ITAK»'iionr ^ 10QQ MOORE COUOTY’S LEADING NEWS-WEEKLY THE A Paper Devoted to the Upbuilding SPAiNca LAKRX/fSW NEBUiFP PILOT FIRST IN NEWS, CIRCULATION & ADVERTISING of the Sandhill Territory of North Carolina VOL. 19, NO. 10. Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina, Friday, February 3, 1939. FIVE CENTS PROSPECTS BRIGHT FOR EARLY START ON NEW LIBRARY Fifth Annual Steeplechase Races to Be Held Here Saturday, March 18 Supreme Court Affirms Decision Which Set Aside Friendly ^Restraining Order OPINION AWAITED HERE Prospects appeared bright yester day for prompt action in providing Southern Pines with a new library building. The State Supreme Court handed down a decision affirming, with modi fications, the decision of the Super ior Court in the friendly action brought recently by Hiram West brook of Southern Pines against the Town of Southern Pines, based on the erection of the proposed build ing. The test case was to determine •whether a library building, for which the town has been allotttd $11,500 by the federal government, comes under the provision of the law which reads “buildings which may le gally be erected” on city property with public funds. Mr. WestbrooK obtained a restrain ing order, which the Superior Court set aside. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court which no^ af firm,the lower court, “with modi fications.” What these modifica tions are will not be known until the papers have been received here. Pending decision of the Supreme Court,, Southrn Pines has been at a standstill In Its Civic Center plans. I State’s Business Increased ''00,000 in First Year ^.dvertising Fashion Show Annual Hospital Ball Chang ed To Something Different, On Night of March 28 Gross Annual Return of 64 Mil lions, Governor’s Secretary Tells Kiwanis Club 214 NEW INDUSTRIES Civic Club Announces Two Artistic Progrrams Presents Miss Seawell and Mrs. Pearson Today, Hoffman at Mid-Pines Next Week The program this afternoon, Fri day, at 3:00 o’clock at the Civic Club of Southern Pines, is open to all guests of the Sandhills who are in hotels or cottages, on Invitation without cost, and promises to be a very delightful one. Miss Meade Seawell of Carthage Is a favorite speaker In the state, and her visits to the Sandhills are most welcome. Miss Seawell has chosen “Today’s Challenge’’ aa her topic. Mrs. Harlow Pearson, lyric ao- prona, also a daughter of the South by birth, will sing two groups of songs, accompanied by Mrs. Norris Hodgkins. Mrs. Pearson is from New York and with her family Is winter ing in Southern Pines. Mrs. Virgil Lee and Mrs. Edward A. Campbell will be hostesses at the tea hour. Next the list of guarantors will be published for the Valentine’s Day recital to be played at the Mid- Pines Club by Mark Hoffman, con cert pianist. The Civic Club is pre senting Mr. Hoffman on Tuesday af ternoon, February 14th at 3:00 o'clock, and a limited number of tick ets may be ordered at Hayes’ Book Store in Southern Pines, and at .the Carolina Pharmacy In Plnehurst. For the past five years. Mark Hoffman has been the director of the School of Music In the Womens' Col lege of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and is gain ing national reputation for his school. Mr. Hoffman Is a Gold Medal prize winner of the Chicago Mvisical Col lege and a pupil of Rudolph Reuter and EJmest Hutcheson. He Is a Bach elor of Music from the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, and a Master of Arts, New York Univer sity. He had a yea^L ln Berlin, Ger many, with George Schumann, study ing theory, and then toured Ger- (Pleaae turn to page eight) SOUTHERN PINES MEN’S CLUB HOUSE RENOV.\TED The National Steeplechase and Hunts Association last week awarded the date of Saturday, March 18th to the Sandhills Steeplechase and Racing Association for its fifth annual meeting on the Barber Estate course on the Midland Road. Reserved parking spaces have already gone on .sale at the association’s office in the Village Court Building, Plnehurst, and officials report an unprecedented early demand. A J.J CANADIAN BANKER AND INDUSTRIALIST President of Trust Company, Railroad and Mining Concerns Passes in Southern Pines LONG A WINTER RESIDENT The Southern Pines Men’s Club has completed renovation of its clubhouse on East Pennsylvania ave nue. The Interior of the building has heen repainted, a new heating plant installed, billiard tables rebuilt and nevsr curtains and furniture ordered. Dr. George C. Herr Is president of the Club, 8jid Eugene Wodward sec retary and treasurer. James J. Warren, Canadian bank er and industrialist, died last Satur day at his winter home on Wey mouth Heights, Southern Pines at the age of 68. Death followed a heart attack of short duration. Mr. Warren, who had come here for several years, was president of the Trusts and Guarantee Company of Toronto and had been president of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company for twenty years. It is Canada’s largest silver produc er. At his death Mr. Warren was president also of the Kettle Valley Railway Company in British Colum bia, which he built as a subsidiary to the Canadian Pacific Railway. He was managing director of the West Kootenay Power and Light Company and a director of the Canada Starch Company. He was a member of the National Club In Toronto and the Union Cljb, Victoria. Mrs. Warren and a daughter, Mrs. F. W. Perclval, accompanied Mr. Warren to Southern Pines early last month. Another daughter, Mrs. Har old Hummell of Vancouver, and two sons, James W'arren of Edmnlton and G. M. Warren of Vancouver, also survive. Funreal services were held in Toronto on Wednesday. School Children of County Net $733.64 in 1938 Seal Sale Drive From Flop to Top Best (iymkhana Ever Prom ised /or Southern Pines Next Thursday Afternoon j Colored Pupilsi Collect $230, [ Whit© $503 For Campaign Against Tuberculosis Here The Sandhills is to see the last word in Fashion Shov/s thl.s Spring, the biggest and most colorful affair of Its kind ever staged in the Sand hills. This was decided upon Wed nesday morning at the regular meet ing of the Plnehurst Hospital Aux iliary. The affair will take the place of the annual Hospital Ball which has been held for several years for the benefit of the Auxiliary's char ity fund, and will feature the latest evening gowns, wraps and sports wear from a Pinehurst shop, modeled by a selected group of society wo men of the Sandhills, and by pro fessional models from New York. The Fashion Show is scheduled for Tuesday night, March 28th, the first night of the Plnehurst Horse Show. After serious consideration by the members of the Auxiliary it was de cided to vary this year’s program and to offer something different. Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Razook presented a fashion show at Lake Placid during the past summer which was both an tertalnment here. Their offer was ac- fPlease turn to page eight) The next gymkhana will be held In Southern Pines next Thursday af ternoon at 2:30 o’clock, and plans are In the making for the most exten sive equestrian event here thus far this season. The last gymkhana, due to the absence from town of several officials and many of those who us ually enter their horses, came close to being “a flop.” Chairman Fred erick H. Burke, just back from Flor ida, promises to make this one a “humdinger” to average up. "We’ll have the best program, the most horses and the most riders we’ve ever had here,” he told The Pilot yesterday. “We have postpon ed it from this Friday, as scheduled, until next Thursday for two reas- one: first, there’s to be a gymkhana In Plnehurst this Sunday, postpon ed from last week; second, we want plenty of time to prepare for this affair, because we’re going to make It 'the top’.” Mid-South Golf For Women Here March 20 Patty Berg, National Champion, Expected To Defend Title She Won in 1938 Mary Ellenore Eddy Married Last Summer Mr. and Mrs E C Eddy of Sou thern Pines Announce Betroth al To Harold B Smith The committee In charge of the 11th annual Women's Mid-South Golf championship tournament, to be held at the Southern Pines Country Club Monday, Tuesday and Wednes day, March 20, 21, and 22,1 this week announced the schedule of prizes for this event which has drawn the elite of women golfers since Its Inception In 1929. This year ^ I the tournament will be played on Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Eddy of South-1 greens of the club for the ern Pines announce the marriage of f**st time. their daughter, Mary , Ellenore, to i The championship trophy will go Harold Bryant Smith of Lakeport, N. | to the winner of the low gross H., on last July 22. j for 54 holes. There will be a prize Mrs. Smith Is a graduate of the! fo*" . anner-up, second low gross. Southern Pines High School. She at- j ^ for low net for the 54 holes, tended Qu6ens-Chlcora College In j the second low net. Prizes Charlotte and Is a member of Alpha i wUl also be given for low gross and Delta Theta Sorority. | net for each 18 holes. Mr. Smith Is the son of Mr. and | Entry is by invitation only and Mrs. Harry L. Smith of Lakeport, N. j no entry fee or greens fee will be H., and Is a graduate of Laconia | charged. The No. 1 champlon.ship High Schol. He attended th Unlver-1 course will be available to entrants sity of New Hampshire n d Is a j for the two days before the tourna- member of the Phi Delta UpsUon ment. Entries close March 17. More county can justly second the sentiments of Mrs. T. A. Cheatham of Pinehurst, chairman of the Coun ty Tuberculosis Committee who told The Pilot this week: “I wish to com mend the fine co-operation of the county schools in the 1938 Seal Sale campaign.” A total of $733.64 was collected by the pupils of the schools of the county, Mrs. Cheatham reports,” and we have five schools yet to hear from.” Fourteen schools topped their quotas, thus earning for their own health uses the ten percent bonus offered them. These .schools, with their total collections, were: White—Plnehurst, $149.42; Aber deen, $75.00; emp, $69.00; Carthage, $61.00; Southern Pines, $35.00; West End^ $30.00, and Vass-Lakevlew, i $21.90. Colored—Eastwood, $35.00; Car thage, $34.00; Southern Pines, $30.00; Pinehurst, $25.00; Aberdeen. $21.00; Eagle Springs, $10.00, and Spies, $10.00. Honorable mention goes to the Eiastwood colored school which, though but a one-teacher schol, led the colored division with collections of $35.00. Mrs. Edna Taylor of Pinehurst is th-. tf.scher. In the entire coi'nty, the w'iilto schools collecteJ .S503.13. the colored $230.51. Figures for the cf)unty other than the returns from the schools aie not sufficiently complete fo'- publication IMs week, Mrs. Cheath^'.m announced. Several towns have not a.v yet turned I I their reports, as moiicy is s'lll dribbling in.” But tho county chair man felt safe in slatinsj to The Pilot that the total receipt-^ in the county for the campaign against tuberculos is will top last year’s total. LAUNCH CAMPAIGN TO RAISE $600,000 FOR boys: SCHOOL Fraternity. His father is '...slstant State Engineer of New Hai.ip^ire. The young couple plan to make their home in Nashua, N. H. It is expected that the present na tional champion. Miss Patty Berg, who won this event last year, will (Please turn to page eight) A Gift For Health Mrs. Kealing Sends Check for $118.21 To County Phy sician. Dr. J. Symington with the final payments from the llq,uidation of the Page Trust Company Mrs. Francis T. Keating of Pinehurst, president of the Health and Welfare Association has sent the Moore County De partment of Health a check for $118.21, to be used for definite purposes. "We are very grateful for this check as it will help greatly in our work and will be used for the purpose designated,” the Cour,+y Health Officer told The Pilot. T. Ashley Haywood of Rock ingham Elected Chairman of Trustees at Meeting Here full BOARD IS CHOSEN Following promptly the approval of plans by the Boaid of Trustees of the North Carolina Preparatory School for Boys at the dinner meet ing held in the Carolina hotel at Pinehurst last Saturday night, the campaign for the Building Fund was launched this week under the direc tion of the newly elected chairman of the board, T. Ashley Haywood of Rockingham, and with the a.ssist- ance of Francis M. Osborne, execu tive secretary and J. A. Baldwin, assistant field manager. The plans call for raising $600,000 for build ings and endowment. Citizens of Moore, Montgomery and Hoke counties have pledged $20,000 for tlic! purchase of land on Midland Road, to be donated to the school when the first $100,000 of the build ing fund is subscribed. The executive committee of the .school will con duct the campaign for funds and has divided the state into five sec tions, with these cities as headquar ters: Charlotte, High Point, Raleigh, Rocky Mount and Wilmington. Board of Trustees The following were elected mem bers of the executive committee of ♦he trustees: Mr. Haywood, chair man; Dr. Paul P. McCain, State San atorium; Dr. Henry L. Sloan, Char lotte; O. Arthur Kirkman, High Point; Rev. Dr. T. A. Cheatha-n and Mr. Osborne. Other members of the board, in addition to the executive commit tee, announced at the meeting are: .Tames S. Ficklen, Greenville; J. E. L. W'ade, Wilmingtdn; Leslie Weil, Ooldsboro; Dr. W. D. James, Ham let; the Rev. J. Fred Stlmson, South ern Pines; A. H. Oraham, Hillsboro; Jack Joyner, Statesville; J. Ed Mills, Fllgh Point; Dr. Oren Moore, Char lotte; Frank O Sherrill, Charlottet; Trank O. Sherrill, Charlotte; John F. (Please turn to page eight) SUFFERS FALL I’ROM HORSE Fred B. Wilmshurst, of Rumson, N. J., and Hasty, near Laurinburg, suffered a fall while jumping a fence on one of his horses near Southern Pines on Wednesday and is confined to the Moore County Hospital. His condition is reported as not seriouB. North Carolina is getting more than value received for Its annual expenditure of $125,000 in advertis ing the state, Robert L. Thompson, private secretary to Governor Hoey, told the Sandhills Klwanls Club at its luncheon meeting held Wednesday in the Mid-Pines Club. And Mr. Thompson backed up his statement with a recitation of facts and figures which proved most Interesting and enlightening to the Klwanlans. “The value of advertising should be appreciated by the Sandhills,” he said, “for this section saw the light long before the rest of the state. But I doubt that even you realize how much has been accompltsjied by the advertising division of the De partment of Conservation and Devel opment, and how serious will be the future as well as the immediate loss to the state In the event this pro gram is sacrificed on the altar of false econemy. "For North Carolina to drop State advertising at this time would be as foolish as it would be for Plnehurst to plow up its golf courses in order to save the salary of a greens keeper. It is the most profitable i»»vei)tment of $12.5,noQ il probabLy ever made in our history, t “But, first, let’s a fev^f facts for I claim to be at least a God-father of this baby and I’ll ad mit I’m prejudiced. ‘‘Because It took tlm? to map out policies, select ftn agency, buiJd up a publicity office and make neces sary MfltftctM ae well a« contrictS, it was not until the fall of 1937 that the program got nroving and certain ly things were not In full swing be fore January 1, 1938. Now that was about the time the recession got go ing. Nevertheless, according to Co- timates made by agencies of the United States Government as well as State agencies. North Carolina’s tourist business Increased by from twenty to twenty-five million dollars last year and today it is not only the fastest growing business In our State but its gross annual return of $64,000,000 is equaled to one- third of our much vaunted tobacco crops. Gasoline Taxes Was the advertising program en tirely responsible for this? It most certainly was NOT. There were a number of causes, including the Great Smoky Mountains National Park which was visited by over 694,000 people. But don't forget this: Half of that park is in Tennessei and while North Carolina's gasoline consumption increased to the extent that we collected $1,241,000 addition al in gasoline taxes last year Ten nessee's consumption Increased less than half that much and In many states there was a decrease rather than an Increase In the amount of gasoline consumed. “Well, someone might say, do you think this tourist business will con tinue to increase and, if so, will It Increase only when we advertised ? Let’s answer tho.«»e hypothetical questions one at a time. The Federal government estimates that this coun try spends six billion dollars a year on travel. If you will admit that North Carolina Is even an average state, with no more than an average climate and an average attraction to offer visitors, we are still getting le: s than half the share of the average state, although we are larger than average in population and a darn sight better In most other ways. Certainly our tourist business should be doubled at the very least. “But, to answer the .second ques tion, we may a» w'ell give up hope of selling the attractions of North Carolina to the people ofthe oth^r sections of thig country unless we tell and show them what vre have to sell. How long do you think ‘The tuKn to page four)