F&ge Twelve THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Friday, September 10, 1937. FARMERS! Bring your tobacco to the ABERDEEN MARKET Then after the sale bring your “Family” to our stores and be prepared for clothing when the weather turns cold. We have combed the markets to give you dollar for dollar values and in each department we can save you money. • 8hoeis for the entire Family Priced from $1 to $5 pr. Sweaters and Jackets Priced from 5(K’ to $4.50 Underwear of all descriptions for everj'one — Low Prices School supplies for the Kids • We have too many things to men tion in such a small space so we are asking you to visit each store personally and see the I’eal val ues on display. NelvinBros. “16 Years of Service” Aberdeen and Southern Pines JUST HUMANS By CeNECARK 5^ The Kidnapper William Nichol Hutt Passes At 65 in Ellenville, New York WANT'S Southern Pines Resident Was One of the Pioneers of the Sandhills Peach Industry FRESH HONEY—Comb or Strained. Mrs. J. W. Frank, Niagara. tf. HELP WANTED—MALE — A good route man with car—be tween 25 and 40—reliable— 1200 family route—here is op portunity for good man to earn $30.00 to $50.00 weekly. No cash investment required —for details write H. A. Meyers, Box No. 367, Newark, N. J. FOR SALE: We will completely fur nish your home—or a room, with brand new fittings, or second hand, at your choice, and at a reasonable price. Rugs. Linoleum, Beds, Mat tresses, Springs. Bureaus, Dressers, Chiffoniers, Tables. Chairs, Rock ers, Desks. Refrigerators, Stoves. Mirrors, Radio’s. H. A. Lewis, The Trade Store. PINEBLUFF The QUICKEST and SAFEST WAY to send money is by Postal Tele graph. Ask about our special over night rates. Phone 6381, Postal Tel egraph Co., Southern Pines. S24. | HAKE THAT LONG DISTANCE; trip by bus and save the difference. | Special low rates to long distance, points. New York—$8.20; Boston— $11.45; Chicago, $13.15. Tickets; .and information at Postal Tele-' graph Co., Southern Pines. S24.! FOR RENT: Unfurnished small house! «t No. 12 N. Ridge Street. Four rooms, bath and screen porch on «ne floor. Miss Alice May Holmes, 48. E. Vermont Avenue, Tele. 5053. JACKSON SPRINGS | I Miss Floyde Richardson, who is a rtudent nurse in Thompson Memorial I Hospital in Lumberton, spent Sunday j eight with Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Rich- I trdson. I Miss Lena Thomas and Mrs. J. B. Uaynard and daughter, Betty, r*tum- «1 tu Winston Salem Saturday aftei 4 visit with Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Thom- *3.. Miss Blondell Poole is spending tha -veek with her aunt, Mrs. Claude Smith, in Rockingham. Mrs. C. J. Britt of Eagle Springs las been visiting her daughter, Mrs T. C. Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Melvin and children, Neil, Helen, and Patricia, jire spending some time at Carolina Beach. Misses Betty and Juanita Lee have returned to High Point ^ter aa ex tended visit with Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Carter and Bar bara Ruth spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Poindexter in VTinston-Salem. -Ur and Mrs. E. W. Bruton and Geraldine spent Sunday in Troy vis- ftfng relatives, and attended the wed- ding of Miss Sarah Blanche Bruton to M. J. Bamhardt, in Mt. Gilead. William Bruton returned homo V/ednesday from a visit with friends in WUmington. K. G. McLeod and Otis Poole attend, ed the funeral of Cary McLeod, Jr., in McBee, S. C., last Friday. Mr. Mc- Leod wsa killed in a truck wreck near New York city last Thursday. William Nichol Hutt, for many years a resident of the Sandhills, died on Thursday night, September 2, in Ellenville. N. Y., at the home of his wife, Anne Eliza Cox Hutt, where they were accustomed to spend the summer months together. Mr. Hutt‘3 health had been failing for some time, but the end came quite suddenly. William Nichol Hutt was born at Stamford, Welland county Ontario, Canada, on the 26th of April, 1872, one seven children born to Frederick Augustus Hutt and his wife, Jean ette Downie Lawson Hutt. After completing his course of studies at the public schools, Mr. Hutt was graduated in high standing from the University of Toronto, Canada. Upon finishing his university work he en gaged in teaching at colleges in Utah. Md, and the University of iNorth Carolina, from which place he resigned his professorship to accept a position offered him as State Hor ticulturist of North Carolina. His work—writing and lecturing — brought him in contact with an en thusiastic group of the early peacii growers in North Carolina with whom he identified himself and became in terested personally and financially in some of the largest fruit-growing or chards in the state. For the past 20 years Mr. Hutl has been actively identified with the development of North Carolina’s pos sibilities in which he had great faith. After moving from hia peach orchard in West End to Southern Pines, he gave freely of his time and services for the development of local interests, among them the Bird Club of which he later became president. He was associated with the late Rev. Alaric James Drew, former rector of Emmanuel Episcopal Church, in rais ing funds for the new church on Mas sachusetts avenue, and was treasurer of the Building Fund. He was also superintendent of the church School, and was always specially interested in the activities of young people, by many of whom he was affectionately called “Uncle Billy.” Mr. Hutt also assisted on the committee in the early organization of the Moore County Hospital. He was at one time a mem ber of the Kiwanis Club. Quiet and reserved in manner, Mr. Hutt was a man of scholarly attain ments and of a deeply religious na ture, and was always interested in all lines of public improvenrient. His gar den with its varieties of shrubs ana flowers, including the "Van Hooten” specimen, so named from one of his ancestors, was the source of much pleasure to many groups of indivi duals who came this spring to see his fine bed of azaleas growing in such profusion and beauty. His many friends will greatly regret the los? of so fine a character. Mr. Hutt is survived by his widow, Anne Eliza Cox Hutt, a brother. Pro fessor Howard L. Hutt of Georgetown. Ontario, Canada, a nephew, Professor Frederick Hutt of Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y., and three sisters: Mrs. Jenny Kennedy of Toroato, Miss Mar ian Hutt of Lethbridge, Canada and Miss Alice Hutt who is on her return trip from two years of European travel. There are also three nieces liv ing in Canada, Miss Jean Hutt and the Misses Margaret and Jeanette Kennedy. Funeral services were held in Bi lan ville, N. T„ on Sunday, September 6th. Miss Alice Adams is spending some time in Sanford visiting Peggy John son. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Cavanaugh and family were in town Monday. They are now living in Asheboro where Mr. Cavanaugh holds a position with the Asheboro Courier. Miss Dorothy Wallace who. A gay and magnificent musical that skims in shimmering delight a- i long the silvery Alpine slopes, snow -1 drenched with dazzling spectacle and! exciting beauty, heart warming with: riotous fun and young romance, brings ' Sonja Henie and Tyrone Power to ' gether, as you w'anted them to be, thrilling as you knew they’d be, in in "Thin Ice," the attraction at th-3 Southern Pines Theatre Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 13, 14 and 15, at 8:20 p. m., with a' Tuesday matinee at 3:00. | “Thin Ice” is the kind of picture | theatre owners like to think they 1 would make if they were producers and producers would make nothing; else, if they could. It has what is j commonly known as everything. There is the sparkling precedent of! “One In A Million” and here is Son- < ja Henie, whose skating is, of course. | the utterly perfect thing around j which the picture is built. This time j she has in three major production numbers the support of an ice bal let of possibly 150 almost as flawless on runners as the Music Hall Rock- ettes in shoe leather. These produc tion spectacles backgrounding Miss Henie’s incredible solos set a new high in screencraft and at no sacrifice of stellar glory. Joan Davis stops the show and steals the picture with two comedy songs, “Olga from the Volga.” and "My Swiss Hillbilly.” and Arthur Treacher, Raymond Walburn and Al- en Hale do themselves proud in the humor department. If “Thin Ice” doesn’t break all early season records at the Carolina Theatre, then the management will throw away statis tics and get an ouija board. Beginning with “Thin Ice,” the rival taxicab companies, and Miss Rainer as his Immigrant wife whom he barely saves from deportation. Playing the gamut of human emo tions from the depth of pathos to the heights of hilarious comedy, “The Big City” is a winner. In short, it also has everything with a walloping finish that will leave the patrons breathless from laughter, when such sports idols as Jack Dempsey, James J. Jeffries. Jimmy McLarin. “Man Mountain” Dean, Jim Thorpe, Gua Sonnenberg. Bull Montana. Snowy Baker and Taski Hagio frame a riotus finish that has never been equalled on the screen. CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our sincere thanks for the words of sympathy extended to us by our friends during our bereavement. Mrs. Anna G. Partridge and* family. for ^ Tuesday matinees will be re ... u V, li f- i „4. ' instated and the 10c admission foi eight years, has been dietician at the T, , 1 • children under twelve will be discon- Park View Hospital in Rocky Mount, spent a fe'.v days with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Wallace. Miss I Another top-notch attraction, “The Wallace will leave Tuesday for Wash-1 Big City,” is coming to Southern ington, D. C., where she will en- Pines Thursday, Friday and Satur- ter as a student at the Lewis Hotel Training School. Mr. and Mrs. Clenard Hudson of Durham were guests of the Fiddners Sunday. Mrs. Hudson is the former Miss Alice Wilkes. Little Ruth Trout man accompanied Mrs. Hudson back to her home to stay for some time. Mr. and Mrs. Belton Fletcher spent Sunday in West End visiting rela tives. The J. V. Adams have moved from the Knollwood to the Austin Cottage on Grape street. Miss Alberta Fletcher is visitirg relatives in Gastonia. Mr. and Mrs. Walter MacNeill are spending the week in Richmond, Va. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Melvin and fam ily returned last week after spend ing some time in Rocky Mount with relatives. Miss Mary Miller of Winston-Sa lem was a guest of her aunt, Mrs. M. F. Butner, on Monday. John Fiddner, Jr., who has been spending the summer with his grand mother, Mrs. Sadie Fiddner, in Dan bury, Conn.. returned home Sunday. Miss Ella Mae Johnson of Sanford is the guest of Betty Warren. Miss Virginia Butner is spending the week in Winston-Salem visiting | relatives. j Mr. and Mrs. Edward Abrams, who \ have been the guest of Mrs. Gussie | Gibson, left Saturday for Florida. j Miss Diehl entertained Circle Num- j ber 4 of the Bethesda Church Mon-! day afternoon. Fourteen members | were present. A good program was presented, followed by refreshments. J. H. Suttonfield attended the North Carolina Synod in Raleigh Tuesday. day. Sept. 16, 17 and 18. at 8:20 p. m., with a Saturday matinee at 3:00, with the stars of “The Good Earth,” Luise Rainer, and of “Captains Cour ageous,” Spencer Tracy, united in a picture presenting a cross section of American metropolitan life, with Tracy as a New York taxi driver who becomes involved in a war between Carolina Theatre—Southern Pines PRESENTS THRILLING TOGETHER . . . m a gay and magnificent musical! 0»b«h Mon., Tue., Wed., Sept. 13, 14, 15—8:20 P. M. MATINEE TUESDAY AT 8:00 MiSi frahh onzAGE frflductiw JtAINCR SpenceffRA CY Thu., Fri., Sat., Sept. 16, 17, 18—8:20 P. M. IVLXTINEE SATURDAY .\T 3:00 The BANK of PINEHURST A Sound Institution Serving’ the Fi nancial Needs of Moore County —Agricultural, Indus trial, Personal. CAMEL FINDS GOODMAN SWING MUSIC POPULAR j R. J. Reynold Tobacco Company is capitalizing on country-wide inter- est in swing musi<i through its sum-1 mer radio show featuring Benny | Goodman, King of Swing, his swing orchestra, swing chorus and Holly wood guest stars. This already sen- saticnally successful program is be ing broadcast every Tuesday evening over the Columbia coast-to-coast net work. In a recent nation-wide poll on th3 popularity of swing bands Goodman’s group tetaled two and a half times as many votes as those of his near est competitor. In the same poll these swing artists more than doubled the runner-up votes for favorite band of 1937. Goodman’s “School of Swing” —a painless education in syncopated knowledge—provides about twenty minutes of swing music and about ten minutes devoted to represeata- tives of the “Society for the Preven tion of Swing.” The latter never fails to provide a comic interlude for the show. We Welcome the Tobacco Farmers to the Markets of the County and Wish for Them a Profit able Season. BANK OF PINEHURST Aberdeen Pinehurst Carthage Deposits Insurei by Federal Oepqsit Insimmce Gorporation of Wa^ngton, D. C. $5,000 Mtiximum Insurance for Each Depositor

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