Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Oct. 18, 1940, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
'fwd ^ THE PILOT PublUhed each Friday by the PLLOT, Incorporated, Southern Pines, N. C. NELSON C. HYdIe Editor DAN S. RAY General Manager CHARLES MLACAULEV Advertising Manager Helen K. Butler, Virsinia Cree!, Ressi^* Cameron Smith. Charles Cullinsford, Assoeiatet. Sub(wription Rates: One Year _. $2.(Ki Six Months $1.00 Three Months .50 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N. C., as second class mall matter. THE PILOT> SbutYief?! ytnii ah< North C«ro»n> Priday. October 18, IMO. THE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE TMC AUTOMOBllC IfJPUSTTt/ USES 68% OfTUB leather upholsterv IN TME ONITCP STATBS GIRLS WILL BE BOYS Girls will be boys. Or it looks that way. It’s getting to be the excep tion when you can walk along the streets of Southern Pines these days and not pass a long- panted lassie. It prompts us to second the motion of the Yale Daily News, which recently edi torialized; “There, revealed before our eyes, is the story of an activity so subversive as to stagger the imagination. We call on the President to hurry to the near est fireside and declare a na-; tional emergency. The women'Dr. Medlin Champion must be deprived of their pants. “This country was founded on the principle that women con stituted a weaker sex and ded icated to the proposition that a ■woman’s pliice was in a skirt. It is indeed a sad commentary on the inherent treachery of women that in this hour of trial mankind should be cruelly stab bed from behind in its most vul nerable spot, it’s collective pants. ‘We of the News feel that BOSMess ^ 60¥BHmemf*i^ IT CO«T» 3 CtNTS 10 ! 9CN0 A lETTtR IN -mC — rxit AMOiwr, -Tht P)*y* 7MT yj-nt Oftr n ouiffVioi itfn» IT VtKes tiMosr 2 yf/fJK TO SfiOW A fit/flAPPU AMRtlCAN IDURKIV UfT yUM SPtNT AMlliOM OOMtnH. OOUMtS FOR EQOlPMCNf. sirr*. AND SOUVTNIM TUe FW.tT ‘MACHIHC SUN' WAS USCP 8y 1ME AMVRICAN AttMIC« IN IB60- if coNtifTEP OF A fcone OR A^O«tC TCfMRArn «(IN BARRCtS MOUNICP ON A CARRIAM Many Come, See and Buy at Opening of New Curb Market Attractive Building: in Southern Pines With Ample Show Space, Pleases Farm Women Slot Machines Out They Mysteriousyl Disappear After Judge Orders Sher iff To Seize Them Many visitors went to look and re. n-alned to buy when they attended ►he formal opertlng of the Home Dem.^ ''nstratlon Curb Market in the com.| modlous new budding next to the ■^rade Store in Southern Pines Sat-^ ■fciay, and along with the new cus. tomers were many who long ago 'earned of the values in flowers and^ farm produce fresh from the coun. 1 try which the home demonstration -lub women offer from week to week. | I The women are delighted with their new place, for in addition to having ample space in which to dis. j tlay their wares, which include pverything Imaginable from the farm, | there is plenty of room for customers to stand and chat and the friendly WOMANS CLl’B MEETS mosphere of the place is one of Its HOME OF MRS. MATTHEWS outstanding charms. The Curb Market is governed by | The Vass Woman’s Club met Mon. a market committee and the home day evening in the home of Mrs. agent, and special rules and regula. ^ Hertle L. Matthews with Mrs. C. J.j tions are established. No effort is j Temple, Mrs. C. L. Tyson, Mrs. W.| The Catholic Daughters will have made to undersell the local stores. T. Cox and Mrs. Leon Crutchfield as'a card party and social tonight, Frl. but prices are kept in line with associate hostesses. jclnv nirht. at 8:00 o'clock, at their those prevailing in town. There Is no Mrs. Charles Gschwind of the pub. new hall at No. 9 N. E. Broad street, delivery service and no curb market He welfare department had charge Mrs. Irving and Mrs. DeBerry act- seller is allowed to peddle her prod, of the progrram. which was present.! ing as co.hostesses. Slot machines have dUappeared mysteriously from nooks, and cor. ners in Moore county, after doing a flourishing business In nickles and dimes for some time. A superior Court order was re. ceived by Sheriff C. J. McDonald to seize them as illegal, but ap parently little birdies flew around the county and warned the op'jr. ators that something was brew, ing, for the Sheriff found them all missing when he started on his rounds. Training Course For Girl Scouts Oct 24,25 Helen Gillord. Field Adviser, To' Conduct Two-Day Program at Country Club Miss Helen Gillard, Field Adviser of Region VI and National Camp Dl. rector of the Girl Scouts, will hold a Leaders’ Training Course at the Southern Pines Country CTub on Oc tober 24th and 25th for Girl Scout 'caders and committee members frona the Sandhills and neighboring com- munitle.;. The public Is particularly Invited to attend the meeting on Thursday I evening. At this meeting Mi.ss Gillard jvill explain the Girl Scout program after which there will be a general I discussion. I The program for the two days la jnp follows: 2:30 Thur.«!day afternoon. I Session for new leaders and com- Imittee members: 8:00 Thursday eve. ining, General meeting; 10:30, Friday morning, Intermediate program; 2:30 Friday afternoon. Brownie program; I 8:00 Friday evening. Senior program. CAHO IV •JT YTONIGHT of Yadkin Golf Club Grains of Said His 280 Wins Annual Touma-t ment by Close Margin Over Frank McCaskill acts on the streets on curb market ed by Mrs, W. J. Cameron, Mrs. H. C. j days. The market Is kept open from Callahan, Mrs. S. R. Smith and Mrs. 8:00 a. m. until 1:00 p. m. in order W. P. Parker. to give employed persons an oppor. ^ reported that the club had 'iiii'.ty to shop during the noon hour, sponsored a shower of household Ka'^1’ seller turns in fivo per cent cf poods and food for a colored family October 9th was a big day in thei’’"'' ’^ceipts lor the upkeep of the v-hose home had been burned and that market. | more than 1000 quarts of fruits and During the almost ten years since vegetables had been canned in the| the Curb Market was organized, club-sptonsored WPA canning project, Pilot Want Adt Pay. CJschwind home in Vass. Paul Gschwind observed his 80th The annual Yadkin Club golf birthday, which wag also the birth- thousands of dollars have been real-'for use In the school Iimch room. , ^hanipionshlp was won this year by^days of his grandson, Paul Laubscher, ized by the farm women from their' m^s. P. A. Wilson, Mrs. W. B. Gra. j great grandson, Johnny .surplus fruits, vegetables, poultry, ham, Mrs. C. J. Temple, Mrs. B. M. | ! eggs and flowers. ] Corbett, Mrs. A. K Thompson and of Switzerland, Mr.' — ' Mrs S. R. Smith gave interesting Gschwind came to Vass from New | WHUNG WORKERS TO MEET j sidelights of the recent district meet. I ing in Lillington which they attended. Dr. E. M. Medlin of Aberdeen. Dr. | and his Medlln’s net score for four rounds of Laubscher. medal play was 280. Frank McCas.j native kill of Pinehurst was a threat to the while the situation is desperate Itou™ament„ j york city some 40 years ago, and, all is not yet lost if the men of "The Dutchman,” was soon firm. Yale will take a firm stand on 1 "T"*’ ly established in the regard of the this all-important question. It is a fight to the last flannel, and may the best tweed win.” SOLVING THE UNEMPLOYMENT PROBLEM The Willing Workers of the Bap.' Two contests were enjoyed dur. ' '■'> I Church will meet on Tuesday af. ing the social hour and prizes were behin^d^at the^fin'sh”^” , older citizens of the town, most of|temoon, October 22d at 3:00 o’clock awarded Mrs. H. A. Borst and Mrs. T, .V ^ . .. whom have already passed on. He Is Pt the church, with Miss Ann Hunt.! Odell Oldham, Mrs. D. C. McGill and Both Dr. Medlin and Mr. McCaskill .. j ^ ^ ^ I. ^ ^ c i. JT still active and always ready to do! ington and Mrs. Ralph Mills actmg Mrs. S. R. Smith. The hostesses serv- Putting the country on its feet after the Depression of the early thirties is one of the prin cipal pampaigm boasts of the Roosevelt administration. Let’s lake a look at some Unemploy ment figures which are close to home The North Carolina Unem ployment Compensation Commis sion reports this week that it has distribufjf'd $16,370,462 to unemployed and partially unem-[same days ployed workers of North Caro lina in the 33 months of bene fit payments. From the Sanford office alone—Moore county is covered by this office — 35,691 checks have been sent out to unemploy ed, totaling $211,834. Nearly ‘2,000 checks went forth received medals. Prizes were given t j * u V .J. ir 11 o . .anything possible to accommodate a Herbert Vail and Dr. T, A, Cheat-' ham, who finished third and fourth, • with scores of 287 and 289. Saturday and Sunday, October 19 nnd 20 will bring out many golfers who will try to finish their summer Solf by winning one of the prizes donated by the Pinehurst Country Club for a blind bogey tournament ^o see how a red.blood-' | to be played on the popular No. American could vote for a fifth ^ ^ 1 course. Anyone who plays either columnist son, pure.blooded Ger. | Faturday or Sunday is invited to en. M*"- McLean wrote. "Kiss the ^ t PERSONAL B«alrlcc—whet did you l«H the S«wlnf Orel* that day? Waa it •bout one baking powder be ing best lor all kinds of recipes? Yea, that’s what Beatrice said, and she waa talking about Rumford. For with Uumford 70a can uae any good recipe without worrying about how much baking powder to uae. The amount tlie directions call for is the right amount to use ot B''<nford.... Rumford con tains no alum—never leaves a bitter taste. Send for a FREE recipe book. Address: Rum> ford Baking Powder, Box Ci Bamford, Rhode Island. ' There might just as well be no election in Moore county. Nobody’d dare vote for Willkie after the let. ter in last week’s Sandhill Citizen by E. D. McLean of Aberdeen. cd refreshments as joint hostesses rfWniTTIt BAKER’S FOOD STORE Dial 5681 Free Delivery Service Dial 5681 ter this event. No entry fee will be German cow if you choose. It’s your | || charged. There will also be a blind privilege whoever desires.” hogey event for the ladies on the Have you asked the F. B. I. to in vestigate this fellow Willkie, Mr. McLean? Sounds like a spy, to us. i ^ DR. OVERCASH’S FATHER | | begins razor. ILL SEVER.VL MONTHS, DIES ••E^^ery time Bruce ing with his electric month. And these totals do not include benefits to colored peo ple. Is solving the unemployment problem at the expense of the taxpayer solving the unemploy ment problem? TAXATION' BEGINS TO TELL L. K. Overcash, 80, retired cabinet starts singing,” observed Mrs manufacturer, died Tuesd.iy night in Cameron of Manley to a caller who Pinecrest Manor Sanatorium here, had asked questions in regard to the j following several months of failing canary’s .singing, last, health. Mr. Overcash was a native of ^o try him out, Mrs. Cameron set American businesses and in dividuals are now betting a taste of the higher taxation that has finally become inevitable. Earlier this session Congress raised income tax rates in all brackets and lowered exemp tions, in order to bring into the fold thousands of low-bracket citizens who had never paid di rect Federal taxes before. Con gress ha.s agreed on still another Statesville and spent his life there, ^jje razor buzzing. Although Jerry His wife, the former Miss Alice Alex- chirped a note since the ar. nnder, died two years ago. guest, he immediately Surviving rie two sons and two into song. daughters, H. B. Overcash of Hamp. den.Sydney, Va„ and Dr. W .E. Over. ...what’s My Name?” asked A. B. Atkins in the following letter printed in the Sandhill Citizen of Aberdeen last week: Margaret and Luola Statesville. Overcash of I could ^ New York in a great mansion. I never knew what work reasonable expectation, '•hange the outlook. No one doubts the need of neither did my father, spending for defense. The Amer- However, I know more about your ican people will not be chary of or business than you do. As dollars when their liberties' are » boy l had two or more nurses and threatened. But certainly the ® governess to answer and satisfy American people are entitled to every whim. During the last war demand a degree of efficiency in when most men of my age took up government greater than any we country, through p^ii know today or have known in ^ received a cushion job as Assistant the past. Efficiency means, of Secretary of the Navy (thut an older course, getting the most weapons experienced man could tax bill, levying substantially i and material for each defense h^^e filled better), i practiced law in heavier taxes against industry, j dollar expended. More than this. Wall street, defending “bucket shops.’ particularly in the matter ofiit means carrying on the other ^ joined just two business ventures; excess profits. necessary government activities of them proving 100 per cent Our taxes are now the highest at minimum cost. It means the Josses to investors long before the in our history. Even so, the rev- elimination of any activity collapse of 1929. i served four years enue resulting will be far from which does not fall into the es- Governor of a great state and sential category. It means cut- wrecked its finances. I have served ting a few thousand dollars off eight years as President of the great, the ajjpropriation for small de- est nation in the world and now have partments no less than cutting the worst mess in its history, millions off the appropriations While my wife, sons, and daughter, for the big departments. through the prestige of my office, Higher taxes mean sacrifices Jwa<ie a fortune, i now want to for all the people. We will be continue myself and family in office able to afford fewer luxuries— forever. What’s my name? and we ,?hall have to rnake th“ most out of the necessities. It is Jot of the old timers hung around adequate to pay for what we are spending. The answer to that is more deficit-financing — which simply amounts to charging to day’s bills against tomorrow’s income. No economist believes that the tax boosts so far ap proved by Congress are anything but a modest beginning. In com ing sessions further increasof!, more severe than anything we have evei’ known, V7iii in all; the duty of Government to see Draft registration headquarters probubilitj’ piassed. Only a, that the people’s sacrifice is not Wvo-nesday, acting as if they were miracle, which would raise the in vain—that, in short, ft gets fbout to go in—hoping passersby national income far beyond anyjlOO percent value in return. jwould think,they were under 36. On the job from 6:00 o’clock in the morning to 7:30 in the Even ing with the best Service possible to give. Charge accounts for your convenience. PORK CHOPS PINK SALMON KRAFTS’ Electric Cut Limit 5 Cans Mayonnaise Any Thickness Pints—24c Lb.-19c Special—11c Quarts—37c EXTRA SPECIAL: FISH CROAKERS, 4 lbs. 25c MARKET SAVINGS Tom’s All-Pork Home-Made Sausage 17c Hot Dogs, lb 17c Spare Ribs (Home Killed), lb 14c Pork Livers, lb He Pot Roast (Steer Beef), lb 15c Fryers, (home killed) 24c Fowls (home killed) lb 21c Roan Butter, 1 lb. roll 34c Fat Back, lb 7c Ham (tender made) sliced, lb 27c GROCERY SPECIALS Pineapple Juice. 47 oz. can 24c Grapefruit Juice, No. 2 can 5c Armour Dog Food, 10c value. 2 for 15c Chase and Sanborn Coffee, lb 20c Break-A-Morn Coffee, lb 15c Pure Rio Coffee, lb 9c Macaroni, .3 pkgs 9c Matches (5c size) 3 for 9c Potted Meat (5c size) 2 for 6c Puffed Rice and Wheat 5c k EXTRA SPECIAL: FLOUR, 24 lb. Bag 59c N. C. OfSTERS PURE LARD SWIFTS JEWEL Pts.—21c 2 lb. Pkg. LARD Qts.—39c 17c 4 lb. Pkg. 37c No. 1 Potatoes, 10 lbs. 17c No. 2 Potatoes, 10 lbs —13c No. 1 Onions, 10 lb. Bag 29c IMill-Feed, 100 lb. bag $1.69 Good Table Meal, pkg 21c Chatham Chicken Feed; Yellow Corn, 25 lb. bag ... 55c Loose Grits, 3 lbs 9c Salt (5c size) 2 fdr 5c EXTRA SPECIAL: HEINZ BABY FOOD, 3 for
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1940, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75