Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Oct. 30, 1936, edition 1 / Page 14
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Page Twelve THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, NV>rth Carolina Friday, October 30, 1936.' Discount Corporation Buildi ng‘ To Become Filling: Station I Building of Carolina DiscountCnrporation on Aberdeen’s Busiest Traffic Corner Carolina Discount Corporation Site Sold For Filling Station SheH Interests To Erect ‘Super’ Station of Colonial Design in Aberdeen Aberdeen Is to have one of the most modern filling stations and din ing rooms in this section of the state, according to announcement made last week. The Quality Oil Company of Winston-Salem has ac quired from the Acme Oil Co^mpany of Pinehurst, local distributors of Shell oil products, the former home of the Carolina Discount Corporation in Aberdeen and on the property will erect a “.super” station of Colonial design. A. R. Carlan of Candor, an exper ienced oil man who came here from Mt. Airy, where he enjoyed a success, ful career over a period of several years, becomes the resident mana ger of the Winston-Salem company, which distributes Shell products over a wide area. The Carolina Discount CV>rpora- tian building^ and adjacent lots, will be converted into a service station, it is announced, with one of the most modern dining rooms in this part of the state. The “super” sta- i tion, as it is called, will be the Co- ; lonial type architecture, and Mr. Carlan says it will be a really beau tiful structure. Every conceivable , service station facility will be afford- j ed the traveling public and it is the intention to give 24-hour a day ser- ; vice. .\cquisition of the Acme Oil Com- I pany and the Aberdeen property ' marks the advent of the Shell inter- ; ests in this section or a really big i scale, it is stated, as stations in oth er localities are conteniplated. Shell prc^ducts are already dispensed in this section at a number of stations. ' Offices of Mr. Carlan are main- i tained for the present in Candor, but it is said to be his intention to j make either Aberdeen or Pinehurst : his future headquarters. He is the 1 son-in-law of the late Charlie Ben- ‘Pause That Refreshes’ Bottled in Aberdeen Coca Cola Plant One of Coun- Iry's Busiest and Most Successful Industries Just as there is no more popular drink in the Sandhills than its pro duct, there is no busier plant here than the Coca Ccla Bottling Com pany’s in Aberdeen. The output of this plant spreads over a wide terri tory, keeping a fleet of trucks busy hauling the beverages to and the “empties from hundreds of stores, filling stations, hotels and ^^homes. G. C. Seymour is head of the com pany, one of ithe most successful j in the county. j nett, pioneer peach grower of the I Sandhills and one of the most popu lar figures in this section. The Winston-Salem concern is one of the largest oil distributors in the state, with interests scattered over a wide area, and its financial re sources are such as to permit the widest sort of expansion in the Sand hills. Noore County’s Newest Industry Men's Finest Handkerchiefs IN LINEN and COTTON Thoug-h in its first year, the Carolina Handkerchief Company at West End has found a ready market due to the fine quality and low price of its produdts. To introduce its product to its own neighborhood, it is making special “Mail Order" offeringrs to residents of Moore County as follows: Men’s Fine (^otton Handkerchiefs $1.00 Per Dozen Men’s Pure Irish Linen Handkerchiefs $3.00 Per Dozen I Attractively boxed and mailed to any address on receipt of proper amount in checks, money or stamps 0 Carolina Handkerchief Co. WEST END, NORTH CAROLINA Taylor Chemical Company Manufacturers of f'f Farm and Orchard Chemicals t ♦♦ We are now located on Aberd een-Pinehurst Highway in Our New Building with I New and Modern Equipment and Machinery Phone 27 Aberdeen, N. C. A Local Industry 101 Years Old Garrett & Company, Inc., originated in North Carolina in 1835, the pioneer American Wine Growers. One hundred years later, after a lapse of a few years due to the 18th Amendment, it re-opened its plant in Aberdeen, and is again operating in the Sandhills of North Carolina. For its Quality Wines it is buying grapes and berries in North Carolina; employing local labor; supplying local demand for its products. “We have every hope that our Aberdeen plant will prove a great success, both as a branch of Garrett & Company and as an impetus to the agricultural and industrial prosperity of the State of North Carolina. We hope to have wines made in Aberdeen and ready to offer to North Carolinians very shortly.”—Paul Garrett, President. Garrett & Co., Inc. 882 Third Avenue, Brooklyn, New York
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1936, edition 1
14
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