Page Eight THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Friday, January 7, 1938. B. L. CHURCHILL ELECTED TOWNSEND CLUB FKESIOENT At the regular meeting of the Townsend Club Monday night, the following officers were elected tor the coming six months: President. B. L. Churchill; vice president, E. C. Loomis; second vice- president. F. M. Veazle; secretary, Mrs. F. M. Veazie; treasury, Mrs. C. The ladies of the Townsend Club L. Dutton, take this opportunity to thank all wh« helped to make this Christmrs •jale a success. After Inventory We find that we still have lots of merchandise to sell. We are putting real low price tags on most everything at the store in Aberdeen. Some of you know that we are moving our Aberdeen store to the new building, next to Mack’s 5 and ll^c Store. We will open there about January 18th. We want to make it a little more con venient for you to trade with us. We solicit your trade in the new location. We will give you the same values as in the past, and better ones when ever we can. NelvinBros •Inc "16 Years of Service” Aberdeen and Southern Pines Cameron and Community On the last Sunday of the year, I Prof. and Mrs. J. Clyde Kelly enter- [ tained at a family dinner. Covers, were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Ever i<el-1 ly of near White Hill, Miss Bert Kelly | of Washington, D. C., and for the; host and hostess and their four chil- dren. Prof. and Mrs. R. F. Lowry charm ingly entertained on New Year’s night at a delightful bridge part/. Three tables were in play, Mrs. Lou- la Muse was presented an attractive marmalade jar for high score prize, while low score fell to J. D. McLeai, assisted by Misses Isabel McKeithen and E>velyn Ann Snow the hosS.ssj served refreshments. j Mr. and Mrs. L. B. McKeithen gra-1 ciously entertained at a bridge party | on New Year’s eve and the same j evening Miss Jean Kelly entertained i the young college students at the j home of her parents, Prof. and Mrs.; J. Clyde Kelly. Miss Kelly invited Mr. | and Mrs. McKeithen and their guest.'? to join them at 11:30, when refresh ments were served, souvenirs of gaily decorated horns were passed and the New Year was ushered in with tae noise of trumpets and laughter. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Laubscher of High Point announce the birth of son. Robert, Jr., on New Year's day. Misses Flora Phillips and Jeanette Wooten were supper gueats of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Edwards, Jr., of Vass on Friday evening. Miss Velva Harmon of Durham and Mr. and Mrs. Leangianto of South Boston. Va., were guests du"- 1 ing the holidays of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Thomas. Mrs. Belle McKeithen was dinner guest last Sunday of Mr. and Mis. M. D. Mclver and Miss Mamie Ar nold of Route 1. Miss Mary E. McNeill left 'dst Thursday for Florida, Ala., whe.-e she will spend some time with rela tives. Mrs. John McQueen of Elizabeth City and her brother, John McNeill C^COLINATHE/ITEC/ PINEHURST and ■ SOUTHERN PINES pbese:nts The new’idea musical with that 1938 ummph ! r I with ERIC BlORl EDWARD EVERETT | HORTON • JOHN HOWARD • EDUARDO C I A-N N E L L I RKb*RA[>iO PICTURE At Sduthern Pines Mon. & Tu£s., Jan. 10-11-8:20 Matinee Tuesday at 3:00 At Pinehurst Monday, Jan. 10th, 3:00 & 8:30 P. M. Please Note. There will be no attraction at the Pinehurst Theatre on Wednesday. WttW At Pinehurst Friday, Jan. 14th, 3:00 & 8:30 P. M. A.1 SoUtliCl'ii A Wed. & Thurs., Jan. 12-13—8:20 Matinee Thursday at 3:00 of Maysvllle, Ky., were guests of the Rev. and Mrs. M. D. McNeill on t'ri- day of last week. The Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Mallard and daughters. Misses Mary Ellen and Lou Millard of Alamance church, Greensboro, were guests last week of Prof. and Mrs. J. Clyde Kelly. Misses Annie H. and Ellen R. Jones, ahd Messrs Truitt, Henry Dowell, Edgar White and Wingate Jones spent the holidays with their father, C. C. Jones on Route 1. Misses Annie McFadyen, Effie Oil- christ and Beulah Thomas returned to their school work at Biscoe, Orien tal and Henderson on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Graham Bullock, who spent the holidays in Georgia, re turned home Saturday. Mrs. J. J. Irvin, after visiting her daughter, Mrs. Robert Laubscner in High Point, returned home Tues day. Mrs. O. C. Britton, Miss Martha and Jack Britton of Winston-Salem were week-end guests of Cameron friends. Miss Sarah Howard, dietitian at the Methodist Children’^ Home, Win- ston-Salem was the guest Friday of Prof. and Mrs. J. Clyde Kelly. Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Mclver spent last week-end with Mrs. John C. Bruton of Columbia, S. C., and re turned Saturday accompanied by M..S. Bruton, who is their guest this week. The Rev. L. A. McLaurin of Hemp will preach in the Cameron Presbyterian Church at 11:00 o'clock Sunday morning, January 9. Kenneth Wooten left Monday for Brunswick, Ga., where he has ac cepted a position with a textile com pany. Mrs. Pete Phillips and little dau ghter Mary Jane, after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Sherrill of Granite Falls, returned home Friday. Neill and James McDonald, Hugh McPherson and Raymond Spivey re turned to Lees-McRae College Mon day; Misses Margaret McLean to N. C. C. W., June Hemphill to Louis- burg, Elizabeth Thomas to Campbell and Francis Thomasson to Wake For est. Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Pullen, w'ho spent the holidays with their parents in Brooksville and Boaz, Ala., re turned home Saturday. Miss Virginia Cameron, after vis iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Cameron, returned to her hospital work in Washington, D. C., last Fri day. Miss Ruth Stutts of Charlotte a.nd Miss Virginia Stutts of Chapel Hill spent a few days with their mother, Mrs. Geraldine Stutts. County Board Recesses i as McCaskill Tribute * ! Adopts Resolution on Death of Faiihe** of Miss Bess McCas- j kin,. Clerk of Board The Board of County Commissi >n- ers met Monday but recessed from 2:30 to 5:00 on account of the fun eral of Hugh McCaskill, father of the clerk, with the result that little business was transacted. ' The following resolution was adopt ed: “Whereas, the members of the •Moore County Board of County Com missioners have learned with profound regret of the passing of Hugh Mo- Caskill, the beloved father of oar clerk, Bess McCaskill, and “Whereas, the members do hereby desire to give expression of their deepest sympathy to and for Bess McCaskill and her family in their great bereavement and sorrow for the loss which they have sustained, “It is ordered that a copy of this resolution be sent to Miss McCaskill and members of her family. The report of Miss Flora McDon ald, home agent, was read and ac cepted; Mrs. Ruth Caviness, Eag’e Springs Route 1, was allowed $8 per month until check is received from the welfare department and the Hol ly Inn Hotel at Pinehurst was grant ed a license for sale of beer and wine. tT( WANTS BUY A SANDHILL HAM—the only ones on the market smoked wita corn cobs and hickory wood. I smoke “em,” Doi'n and Knowleg sell “em.” H. A. LEWIS. Trader FOR SALE. Pinebluff, N. C. Seven room house, two bath rooms, ga rage, shop, wood shed, dog kennels and cabin. Completely furnisned and grounds improved. Inquire of M. W, Miller, Pinebluff. tf. At Southern Pines Fri. & Sat., Jan. 14-15, 8:20 Matinee Sat. at 3:00 FOR RENT: Three good sized rooms and bath on first floor furnished. Stove heat in each room. Enclosed porch. $16.50 per month. Mrs. Alice Bennett. P. O. Box 524, Sou ther Pines. J14 tfttittmtmttmmntmtmmtmtmtmtnninimmmHHWwnHKwawtttttHmtwtiM Be Comfortable Before cold weather arrives modernize your iiEMlNG PLANT and PLUMBING SYSTEM ESTIMATES GLADLY GIVEN • FRIGIDAIRE OIL BURNERS IRON FIREMAN (Automatic Coal Burner) ESSO-HEAT FUEL OIL I. V. O’CALLAGHAN FOR RENT: Heated apartment, 3 rooms, bkth, also four-room cot tage, sunny screened porch, unfur nished, or partly furnished, Alice Crky Holmes, corner Vermont ave, and Ridge street, Telephotuj 5055. FOR SALE: 1935 Chevrolet Coupe. Cecil Robinson, Southern Pines. WANTED: Man with car to take over profitable Rawleigh Route. Elstablished customers. Sales way up this year. Must be satisfied with earnings of $30 a week to start. Write Rawleigh’s, Dept. NCA-221- 101, Richmond, Va. WANTED: Position as governess or companion by young woman. Have had teaching experience. For de tails and reference contact Mr.s. E. W. Marble, Southern Pines. FOR SALE by owner who has gone north Plymouth coach, 1933, in good condition, good tires. Price low for quick sale. Time, payment. Call at Colin Osborne Garage, Southern Pines. FOR RENT: Two connecting single bed rooms in pleasant centrally lo cated home. Will let singly or to gether. Lilian A. Roberts, 15 Penn. Ave. East. FOR RENT: Small heated apartment in Bank Building. Citizens Bank & Trust Co., Southern Pines. At least part of the news about "Love and Hisses” ought to be on Page One as an extra. Simone Simon sings I And how the glorious glamor girl sings! Twentieth Century Fox’s new idea in musical show' hits, "Love and Hisses” the attraction at the Pinehurst Theatre Monday, January 10th, at 3:00 and 8:30 p. m., is, to borrow a phrase from one of its stars, a wowsah. Under the order of new business it brings up that old toss-around between the Rajah of Rib, Walter Winchell, and his “Old Mousetrap,” Ben Bernie. This T. N. T. for-two picture has a new kind of “ummph” (how this talk creeps into the language) in the co-starring efforts of a torchy new Simone ^i- mon touching off the pf-f-fuse. Oth er funsters in the cast are Beit Lahr, Joan Davis (no less) Dick Baldwin, Ruth Terry and Chick Chandler. New York in its most glittering and romantic mood—the mood of the Gay Nineties, and the Naughty Hundreds, - the period that saw “Diamond Jim” Brady, “Jdbilee Jim” Fiske and other bou vivants at thcit gayest, is the playground for Mas West in her new film comedy, “Ev ery Day's a Holiday,” the attraction at Pinehurst Friday, January 14th, at 3:00 and 8:30 p. m Set at the turn of the century. Miss West's latest adventure is the story of a girl with a penchant for selling the Brooklyn Bridge to unsuspecting strangers, an idiocracy which gets her into difficulties with the police, particularly Edmond Lowe, a detec tive. Lowe is assigned to the job of “bringing” in the elusive Mis.i W)est which is not an easy one for him. I At Southern Pines I Advocates of both popular and I classical music v.'ill respond to the Inews that in “Hitting A New High,” 1 the attraction playing a return en- I gagement at the Southern Pines j Theatre, Monday and Tuesday, Jan uary 10-11 at 8:20 with a matinee Tuesday at 3:00, Lily Pons sets out to demonstrate that a ranking vocal talent can be exercised with equiva lent effectiveness in both media. Persons attracted by the promise of such a demonstration will go away convinced that virtuosity and versa tility are indeed compatable charac teristics, for the diminutive diva sings three numbers in each bracket, even throwing in a bit of stepping for good measure, with equal facil ity. The comedy of the picture is tak en care of most ably by those three inimitable funsters, Edward Everett Horton, Jack Oakie and Eric Blore. Smartly produced, with a bril liant cast making the most of the witty dialogue and new comedy sit uations, “Wise Girl” plays a return engagement at Southern Pines Wed nesday and Thursday, January 12- 13, with a matinee Thursday at 3:00. The able and clever Miriam Hopkins heads a cast that leaves nothing to be desired, Ray Milland turns in a swell performance opposite her and he is ably aided and abetted by Wal ter Abel and Guinn Williams. An epic Sweep—those are the words to describe Frank Lloyd's pro duction, “Wells Fargo,” playing a re- turn engagement at Southern Pines Friday and Saturday, January 14, 15, with a Saturday matineen at 3:00. PATCH’S Southern Pines, N. C. BLANKETS All Wool or Part Wool, Smart Combinations. Satin Binding, $4.25 to $10.95 Down Filled Puffs $17.50 DANIEL GREEN FOOTWEAR PELT—KID—SATIN Novelties and Regular Styles $2.25 to 9.00 SPECIAL SALE Annual January Reductions Balance of Our Winter Coats— Dresses Hats BARGAIN RACK This inclu(ies Evening Dresses, Day Dresses, Housecoats, Negligees— Always something interesting on this rack. C. T. PATCH DEPARTMENT STORE uttiuituittttttxumtimntusiiittiimtttitxxxtittttx ABERDEEN, N. C. PHONE 154 J Saturday, January 9 Continuous 3 until 9 P. M. “HOPALONG RIDES AGAIN” WILLIAM BOYD GEORGE HAYES Late Shows Starting 9:00 and 10:30 “LIVE, LOVE and LEARN” ROBERT MUNT(;0MERY ROSALIND RUSSELL Monday and Tuesday, Jan. 10 & 11 Night at 7:15 and 9:15 “LIFE BEGINS IN COLLEGE” RITZ BROTHERS .10AN DAVIS GLORIA STUART Wednesday, Jan. 12 Night at 7:15 and 9:15 JACK POT NIGHT “BULLDOG DRUMMOND COMES BACK” JOHN BARRYMORE LOUISE CAMPBELL Thursday, January 13 (Only) Night at 7:15 and 9:15 “THOROUGHBREDS DON’T CRY” MICKEY ROONEY JUDY GARLAND Friday, January 14 (Only) Night at 7:15 and 9:15 “HIGH, WIDE and HANDSOME” IRENE DUNNE RANDOLPH SCOTT —'Tf-.v i- PARK VIEW HOTEL FINE LOCATION GOOD ROOMS OPEN ALL YEAR RATES MODERATE Newly Renovated Throughout \ Subscribe to the Pilot

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