Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Oct. 23, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE PILOT. Southern Pines and Aberdeen, NV>rth Carolina Friday, October 23, 1936* THE PILOT Published eacb Friday by THE PILOT, Incorporated, Southern Pine«, N. C. NELSON C. HYDE Editor FR.\NCES FOLLEY Advertising Manager DAN S. RAY Circulation Manager Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months .50 CARO-GRAPHICS 7 timAY by Joffjr.:' n - DO YOU KNOW «>OV»EflOO/y 'I YWRSTATf? Entered at the Postoffice at South- i MU Pines, N. C., a.s second.class mail (ratter. NO LOCAL AGENCY FOR RELIEF Editor, The Pilot: While walking down the main street of Southern Pines I saw a sight that would make anyone weep. A poor, unkempt lady with three or four little girls, dirty and ragged, trying to get enough money to buy food. I tried to find a w'elfare agent or humane offi cer but no one seemed to know of any. Haven’t you some insti tution to care for such in this city? I should think there should be someone who could do some thing about helping keep girls off the streets. —VISITOR. •:! i FARIY mi OP RAILROAW IT COST #k\0^ 5IR WAlTf R RAlEKjH . U TO 60 FROM WIlHIMWn TO WflWN TMF FIR^T RfAl RT/ DID YOU KNOW r^AT W.5.AIFXAHPFR0F(JRIM- 5HA\Vf5N.Cl5M«»TMAJirR OMVHATl5Bfll£VEPTOBf WF 5MAUFJT moma IWTHfU.5.-6'xf' ? RICH j^ARf, NORTriANPTON CO. HA( A FOPUIATIOM Of 900, AMP A TMFATRE mu A SEATING CAPACn/OF 600 200,000 m RfAlRTATf VENTURE IH N C. DIDYOUKNOWtiiaiit l5(0MM0NlYBHIEV5PT»)m m 6R0TriFR50FOIIVfRCROM- IVEUfnTlFPIHHAllFAXfa AHFRTHF RFJTORATION OF THF MONARCHY IN EN61ANP. OWKim^TMFIRNAHFTO CROWHip • THe COITDRS OP CAR0*d(li^PHIC4 INVlTff VOVTO SEND IN iNTeRCSTINO FACTiS AOOUT VOUR COndUNITY • Mr. Presbrey proposed the or ganization of the Advertising Agents’ Association, which later became the American Associa tion of Advertising Agencies. As a guide to students, he WTote “The History and Development of Advertising.” While he agreed that the business was “a very fasinating profession,” he warned students that it would Grains of Sand Eleven days before Election Day. CAMERON After that what will fill the pers? pa- not guarantee wealth and prom-1 As far as The Pilot knows, j inence to all who entered it. ! there is no provision here for I Apart from advertising, Mr.) temporary relief of stranded' Presbrejfs chief interest was' poor. The Count\\ has a welfare the Boy Scouts of America. A I officer, with an office in Car- i vice-president and member of' thage, but this does not solve i the executive board of the Boy 1 such immediate problems as out- Scouts, Mr. Presbrey was chair- "Thank God for Mrs. Simpson," say those who haven’t been inter ested in campaign news the past few weeks. line<l by “Visitor.” If a citizen of Southern Pines is stopped on the street by someone appealing man of the American delegation to the World Boy Scout Jam boree held in England in 1929. for aid, he does not know to As a member of the internation- whom to send him, or her. There al Boy Scout committee, he also is no local agency for relief.' attended the fourth Internation- There should be. al Boy Scout Conference in Swit- Ralph Chandler, genial boss of the local Carolina Power & Light Com pany headquarters, has never seen a football game. The Broad Street Pharmacy’s ther mometer, exposed to the rays of Old Sol, registered 101 Monday morning f^’. pite the cold. Claude Hayes is considering charg- ; zerland in 1926. In that year he! admission to his book store Sun- I was awarded the Silver Buffa-j day mornings, it would be worth i lo “for distinguished service to the price. John Stephenson’s political AN OUTSTANDIN«G CAREER ENDS J 4.U u boyhood,” the highest honor Advertising, golf and the boy by the Bov Scouts. Scout movement, as we as ^n ardent golfer, Mr. Pres- Pinehurst, lost a valuable friend in Frai.k Presbre • famed ad- ‘ ^ ^^^ized the L nited States in rank Fresore.-, lamed ad gemQi. tournament, a yearlv vertising man who diedon Oct-'^^nt at the Apawamis Golf ober lO h. The s>TOpathy. ot th. p Sandhills goes out to his daugh- tournament. He has ter, Dr. Alice Presbrey, a Pine hurst resident for years. Frank Presbrey w'as head of one of the country’s leading ad vertising agencies, a concern which bore his name. Previous to this successful venture, he had edited and published the “News-Register”, a Youngs town,Ohio, daily. In 1885 he been for years a regular win ter visitor to Pinehurst, a fre quent participant in its golf events. talks as he gets his papers and looks over the various polls and forecasts feature the occasion. Last Sunday’s star act was a debate between for mer Mayor Sam Richardson, Repub lican stalwart, and the United States marshal. NIAGARA Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Copeland and son James of Durham visited here went to Washington and found-; ed the magazine “Public Opin-1 Tiiiey and Mrs. c. f. An ion,” which he edited until its ^rews of Chapel Hill were dinner consolidation with the Literary S^^sts of Mr. and Mrs. j. v. Snipes Digest. j Sunday. At the invitation of W’’alter and family of Roanoke, Hines Page, who was to become American Ambassador to Eng land, Mr. Presbrey went to New York in 1894, as publisher of “The Forum,” of which Mr. Page was editor. During sub sequent months his talent as an advertising executive became in creasingly apparent and in 1896, when Mr. Page acquired “The Atlantic Monthly”, Mr. Presbrey retired from the magizine field to create his advertising agency. Va., visited relatives in this section the past week. D. C. Frye spent the past week in Fayetteville. Real estate is picking up in and about Niagara. The “Detroit Cot tage” which belonged to George Mc Dermott has been sold to a Mr. Mar tin who is having it repaired and ex pects to move in at once. Mrs. D. J. Pierce of Camden was a recent caller in town. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Dutton former- The Charlotte Observer nas come out for Roosevelt. Up to now it’s been pretty lukewarm during the cam paign, and it still disapproves of the New Deal. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Currie have re turned home after a week’s stay in New York City. While there Mr. and Mrs. Currie attended the Carolina- New York University football game. Mrs. S. B. Bartlett of Warsaw is visiting her daughter, Mrs, O. D. Wal lace. Mrs, E. H. Morton, Misses Fran ces and Annie McKeithen and Miss Mildred Petway spent Saturday in Raleigh. Mrs L. C. Currie and Mrs. John Currie spent Tuesday in Charlotte. Miss Sara Hurwitz of New York City is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hurwitz. Mesdames A. McN Blue, Herbert Maness and Ruth McLeod spent Thursday at the State Fair. Miss Helena Morgan of Raleigh was a week-end visitor in tow’n. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Garrison, Mrs. John Symington and Mrs. James V. Baker motored to Coulmbia, S. C. Wednesday, to attend the South Car olina State Fair. Mrs. Symington and daughter were the guests there of | Miss Mary Wycoff of the Columbia Bible College. i Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Sinclair and: Yes, the Raleigh News & Observer is for Roosevelt. Strangely, Democratic Chicago has no newspaper supporting Mr. Roose velt. New York City papers are split up half and half. Leo Fuller of Pinehurst hasn't miss ed a weekly Kiwanis meeting in nine years. That’s 468 straight meetings- For thirty-five years he re- j Niagara but now of Southern mained the president and treas-1 were pleasant callers on Sun- urer of the company. Through-! out this period he occupied a j farmers of these parts have dominant position in advertising much handicapped the past two and business circles and in later saving hay on account of years was regarded as the dean | of the profession. Since 1930 he Claribel Williams, Richard had served as chairman of the Lowell and Carl Quimbley attended board of the Presbrey Company, County Fair on Tuesday, being succeeded as president by { McDonald of Greensboro was his son, Charles Presbrey. ! ^ of Mr. and Mrs, c. e. Lee One of the first things Mr. i Sunday. Presbrey did after creating his > of Washington, agency was to invent “the | ^ ’ Margaret Carter ar- cruise”. He suggested to the | spend some Hamb'irg-American Line that it! winter home here, conduct. a cruise through the j W'^son has returned from West Indies. His suggestion wasj®^ hurried tnp to the state of Maine, successfully adopted in 1897, and Reynolds, Mrs. L. M. as he once said himself, the idea! Hatton and Miss Bertha Welch, all of “revolutionized travel in Amer- I Pembroke, Maine arrived Mon- I day and will occupy Mrs. Reynolds’ He handled many of the na-, tioDs most notable advertising campaigns. At the outbreak of the World War he took over the advertising of the American Red Cross in New York and, during its war-time activity, devoted his entire time to its interests, rarely visiting his own offices. He also assumed charge of the United War Work campaign un der the chairmanship of Joihn D. Rockefeller, Jr. Impressed by the need of pro- feesional ethics in advertising. FOOD SALE WEDNESDAY A Food Sale will be held next Wed nesday, October 28, by the Woman’s Society of the Church of Wide Fel lowship. The time: 10 o’clock. The place: the Broad Street store form erly occupied by the Fallon Flower Shop. The food: home cooked and well varied. All invited. Are you registered? Tomorrow, Saturday, is the last day to get your name on the eligible list for the Nov« ember 3d elections. Tobacco prices are holding up well in Aberdeen and Carthage. But there’s always a fly in the ointment. The boys haven’t as much tobacco to sell as usual. Moore county’s baby industry is handkerchiefs. Mose McDonald is turning them out in quantity up in West End, both linen and cotton, and they look good. R. W. Brown, former well known plumber in Southern Pines, w’ho left here for his old home in Delta, Pa., in distressing physical condition and with eyesight failing, is much improv ed, we hear. He is walking around again, getting some pleasure out of a life despaired of a few years back. Five thousand, eight hundred driv ers’ licenses have been revoked in the state, most of them for drunken driv ing. Moore’s total is 87. These peo ple are well off the highways. It’s the only way to cut down the acci dent toll. Charles Sinclair, Jr., spent Sunday in Fayetteville. Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Dunn of Star were Sunday guests of Mrs. W. M. Kivett. Mrs. H. C. Hulse is leaving Car thage shortly for Newport, Oregon, where she will make her home with her daughter, Mrs. G. C. Allen. Miss Catherine Cagle of Moncure was a week-end visitor in town. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Lawhorn of Boiling Springs College are spending a week’s vacation with Mr. Lawhorn’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Lawhorn. Mr. and Mrs. George Kilmer, of Jacksonville, Fla., spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Colin G. Spen cer, they attended the Duke-Georgia Tech game last Saturday. Attending the Republican rally at Tro’ on Monday night were Mr. and Mrs, H. F. Seawell, Miss Meade Sea- well and Dr. H. B. Shields and daugh ter. Dr. Thomas Dixon, noted author, w’as the speaker. | Mrs. Quincey Hart, Mrs. Bernard Pettiway and Miss Melba Cole, all of j Kinston, were Sunday guests of their J brother, Mr. F. H. Cole. | Mrs. W. J. Adams of Raleigh, Mr. ! William Adams of Rocky Mount and : Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Ledbetter and family of Rockingham spent Sunday I with Mrs. W. T. Jones. ; Mrs. Jessie Woltz of Raleigh spent i the week-end in town. | Col. Oliver H. Dockery Jr., U. S. ! A., retired, and Mrs. Dockery of New | York City and Newark, Ohio, have ■ announced the engagement of their j daughter, Miss Augusta Heisery j Dockery, to Robert Tilghman Weav- I er of New York. Miss Dockery is a ! niece of Mrs. W. T. Jones, of Car- j thage. Tomorrow ia the last day you can register for the coming election. Make sure your name is on the books. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS >L\TERNITY CLINICS FOR CARTHAGE AND ABERDEEN Annie Hannon Fry and others to W. J. Hannon and others: property in Moore county. Mattie J. Johnson and husband* Harry P. Johnson, to Lillian McKen zie and husband, Don J. McKenzie: property in Carthage township. Montgomery Hardware Company to Ross Tyson: property in Moore county. L. W. Barlow, Commissioner, to L. L. Marion: property in Carthage township. Miss Margaret McQueen, County Maternity Nurse, announces that maternity clinics will be held as fol lows this week and next: Carthage, FYiday, Oct. 23rd, at 2:00 P. M. over Wallace Brother’s store; Aberdeen, Wednesday 28th, at 2:00 P. M. at the Community House. MOORE COUNTY CHOSEN Miss Pauline Gordon, specialist of State College, spent Monday after noon in Carthage with senior 4-H Club leaders. Moore county has been selected as one of the three counties in the state to carry out the room improvement program in the senior 4-H Clubs. Safeguard Your Vision! Remember BETTER LIGHT means BETTER SIGHT! 9 § -r. “I’m Strong for BETTER LIGHT Elec Thrift • BETTER LIGHT brings HAPPINESS into the home by eliminating eyestrain and the ’ many other harmful effects of improper lighting. Adults and children are benefited when BETTER LIGHT equipment is placed in the home. Let your Electrical Dealer tell you more about BETTER LIGHT—BETTER SIGHT today! 18 Cash Prizes First Prize $25.00 rcth'nj: To 3uy: Nothing To Sell! Nothing To Submit In Competition! Ask any Electric Dealer Listed Below for Complete Details Carolina Power and Light Company East Broad Street (405) L V. O’Callaghan C. J. Simons Pay Your 1936 TAXES NOW County Taxes for 1936 Paid during: the Month of October are subject to a One Per Cent Discount NOORE COUNTY BOARD OF CONNISSIONERS
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Oct. 23, 1936, edition 1
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