0 Vj4p U. N. C CAROLINA ROOM G MOORE COUNTY’S LEADING NEWS-WEEKLY THE A Paper Devoted to the Upbuilding VOL. 19, NO. 52. 6PRINC9 VAtft ^ /lAKKVlCW JAO(«OH SPMlhOS SOUTHBRN pmM PINSDUiF^ PILOT FIRST IN NEWS, CIRCULATION & ADVERTISING of the Sandhill Territory of North Carolina Aberdeen Southtrn Pines, North Carolina, Friday, November 29, 1940. Pinehurst FIVE CENTS CHRISTMAS GIFT BUREAU TO AID NEEDY PLANNED Civic Club Sponsors “Clearing House” That All May Be ' Remembered MEETING ONt FRIDAY Plans are in the making for a Christmas Bureau in Southem'Pines this year and a meeting of those be hind the movement is to be held thla Friday afternoon at 5:00 o'clock in the Civic Club. The Civic Club is sponsoring the plan which, in the words of Miss' Laura Kelsey, welfare chairman of the organization, ‘‘is a ‘clearing house’ for all Christmas giving so that there will be no duplications, and all needy families or persons being remembered and no one left out. “This can be accomplished,” Miss Kelsey says, “if all churches, organi zations, schools or individuals who do charitable giving at the holiday reason will cooperate." Details of organization will be dis cussed and worked out at the meet ing on Friday. Two Polo Games Pinehurst Meets Bragg on Thanksgiving, Winner to Play N. Y. A. C. Sunday Polo will be the highlight of the week at Pinehurst. On Thanks giving afternoon starting at 3:00 o’clock Fort Bragg will play the strong Pinehurst team in the sec ond game of the Aiitmun tourna ment. and the winner of this con test will meet the New York Ath letic Club team next Sunday after noon in the finals. Both games promise to be thrill ing, and there is no question that there will be a big turnout from all over Moore county for the con tests. RED CROSS ROLL CALL NETS $1,300 IN SOUTHERN PINES Generosity of Donors Sends City “Over the Top” of Quota By $456 CAMPAIGN 13 SUCCESS MORE NEW BOOKS, SPEEDIER SERVICE AT S. P. UBRARY Fellowship Forum To Present Religious Play “Simon, the Cross Bearer” To Be Given at Wide Fellow ship Church Sunday “The play’s the thingi” Thus thought the Fellowship Forum, the Senior Young’s People’s group of the •Church of Wide Fellowship. Accord ingly, this Sunday evening, will mark the beginning of evennig services at the church, and the forum is taking over for the first service of the sea. son. The time is 8:00 o’clock, Decem ber 1st. The play, “Simon, the Cros.s Bear, er,’ by Dorothy L. Marshall, has its scene in the carpenter shop of Simon cn the fifth day after the Resurrec tion. Following is the cast of char acters: Simon, the Cyrenian, Milford Grantham; Zara, wife of Simon, Mary Alice Tate; Rufus, twelve-ycar-old son of Simon, Edith Davenport; Po ll nus, a Roman soldier, Charles Aus tin. The director is Algene Hoskins; promoter, Lois Hall; stage director, Dorothy Tate; make-up. Iris Tate; lights, Robert Henderson and Dwight Hoskins. There will be special music by Viiss Hazel Getchell, violinist and Mrs. Charles Gray, organist. No admission charge is made, but a free-wil'. offering will be taken. Remember, you have a date with the Forum at 8:00 o’clock this Sunday right. Southern Pines responded magnifi. cently to the annual Red Cross Roll Call, just completed. With a quota of $844 established on the basis of last year's drive here, and despite the fact that there waa a mid-year campaign for the Red Cross War Emergency Fund, a to tal of $1,300 is reported this v.'eek by Miss Florence Campbell, Southern Pines chairman. This tops the quota by $456. Miss Campbell expressed deep grat. ification “for the generosity of the people of Southern f»ines and their loyalty to the Red Cross. The result of the campaign of the 28 workers bere seems like a miracle to me," Miss Campbell said. Mrs. A. Burt Hunt, county chair man, reports that the same spirit of generosity which pervaded Southern This week the Southern Pines Li-j Pines was evidenced throughout the brary will open a new Special Service county, and although returns are not department. It is the purpose of this' yet in from many of the districts, department to supply more new fhe anticipates a record over-subscrip- books, more promptly, to its readers. I tion in the 1940 Roll Call. In the past, because of the limited I — :rt J McCnmmon Dies ‘ Library should be permanent addi- I tions to its shelves. This has meant Carl Thompson, Jr., to Head New W P A Project in Si^ r: I SEAL SALE OPENS FURTHER WAR Southern Pines Resident To Di rect Universtiy-Sponsored Work Service Program Special Department Opened This Week To Provide Latest in Publications Here in Her 84th Year University Glee Club Opens Forum Season North Carolina Students To Give Concert at Pinehurst Coun ty Club Dec. 5 I that many books, well worth reading, I W'idow of Kenneth McCrimmon, ihave had to be omitted from tBe* One of Fort Bragg Settlers j monthly lists. It has meant also that^ Before U. S. Purchase I it was impossible to supply an ade- j quate number of duplicates of books Funeral services conducted by the especially popular, and that long Mullis, with the Rev. E. L. waiting lists were inevitable. A speC'^ assisting, were held in Be- ial fund has now been set aside Church at 3:00 o'clock Monday the establishment of this new depart-!Mrs. Frances Fergu- ment. It will endeavor to s'apply the^"" McCrimmon, who died in her 'book you want the time when you^*’°”'® niiles east of Southern Want it: best sellers, popular fiction,!^'"®® Sunday mornnig. mysteries, duplicates. j Born in Cumberland county July The charge for this service will be 16. 1857, the daughter of John Mc- tliree cents daily for books with- Lain Ferguson and Kate Priest Fer- drawn, plus a deposit of one dollar! Si'son, Mrs. McCrimmon, the widow (returnable) for those who are not of Kenneth McCrimmon, had passed regular library members. The pro-{her 83d birthday by three months, ceeds from circulation will be turned' Long a neighbor with the once num- (Please turn to page fight) erous clans of Priests and McCrim mon who relinquished their holdings in the making of F'ort Bragg for new homes on the easterly border of Moore county, Mrs. McCrimmon was for many years affiliated with the Mrs. Peg Gainer Suffers Broken Manley Presbyterian Church. Survivors are two sons, John R. McCrimmon of Southern Pines and Grover McCrimmon of Manley; one daughter, Mrs. E, C. Calloway of Southern Pines. Interment svas at Bethesda cemetery. Carl G. Thompson, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Thompson of Southern Pines, was this week named by C. C. McGinnis, Rtate WPA Administra tor, as State Supervisor for the Workers’ Service Program, a new type of community service project just approved for operation in North Carolina. Workers’ Service propects will be developed in areas where farm and industrial workers desire a broader knowledge of industi'y, leg. islation, labor and community prob lems, and want opportunities for greater educational and leisure time activities to be carried on through group activities. Th program will serve members of the organized labor movement, indus trial clubs, rural groups, and other similar groups of wage earners which requests aid in developing activities of this nature. The project is set up to give employment to out of work people capable of working with work ers’ groups in developing classes and discussion groups, recreation, art and craft activities, information service centers on labor and social legisla tion, visual aid workshops, and pre paration r(|9earch material foe use with wage-earning groups. The WPA project is spoisorcd by the University of North Carolina, through its extension division, and will cooperate with government and private agencies in planning and car rying out its program. Thompson Is a graduate of South ron Pines High School and the Uni versity f North Carolina and was formerly a member of The Raleigh I News and Obsei'ver staff and con- I nected with the State NYA. For the I past year he has been field represen- I tative for the Southern Summer j School for Workers, on independent ! workers’ education institution. WPA Supervisor CARL G. THOMPSON, JR. PARR LAND GffT IS MEMORIAL TO JOHN L. McKINNEY \Vidow, Resident of Southern Pines, and Daughter, Present Acreage to Titusville, Pa. \ "'I County Lx/mmittee Hopes to Top $2,000 Mark of Last Year To Aid Work COLORED SET $500 GOAL The Pinehurst Forum will open its Reason at the Pinehurst Country Club on December 5th, presenting the University of North Carolina Glee Club under the direction of Clyde Keutzer. Mr. Keutzer has succeeded John E. Toms as director of vocal music in the School of Music of the imiversity. Mr. Toms is on sabbati cal leave from the University, and Is with the Philadelphia Opera Com pany. The members of the Glee Club will be the guests of various Pinehurst hostesses before the concert. At a meeting of the advisory board of the Forum held Monday it was de. cided to abolish membership dues fhjs season, making the regular pres entations open to all. Voluntary con tributions are* expected to meet the financial noeds of the organTzation, and are solicited from all interested. Those at Monday’s meeting were Mrs. J. D. Hathaway, Dr, T. A. Cheatham, Donald Parson, and J. Pryor Williamson of Pinehurst, Pres ton T. Kelsey and DeWltt B. Nettle- ton of Southern Pines, and H. F. Seawell of Carthage. Mr. Nettleton is chairman. Nine Injured in Car Collision Near Hemp Back.—Five Rushed To Hospital One hundred and eighty acres of adjoining land has been presented to the Drake Well Memorial Park in Titusville, Pa., by Mrs. John L. Mc Kinney of Southern Pines and La- Grangeville, N. Y., and Miss Ethelyn McKinney of Greehwich, Conn. The erift is made as a memorial to the late John L. McKinney by his v.id- ow and his daughter. The land comprises beautiful wooded hills east and west of the present park, and some land south of the park in which are locted pre historic oil pits. The purchase was niadfl from the Preston e.«?tate which retains the mineral rights. Perhap.<) none of the first genera tion of oil men in Oil Crek valley in \\'omen of Emmanuel Episcopal Penn.sylvania was better known than John L. McKinney, and his interest Sale by Auxiliary ot* Articles Made by Blind Church To Aid Sightless Workers December 10, 11 in the petroleum industry continued for a period of over 70 years, or un- A sale of artide^hearth brooms,' t** » f®"' years prior to his death on! knitting bags, woven rugs, leather, ®^ay 20, 1937, aged 95. He was taken' etc made by the blind of, Nine persons, all occupants of the car of Peg Gamer of near Hemp, were injured Sunday afternoon when their car collided with a pick-up truck driven by a Mr. Davis. The accident occurred about six miles north of Hemp on Route 705. According to Iniformation gained by officers investigating the wreck, Davis, whc resides in that commun ity, started to make a right hand turn and the Gamer car, evidently being operated at a terrific speed, tried to pass him on the right. The Gamer car struck the pick-up, sped on against an embankment, left the ground and landed on its radiator 22 steps farther along the way, The first car reaching the scene ot the accident picked up the five Orphanagre Head Is Speaker at Kiwanis Joseph B. Johnson Attributes Happiness of Children to Con tagion of Neighborliness The contagion of neighborliness, of the kindly spirit, is respolslble for the happiness of the children at Barium Springs Orphanage, Joseph John son, head of that Presbyterian In stitution, told members of the Sand hills Kiwanis Club at their annual Thanksgiving meeting at the home most seriously injured and rushed of M!rs. J. R. Page In Aberdeen on them to the Moore County Hospital. I Wednesday. The proceeds of the Another car going In the opposite meeting are dedicated to theorphan- directlon carried the other four to the Randolph County Hospital in Ashe- boro. Mr. Davis escaped injury. Mrs. Gamer is reported to have sustained a broken back and two or three of the number had legs brok en. Officers had been notified that Garner was driving while intoxicated and had ben looking for him for two hours before the accident occurred. In the car with him were his wife, bis mother, a grown sister, a Mr. Richardson and four children. Gar. ner s brother or sisters. All occu- There are few days in the year pants of th^ cat except the children when golf cannot be played in the are reported to have been drinking. Sandhills. age each year. Mr. Johnson told of the apprecia tion not only of himself and his as sociates but of the children for the support given the institution by the public. The knowledge that they have so many friends gives them the feel ing of parenthood which they would otherwise lack. The club, in addition to its grfft to the orphanage, voted |10.00 to the Moore County Tuberculosis Associa tion at Wednesday’s meeting. goods, Moore county and North Carolina— will be sponsored by the Woman’s Auxiliary of Emmanuel Episcopll church and held in the Thrift Shop on Pennsylvania avenue on Decem. her 10th and 11th. This effort to help is the result of a talk given before the auxiliary by Mrs. Edna Keeler, a representative of the N. C. State Commis.sion for the Blind. The articles have all been made under the Intnictlon of a blind teacher, and all proceeds of the sale are returned to the makers. Only the President V/herein Talbot Johnson Finds Tobacco Market Visitor is Head of Princeton A young looking man stood watching the tobacco auctioneer, sellers and buyers with keen In terest on the floor of one of the Aberdeen warehouses on Tuesday, so keen. In fact, that J. Talbot Johnson, president of the Aber deen Chamber of Commerce, who was also present, engaged him In conversation. They chatted for several min utes, and Mr. Johnson asked him where he was from. He said Princeton, New Jersey. “I am thinking of sending my son there," M!r. Johnson said. "Are you connected in any way with the university.” “Yes, I’m its president„” he answered. President Harold W. L>obbs of Princeton, guest this week in Pinehurst, was deeply interested in the proceedings at the ware house. in Weymouth Heights, Southern Pines, and rushed by private car to, Titusville where he lived but a few j days. I Bom in Warren county of a pio-; old when Col. Drake drilled his well in Titusville. The stories of fortunes to j he made In oil thrilled the young man | and his older brother, James Curtis ■ McKinney, who decided, against the j advice of their father, to engage in the oil business. Plon«!er in Oil The success of the McKinney brothers is well known to all of the That one .short period of the year vhen all funds for the fight against tuberculosis in Moore county are rai.sed is here. The Seal S.hIo is on, right after Thanksgiving and extend ing until Christmas. More than $2,000 was raised in last year’.s campaign; the County Committee, of which Mrs. T. A. Cheatham of Pinehurst is chairman, hopes to better this fig ure this year. In an interview with The Pilot this week, Mrs. Cheatham outlined some of the work accomplished during the pHst year, some of the reasons why generosity Is needed for the work of the cr>mlng year. Twenty-seven cases were cared for by the County association during the past year at the State Sanatorium. Nine out of ten cases were dis missed as arrested cases. Four died In the Sanatoriuin, Two cases are now on the waiting list for admission to the Sanator ium. There are at present only two in curable outside cases in the county, a smaller number of incurables than ever before. Five of seven children who were in the Sanatorium have been rettimed to school. The.se figrures, by comparison with leports of the associaoion In its ear lier days?, reveal the tremendous Im- Drovemonts in conditions in the coun_ ty, due to the work of the County nsscciation. That thia work must go on, and that it will eventually result in Ihe elimination of active cases in homes in the county, appears self- evident. The Seal Sale for the colored peo ple this year is being handled by the colored people them-selves with Paul 11. Brown of Southern Pines as chair man, a.ssisted by a committee of four comprising J. W. Groves of Carth age, treasurer, C. H. Flagg of Pine- I'lirst, S. L. Cnlbert of Carthage and Edna B. Taylor of Pinehur.st. They will be assisted by all the colored teachers of the county acting as lo cal chairmen in their communities. The colored workers have set $500 as thpir goal for the county, $131 more than their record high of last , year, which was $369. Local Chairmen Mrs. Cheatham announced this week the local chairmen for the county, as follows: Aberdeen, Mrs. J. B. Edwards; Ad- dor, Mrs. Henry Addor; Cameron, Mrs. J. S. Snow; Carthage, Miss Ro- zelle WilUi'.mson; Eagle Springs, Miss .. Watson; Eureka. Miss Marv elder residents of western Pennsyl. ^ . , . . VI » T » B'ack; Glendon, Mrs. June HarrinE- vania. The keen foresight of John L. . „ , ’ _ ® „ I,. t .e * , I ion; Hemp, Mrs. W. Stuart Evano: McKinney as to the future of the ^ „ ’ I , , - ... .iHigh Falls, Miss Lucy Reynolds: lusiness made him one of the most , , „ . . j Jackson Springs, Miss Lola Carter; successful of hundreds whose advan tages were equally as god as his. Mr. McKinney was among the first of the independent operators to ap. predate the advantage of co-opera- tion and he threw his interefts with the Standard Oil Co., of which John D. Rockefeller was the head, and he worked with Mr. Rockefeller through the years. In the early days, Mr. McKinney was president of the first dll ex change In Tituville, organized as a private enterprise In 1871 and con tinued as Its head for many years. SON BORN NOVEMBER 20 TO MK. AND MRS. PAUL C. BUTLER Mt. Holly, Mrs. G. P. Jones; Pine- bluff, Mrs. J. M. Townsend; Pine hurst, Mrs. Leroy Gates; Roseland, Mrs. Lottie Lowder; Samarcand, Miss Reva Mitchell; Sliver Springs, Mrs. W. M, s)iannon; Southern Pines and Manley, Mrs. Clara Pushee; Sprin^leld, Mrs. Lee Comer; Vass and Lakeview, Mrs. S. R. Smith, and West End, Miss Alberta Monroe. The Pinehurst “drive day’’ will be this Saturday, November 2flth. FRANJEANS CELEBRATES ITS SECOND BIRTHDAY A son, Paul Carraway Butler, Jr., was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Butler of Southern Pines on Wednes day, November 20th in the Moore County Hospital. Mrs. Butler and her son are expected to return short ly to their home on Midland Road. Mr. Butler is president of the South ern Pines Junior Chamber of Com merce. Franjean’s on West Broad street. Southern Pines, ds celebrating its second anniversary this week. It was ji'st two years ago that Mrs. Paul C. Butler and Mrs. Clarence Edson openml their attractive shop for Mi- Ipdy, under b. name selected from their own given names, Frances and Jean respectively. They have made a splendid success of their undertaking and have become one of the establish ed business houses of the Sandhills, with a large clientele.