•lAF. 2 0 1937 MOORK COUNTY’S LEADING NEWS-WEEKLY THE A Paper Devoted to the Upbuilding VOL. 17, NO. 16. ^ >wCA«THAOe O BiUlUK SPRINGS ALAKKVISW PILOT FIRST Niuwa, CIRCULATION & ADVERTISING Southern Pines and Aberdeenr N^th Car^ina, March 19, 1937. of the Sandhill Territory of North Carolina Stringent Slot Machine Law Passed; Supported by Poole FIVE CENTS Over Brush in One of the Steeplechase Races Here Last Sat%^ :S County Attorney Hoyle Corrects Impression Made by Action of Ministerial Group In a communication received by The Pilot this week, County Attorney Samuel R. Hoyle cf Carthage endeav- ors to clear up the impression made upon the public by resolutions pass ed recently by the Sandhill Minister ial Association with regard to the position of Moore county’s Represen tative, J. Hawley Poole on slot ma chine legislation. The resolution adopted by the clergymen, in part, read: “ . . . having heard that a local bill is be fore the Legislature exempting Moore county from protection against slot machines . . .urge our Represen tative to withdraw said bill and . . . cooperate with those who are trying to protect us from this vicious evil.” That Mr. Poole was one of the leaders in the fight for outlawing slot machines throughout the state is the evidence presented by Mr. Hoyle, who writes: Editor, The Pilot: In last week’s papers, I note that the Sandhill Ministerial Association adopted a resolution addressed to Representative .T. Hawley P^ole, urg ing him to withdraw a bill introduc ed by him in regard to slot machmes. Evidently this resolution was offer ed because of a misunderstanding as ^ to the contents cf the bill introduced by Representative Poole. As I drew the bill at the request of the Board of Commissioners of Mcore county, who have used every effort including this bill to outlaw slot machines, I deemed it advisable to explain the purpose and contents ff this bill. Stringent Law The bill was House Bill No. 369. Section 1 exempted Moore county from the provisions of Chapter 282, Public Laws cf 1935, which is the law under which Judge Rowe of the Recorder s Court held slot machines were legal of the type put out by the Fayetteville Vending Machine Company. Section 2 re-enacted Chap ter 37 of the Public Laws tf 1935 W. p. A. Project Aberdeen Gets Allocation of $5,531 For Sidewalks on Busy Streets ' Aberdeen learned with pleasure this week of the approval of a federal W. P. A. project involving the expenditure of $5,531. for the paving of sidewalks on P*oplar street (U. S. Highway No. 1) throu(?h the city, and on Main street in the business section. The work is to get under way at once. SEAL SALE TOPS PREVIOUS RECORDS IN MOORE COUNTY Tuberculosis Drive Nets $1,- 542.46, With Response Gener al Throunhout Community —Photo by Eddy CLOSE FINISHES FEATURE ANNUAL RACE MEETING Great Crowd Sees Leading^ Horses and Riders of Coun try in Action Here COLORED RAISE $147 The 1936 Seal Sale for the preven- ticn of tuberculosis broke all prev- i ions records in Moore county, topping the $1,500 mark for the first time. The total was $1,542.46, with every section of the county ccntributing' I and with a generous response from I colored as well as white residents, j The County Tuberculocid Ccmmit- I tee held an enthusiastic meeting in | i Pinehurst on Monday, with represen-1 I tatives from Aberdeen, Carthage, | I Southern Pines and Pinehurst pres ent. Dr. J. Symington, County Health Officer, reported that the county showed a mcst encouraging decrease the prevalence cif tuberculosis. Out of the 2,608 children recently exam ined, only one active case was found. GENERAL BUTNER FORMER “C. 0 ” AT Dr. H. A. Derthick, President of Milligan College, Here on Sunday FORT BRAGG, DIES; Speaks Here Sunday Brother of M. F. Butner ofj Pinebluff Led Brigade in i World War I BURIED IN ARLINGTON The last chapter in the notable army career of Major General Henry W, Butner of Pinnacle. N. C., was en acted Monday when his body was laid to rest in the Arlington National cemetery. The distinguished North Carolinian was buried with full mili- and this is being placed in the State honors. the cooperation of the general pub lie. The reports shows the following (Please turn to page eight) Judge R. W. Winston General Henry W. Butner, recent ly relieved as commanding officer of the Panama Canal department, died last Saturday at Walter Reed hospi tal. Born in Pinnacle April 6, 1875, Gen eral Butner was appv.inted to the West Point Military Academy on June 20, 1894, and was a member of the class which was graduated ahead of schedule in April, '1898, at the outset of the Spanish war. He was commis sioned a second lieutenant of the field artillery, and had risen to the rank cf lieutenant colonel by the outbreak of the World war. He became a brig adier general, temporarily, during the war. and was promoted to the lank Civic Club Speaker I of major general last February. _ ;— _ I Up to the time of the World war, Local Organization Invites Pub- ■ General Butner had seen service in lie to Hear Noted Author Cuba, the Philippines, Hawaii, and and Biographer j mcst of the field artillery posts ' in the United States. He was for Judge Robert W. Winston of ^^^‘^gprne time commanding officer at ham will be the guest speaker at ■ Bragg. He was on the Mexican a meeting of the Civic Club in Sou- them Pines this, Friday, afternoon to, which all men and women of the' that the Ministerial Association for community arc iiivilcu. One of the the Sandhills and all other good cit- . school of southern gentlemen and izens would not Intentionally do Rep- j scholar, Judge Winston is a force- ^ ^ ^ ^ August 5- resentative Pocle an injustice, and ,,,, delightful sneaker His life August o will gladly correct the erroneous Im-|a m“t LerSune c“e ind I has been a most interestmg one, ana, Meuse-Argonne, October 1-Novem- it is fron: his newly published aulo-|^^^ g. Germany until biography, 'It’s a Far Cry.” that 26, 1919. He became command- will draw bis text. Sanatorium by the committee. The reports of the various sub committees showed an organization I alive and watchful, with a determi- I nation to make Moore county absc- I lutely free from the dangers of the in its application to Moore county,' disease. prchibiting th“ manufacture, sale, j M,.g Anna F. Cheatham, county possession and use of slot machines, I chairman, presented the best report gambling apparatus and devices. ^ jjj ^he history of the Seal Sale, made Chapter 37 above referred to is the' pcssible by the splendid workers and most stringent slot machine law ever re-enacted in North Carolina until this session of the Legislature when Senator Edd Fiannigan of Pitt coun ty introduced in the Senate a slot machine law outlawing all kinds of slot machines except mechanical clcrks or vending machines. While in Raleigh yesterday, I talk ed with Senator Fiannigan. and he stated that Representative Hawley Poole was one of his ablest lieuten ants in the House in securing the paissage of the Statewide Slot Ma chine Law recently ratified by the Legislature. I am writing this because I know PURSES TOTALLED $1,700 A crowd variously estimated at I from 10.000 to 18,000 witnessed the third annual hunt race meeting of the Sandhills Steeplechase & Racing As sociation on the Barber Estate course midway between Pinehurst and Southern Pines last Saturday after noon and saw some fiin^uc..] aa c. citing as anyone could ask for. They saw some of the finest steeplechase horses in the country tearing over timber and brush jumps, ridden by many of America’s leading riders. The day was perfect, with a cloud less sky and the temperature just right for the sport. Parking spaces around the big course were at a premium, in fact cais were parked in double and triple tiers at various points. Officials of the association sponsoring the meet report that the gross receipts were greater than at the two previous meets, and beyond expectation. It is believed that from subscriptions and parking space sales there will be a sufficient balance m 1 the association’.s tr^iaaury to mak*! Tennessee, neces.sgry improvements to the grounds before next year’s meeting. People were here from all parts of j the state and scores from Aiken. I Thaddeus A. Cheatham is in- Camden and other points in South viting the public to attend a very in-' Carolina, to say nothing of large teresting service at the Pinehurst Vil-1 numbers who came from the nortiv Talk on Work in Mountains To Be Preceded by Organ Recital by Miss Harding Dr. DR. H. A. DEKTHICK BILL LEGALIZING VOTE ON SCHOOL PASSES HOUSE He went to France with the Six teenth Field Artin<>iy on May 21, 1918. He participated in the opera- pression that he was attempting to legalize slot machines, when in truth and in fact he was working diligently to procure them to be outlawed In the state as well as in Moore coun ty. —S. R. HOYLE, County Attorney. March 17, 1337. JOHN WlLXiCOX MOVES FROM “HOUSE IN THE HORSESHOE” Judge v;inston cast the electoral vote of North Carolina for Grover Cleveland in 1884. He has shaken hands with every President since Lincoln. He was a slave owner. Af ter his retirement some years ago from the bench he resided in Wash ington, then returned to his old col lege In 1924 "to become a Freshman again at Sixty.” This episode of his John Willcox. clerk of the Moore i life he once wrote up in Scribner’s county Superior Court, has purchased the Major Petty place In Carthage and will move his family there with- ing a few days. For many years the George Willcox, the owner’s broth- House in the Horseshoe,” one of the show places of the county located several miles out from Carthage. George Willcox, the woner’s broth er, will move into this house and will supervise the large farm. magazine. He has written several bi ographies, among them the lives of Andrew Johnson and Robert E. Lee, His new book is reported as most Interesting and is expected to be oi^ sale by the end of the week in the Hayes bookshop here. He will be introduced at tcday’s meeting by Robert L. Hart, presi dent of the Southern Pines Cham ber of Commerce. Early Actiion on Measure For Referendum in Southern Pines Expected in Senate er of the First Field Artillery bri gade October 1, 1918. On his return to the United States in 1919, he went to the Army War college in Washington. He occupied positions of high command at posts in this country, Hawaii and the Phil ippines, and in July. 1936, sailed for Panama to become commanding gen eral of the Panama department. He was on the general staff eligible Ifst. General Butner was a brother of M. F. Butner of Pinebluff and had been a frequent visitor here. Other survivors include a sister, Mrs. J. S. Atkins of Elkin and a brother, Ar thur L. Butner of Winston-Salem. At the union church service at the Church of Wide Fellowship Sunday night the Rev. Voight Taylor of Duke University will preach on "Pe ter’s Fall.” Dr. George G. Herr, chairman of the Southern Pines School Board, re ceived a telegram from Representa tive j. Hawley Poole, in Raleigh yes terday advising him that the bill pro viding for a referendum in the South ern Pines School District on the sub ject of a bond issue to finance the much discussed expansion of the school's physical facilities, has pass ed the Hcuse and is now on the Sen ate calendar awaiting an early pas sage in the upper house. By State law it is necessary for the School Board to have such a law enacted granting permission to hold a special election cr referendum be fore any further steps can be taken and it is expected that, in view of the fact that the Assembly adjourns in the near future, the bill will paiss the Senate within the next few days. MRvS. STONEBRAKER TO SING IN VILLAGE CHAPEL SUNDAY Mrs, S. D. Stonebraker will sing at the morning Palm Sunday service at the Village Chapel in Pinehurst this Sunday. In two weeks Mrs. Stonebraker returns to her native Vienna to sing in a series of con certs. The public is cordia’.ly invited t( hear her Sunday. lage Chapel this Sunday evening at 8:15 o’clock. From 8:00 to 8:15 p. m. there will be an organ recital by Miss Irene Harding. The speaker of the evening will be Dr. Henry J. Derthick, president of Milligan College, Tennes see. Since young manhood Dr. Derthick has spent his life among the moun tain people of the South; he has serv ed them both as minister and educa tor and has been a tower of strength to those who have planted "a mighty home of mankind strong, to learn the right, reject the wrong.” For the past 11 yeais as the presi dent of Milligan College in the moun tains of East Tennessee, Dr. Der thick has repeatedly stated that "as we turn to the hills of the Appala chian region for our sole remaining strain of pure Anglo-Saxon stock, so should we turn a portion of our re sources toward these institutions of learning — the small colleges—to aid them in their unselfish, unsung work of educating the youth cf today for the parental and national responsi bilities cf tomorrow.” for the big week-end. The races themselves lived up to their expecta tions. There was not a bad race on the card, and the times recorded in the various event was unusually fast. Piize winners in the different races were as follows: The Catawba, one and one-half miles over hurdles: Mrs. Marien T. Git/ison’s It.saboy first, Vemer Z. Reed’s Little Hurd second, Mrs. Ran dolph Scott's Hydraulic third. Pur-se, $300. The Croatan Steeplechase, two miles over brush: Mrs. Gibson’s Lit- (Please turn to page eight) Mrs. Akeley, Noted Explorer, Here Sunday “Adventures in African JunKle” Subject of Lecture in Pinehurs^t Theatre Mrs. Carl Akeley of the American Museum of National History, New York, will give her lecture, ‘‘Adven tures in the African Jungle,” at the Dr. Cheatham not only says that ! Pinehurst Theatre on Sunday evennig, March 21st. at 8:30. She will tell of her adventures with her hus band, the late Carl Akeley, explorer and naturalist, while collecting great mammals in Equatorial Africa on the Akeley-Eastman-Pomeroy expoditi n for the American Museum. She will also recount her experiences on her 1936 expedition in South Africa, Zul- uland and Portuguese East Africa. Mrs. Akeley is adviser in piom t- ing the Akeley African Hall in the New York Museum. After her hus band’s sudden death of fever in the — I Belgium Congo, Mrs. Akeley was the The volunteer firemen of Southern | leader of the expedition for five Pines are holding their seventh an- months in the African jungles. She nual ball for the benefit of the local had a Safari of 300 natives and trav- company next Thursday evening, eled several hundred miles cn foot March 25th at the Green Pines Casi- before returning tc any settlement, no. and if this year’s event is any-1 She was knighted by the late King thing like those of the past a most. Albert of the Belgiums for her scien- enjoyable evening »s #n store for tific work. She is the author of four Dr. Derthick's message is full of “human interest” but states that he is an “inspiring speaker.” An invitation to attend this service is extended to all visitors te or resi dents of Moore county. Crowd Expected At Firemen’s Annual Ball Affair For Benefit of Southern Pines Volunteers Scheduled For Thursday Night the many who are planning to at tend. Royal Campbell’s 12-piece or chestra is coming to prpvide the music, and those who know this band know what to expect. Tickets have been going rapidly, not only among those who plan to attend but by all who desire in this way to aid the men who volunteer their services for the protection of Southern Pines homes "and property throughout the year. They are only one dollar and should be in the hands of everyone in town by Thursday night. books: “Carl Akeley’s Africa,” “Adven tures in the African Jungle,” "Lions, Gorillas and Their Neighbors and “Restless Jungle.” Mrs. Akeley is a graduate of Bryn Mawr and of Columbia Uni versity and a Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society. She has a moun tain in northern British Columbia named for her in recognition of her early exploration where she did re- conaissance survey and mountain climbing for the Canadian govern ment. I