Page Eight THP] PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina r'riday, April 12th, 1940. KHURCHBll At the Church of Wide Fellowship Sunday morning at the 11;00 h. m. morning worahip the pastor will preach on the theme, "Come Unto Me.” At the 8,00 p. m. evening hour there will be spirituals, plantation melodies, and dialect reading by the “Cotton Blossom Singers” from the Piney Woods School in Mississippi. Church School at 9:45, O. L. Broom, Superintendent, John \V. McMillan, teacher of the Men's cla.ss. Youth League at 6:30 for High School Young People. Mr-s. E. Levis Prizer counse. lor. The Fellowship Forum Evening Wor.ship at 7:00 p. m. “Arc Sin, Disease, and Death Real?” is the subject of the lesson, sermon at the Christian .‘Science Church Sunday mpi’ning nt 11:00 o'clock, Sunday School convenes at the same hour. The Wodiie.'iday even, ing meetings are on the fir.st and third VVednesdiiy.s of the month at 8:00 o’clock. The Re:iding Room, which i.s locnt".! in tho church, is open AVedne.^day afternoons froin 3:f>0 to .’i :00 o'clock. Dr. I. a. Oreer of tli' Baptist Or- phan.'>go at Thoni.TRvinp. will preach fit the 11:00 o'clock .=:>nvico i5tinday morning at the Eapti.st rhuvi’h. n.M’TIST <>KI’H\V\r.K HK\n TO i*KK\( II iiFftK •>;r\n\Y Dr. T. G. Greer. C.onoral Superin tendent of the B.iptist Orphanage of Tlionia.sville. will preach at the Sou. them Pines Baptist Church Sunday morning. Dr. Greer will bring with him the Orphanage Trio which ha.s won statewide honors. Rachel, the or. phan girl supported by the women of the Southern Pines church, will accom pany the group. Dr. Greer is one of the most attractive platform .speakers in the state. He i.s known and remem bered here for his present.ation of Club la.st spring. The public is cor- Alountain Folk Lore at the Civic diaily invited to hear him Sunday luoming. Bentley Here, Tells of European Experiences (Confirm'd frmn page one) passenger. The home trip was made in the remarkably fast time of six days despite the fact that the ship was zig-zag:ed every eight minutes to avoid submarine dangers. It made about 25 knots an hour during the daytime. The vessel carried 695 pas sengers, most Canadians and Aus. tialians returning home. Describing a London blackout, Bentley said "the street lights are cov- I ered so that only a tiny light is vis- 1 ible through a .slit In the covering. The trams and all motor cars carry ! only one small blue light. To guide j traffic during a blackout, the curb.s 1 and street cro.ssings are paijited ■ white.” He spoke of how odd it seem ed to .see no children in such a large city as London, following the evacua. tion. The young man was particularly distres.sod at the news this week of the Gomian occupation of Denmark r.n,i Xnr\v:iy. He visited in homes in Copenhagen and was impre.ssed by the people and their hopeful atti tude that peace might remain for them through .strict obsei-^-ance of neutrality. “I feel deeply for them," he .said. Morrell, whose father, Lieut. Alvin Morrell Bentley, for whom he was named, died overseas during the Woi'ld War before he had ever seen hi.s .son. will he graduated from Mich, ignn this .June. Following graduation he will be married in Coronada, Cal., to Miss Mary A. Paterson of Coron- rida. the engagement of the young couple having been announced two weeks ago. Broughton Aide IN I'LAV Miss Lanie Ruth Gunter, .\berdeen. has a leading feminine role in the Greensboro College Players' produc tion of Si.ai:“speare'.‘! Mid-summer Nights’ Dream," which will be pre sented the evenir.g.s of Friday, April 19 and Satun'.ay. Apjil 20 at 8:15 o'clock in Odel! Memorial auditorium. j In rliiehurtit I "Wholehearted respon.se of a case- ^ hardened Hollywood preview audience ' to this strikingly unusual and brll. liantly handled subject stamps it I outstanding entertainment on any i basis of judgment," is what the crit- ‘ ics say of "My Son, My Son,” the at- \. C'.\KLTO\ Ma<I)t)NAI.I) A. Carlton MacDonald of South ern Pines, deputy commi.vsioner of the Unemployment Compensation Commission, has been appointed "full time field worker " in J. M. Biough- ton's campaign for governor, il was announced this week by State Man ager E, B. Deniiy of (iastonia. H? has obtained leave of absence from the UCC in order to devote his time to the campaign. MacDon.nld is the son of the late Dr. A, A. MacDonald of Jack.son Spring,-; and a graduate of Oak Riilge Institute and Duke University. tJKN. BlfV nKN, rOKT UK \(>0, UKPI TY ( IlIKK OK STAFF traction at the Pmehurst Theatre Sunday night, April 14th at 8:30 and Monday, April 15th, at 3:00 and 8:30 p. m. Howard Spring's best selling t.ovel of a coddled son's malevolent influence upon the life of the father who has sought to give him all ben. cfits of wealth and culture denied in his own youth is by no means typical niatetial; it is superlative in every one of its 115 minutes. The group of brilliant performances, with little to choose in degree of excellence, offers Brian Aherrr. Madelainc Carroll, Louis Hayward. Henry HuP, Laraine Day, Bruce Le.-ster and Josephine Hutchin.son. It is entertiinment of a high Older, a credit to all concerned in its effeitual transition from novel to screen. "It All Came True," the attrac-1 || tion at Pinehurst Wednest! ly, April I SOUTHERN PINES, N- C- Yes the New Dobbs Hats Are Here Our Ready to Wear Sale in on in full swine’. We are offering- values you cannot .afford to pass. We are also having a Sh«e Sale of bl’oken sizes, Red Cross, Slater and other Rood brands ‘ire included ’n this sale. New low ])rjce on Hosiery. .11 MOIi ( IVU C U B TO sl’oxsoK "BoVk«:iJA' Southern Pines will have a “Bow ery Ball" next Tuesday night at the Civic Club, arranged by members of the Junior Civic Club, and everyone i.s invited to go in costume and en joy the fun. Prizes will he preFented for the most original costume and for the school pupil who sells th<' most tickets. The admi.ssion is to be one dollar per couple for the general pub. lie, .50 cents a couple for high school .students. Nine to 1:00 will be the hours, and Baxter's Orchestra will furnish the music. Judges of co.stumes will be Miss Florence Campbell, Mrs. F, Levis Pri zer and Mj’s. Norris L. Hodgkins. Aberdeen theatrE Saturday, April 13 M.VTIN'EE 3:no P. M. Ni>*hl at 7:1.) and 0:00 “THE OKLAHOMA KH)” .lame,'^ Ca.crney Humphrey FJogart Rosemary I.ane Donald Crisp .\I>:o Chapter No, 13 “DICK TRACY’S (l-MEX” with R.VLPH HYRD — PHYLIS ISLEY Monday and Tuesday, April 15, 16 Niprht at 7=30 and 9:15 “SHOOTING HIGH’ Gene Autry Marjorie Weaver Katherine Aldridge Jane Withers Frank MT Thomas Robert Lowery It’s GEN'E and JANE at their BEST! Wednesday, April 17 Night at 7:30 and 9:15 CASH AWARD NIGHT Free Consolation “KING OF THE LUMBERJACKS’ John Payne Gloria Dickson Stanley Fields Thursday and Friday, April 18, 19 Night at 7:30 and 9:30 “VIRGINIA CITY” Errol Flynn Miriam Hopkins Randolph Sc'>tt Alan Hale Humphrey Bogart Frank McHugh (Conti»\(rd frnm nnrio nvr) ant colonel and in 1935 was made a colonel. Only two years later he at tained his present high rank as u brigidaire general. (5en, Bi-yden's first post upon grad uation from VVe.st Point was at Fort Russell. Wyoming, but in 1908 he wa.s tiansferred to the Philippines. Re- tiu-ning in 1908, he became an in. .‘tructor in mathpm,aties at West Point, a position which ^e held until 1912. He then went to the Army’.s field artillery center at Fort Sill, Okla. During one interval away from Fort Sill he served as aide to Maj. General Thomas H. Barry and as a member of general staff corps in Chicago short’y after the outbreak of the World War. He was ordered to Europe in May. 1919. and attended the cour.se of the army center of artiller.y studies at Tieves, Germany. Returning in Au. gust of 1919, he served in the War Department as a member of the Gen eral Staff. He then attended the command and general staff .school at Fort Leavenworth and at the conv pletion of his cour.se remained as an instructor until 1927. He then returned to Washington to attend the Army War College, and upon grad uation entered the office of the Chief of St.Hff a the executive officer in the rffice of the Chief of Field Ar tillery. General Brvden went to Hawaii in 1931 as executive officer of the 11th Field Artillery Brigade. Shortly af ter his return in 1934 he was arrign. ed to duty with the operations and training division of the War Depart ment general staff. On September 16, 1937 he assumed command of the 16th Field Artillery Brigade at Fort George G. Meade. Less than a year later he was or dered to Fort Bragg to command the 13th Field Artillery Brigade and arrived there on May 11, 1938. In ad dition to his duties as Fort Bragg’s Commandant, General Bryden has been in command of the Civilian Conservation Corps District since July 1, 1938. WIIXI.XM G. SW.XN DIE-S, WINTER RESIDENT IIERK 17th at 3:00 and 8:30 p. m. is real ttmiUXltti: entertainment, with a handful of ex cellent cast names ,a lively stijry and a well.told, swiftly-paced .story i .ndaptnble anywhere as good all .aud ience effective screen fine. Much of the interest, of cnnrno ,is apt to cen ter about Ann Sheridan, who turns in a fine job in a style r^'miniscent of . the late Jean Harlow, but much is | contributed by the characterizations j of the boanling house "regulars,” who j are Zasu Pitts, as a FpinEt.ei’, Una O'Conner. Grant Mitchell a? a poet, t.nd F’elix Bressart as a broken-down vaudeville magician . | An unu.sual attraction, and a decid. cdly worth-while one, i'> 'Florian.” the attraction at Pinehur.vt Friday April 19'.h, which, by-the-way. is a premiere showing, and the one which had to be postponed from its original ly advcrti.sed date because it was not fini.shed in time. It is of particular interest to all lovers of finf horses. The Lippizan stallion named in the title is one of six of his b'-.^ed in Ain'terica. A descendant of a long | Ime of cavalry mounts bred by the Hapsburg for the defence of .\us. tria and him.self a product of the world-famous Spani.sh riding school, | To any horse conscious audience this .splendid animal'.s performance, high-; !ighted by his superb demon.stration of trained ability, is a rare treat, quite independently of story plot and biped ca.-3t. The cast is headed by Robert Young and Helen Gilbei t. The Pinehurst showing of this attraction will be the only one in this country lor some time. In Southern Pines The attractions at Southern Pines are again return dales of the out standing attractions, beginning on Monday and Tuesday, April 15, j|[ with a Tuesday matinee, of that'« pranid attraction, “Rebecca." with > |» Deanna Dvirbin in "It's A Date" on ; Wednesday and Thursday, April 17, 18, with a Ti-.ursday matinee; fol lowed on Friday and Satiu'day. Ap. lil 19, 20, with a Saturday matinee by that hilarious comedy. "Too Many Husbands,” with Jean Arthur, Mol- vyn Douglas and Fred MacMurray. GONE WITH THE WIND will not be shown anywhere except at advanced prices... at least until 1941 BUY RESERVED SEATS NOW FOR HIGH! SHOWS & SUKDtr MtTIKEE ($1.00 plus tax) WEEKDAY MtTS. Continuous NOl RESERVED (7Sc lncl.taxi CAROLINA THEATRE — PINEHURST Sunday, Monday, Tue.sday and Wednesday (t Day.s) April 21, 22, 23, 24—8:00-P M Matinees Monday, Tuesday and Wedne.sduy at 2.00 P. M, Price.s: Nights—Main Floor and Balcony $1.10 Boxes—$1.65 Prices; Matinee.s—Main Floor and Balcony 75c (not re- .served). Boxe.s—$1.10 CAROLINA THEATRES Pinehurst - Southern Pines Present At Pinehurst At Southern Pines EDWARD SMALL DR. TOWNSEND OF “PL.\N” TO SPEAK IN ST.ATE William Gardner Swan, 85, a patient in the Moore County Hospital for a month, died in that institution‘last Friday. Mr. Lrt'an, the son of Reuben Swan end Mary Wilson Swan, was born in Charlestown, Mass., May 11, 1854, and for many years was engaged In the grain business in Milton, Ma.ss., where he was also assistant t»-easurer of the Milton Savings Bank until his retirement IK years ago. At the time of his illness Mr. Swan was residing with his daught er, Miss Florence Swan, the recent purchaser of a winter home on Ver mont avenue, Southern Pines. A son, Durelle Swan of Amherst, Mass., also survives. Funeral services were conducted in the village church of Dorchester Liower Mills, Mass., on Sunday. Mbre than 25,000 drivers’ licenses have been revoked by the Highway Safety Division since 1935. Townsend Club No. 1 of Southern Pines extends an invitation to the public to hear Dr. F, E. Townsend speak at the following towns in North Carolina; April^I7th^ States ville Courthouse; April 18th, Concord armory: April 19th, Salisbury court house: April 20th, Goldsboro Court, house, afternoon and evening . WANT S LOST: Pocketbook and watch, last Thursday on Indiana ave., South ern Pines. Reward for return of either or both to Mrs. Howard Butler Indiana avenue. A,26 FOR SALE: One eight foot Frigi. dalre. Phone 7264, Southern Pines, N. C. tf. buy your eggs THE DAY THEY ARE LAID. Dan S. Ray, 1 mile South of Southern Pines. First road right, beyond Suggs Dairy. SOR RENT; Pleasant centrally locat ed apartment, also single rora. Lilian A. Roberts, comer Pennsyl vania avenue and Ashe street, op posite public tennis courts. FOR RENT: Two and three room apartments, very reasonable. The Ellington, 31 West Vermont Ave., Southern Pines. Sunday NijrM. Anril 14th, 8:30. Monday, April 15th S.'OO and 8:30 p. tn. Story le T«ni lEFfREV lYNN HUMPHREY BOGART 1 IKOS Fitt* hctvt tARlHTTS'UNAOCONNOROESSIE BUSLBY JOHN UTEL • h LEWIS SEILER Pbv by FtMiM tad Kiabto Wednesday, April 17th S:00 and 8: p. 1^: Also: The New March of Time Magazine. Friday, April 19th 3:00 and 8:30 p. m. SEIZNICK INTERNAnONAl pr«t«nf| REBECCA starring LAURENCE OLIVIER JOAN FONTAINE Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK Produced by DAVID O. SELZNICK who mode "GONt WITH THf WIND" Released thru UNITtO ABTISTS Mon. and Tues., Apr. 15th, 16th, 8:15 P. M. Matinee Tuesday at 3:00 o’clock Deanna] Wed. and Thu., Apr. 17th, 18th Matinee Thursday at 3:00 Merriest marilal battle in years! ^ ClnctiiIkyWt3ls)f!sn'n'Sc(;M^!tybyCMBiqoi Fri. & Sat., Apr. 19 &20 Matinee Saturday at S:00

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