Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Jan. 24, 1941, edition 1 / Page 2
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PaKe Tw« THE PILOT Published each Friday by THE PILOT, Ini'orporatetl, Southern l*lnes, N. C. NELSON C. HVDE Editor DAN S. RAY General ManaRcr CHARLJ^S MAGAULEV AdvertiHing Manager Helen K. Butler, Viritinia Creel. Bessie Cameron Smith. Charles CulliniEford, Associates. Subscription Rates; One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months -50 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N. C., as second class mail matter. THE PILOT, Southern Pines, North Carolina Friday, January 24, 1941. iTHElPOCKETBOiQKi KNOWLEDGE THEY SHOW THEIR APPRECIATION' Colored people of Moore county set out in last Fall’s Christmas Se^l Sale to raise $500 toward the fight against tuberculosis. They appreciated the fact, they said, that most of the money annually raised here went to their people, either for prevention or cure or care. They wanted to show this appre ciation. They organized among themselves as they had never organized before. Result: $535.44. Over the top by a goodly margin. And to their further credit, one-quarter of the total Seal Sale in the coun ty. . . , 1 Colored school pnncinsiis ami teachers were the spark-plugs in i the campaign. The reports from the schools show the following receipts: West Southern Pines, $136.10; Academy Heights, Pinehurst, $83.49; Pinckney High School, Carthage, $75.20; Eastwood School— a two-teach er institution principaled by Edna Taylor—$36.00; Aberdeen School, $35.75; Vineland, West End, $25.00. These are only the BILLION DwecnviwtoMBiE iHswKxr ymKinf SOCKS. AtBJ Of imMO fill thbk sKfs wrm m WTDMOBll.e AUDvmiCMViWlP 1WERE were /WORE 1W*N SO KINDS OF Tims in TM6 U.S. BFRJRE 1883, when fHE FOUR ZONES OF StflNWRP "nWE WEBE AIWTEP BI6 Defense flfOBiSM FOR MOUSTW-^ H TAKES POVH YFAtS TO BUIID A MOI^RN WmESHlP Twe iNPusmvnDie UNlTtO TntTBS uses />eouT I.33S.OOO MACHIHE TtXXS— AV INWSTMmr or BnuoNS Of Potl/HfS Pinehurst Paragraphs I benefit chain parties for the hospi- I tal recently have been Mis. A. J. I McKelway, Mrs. Paul Dana, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Winifred Hawley and Bill Viall, student at Carolina Uni-. Mrs. Donald Parson, Mrs. Chailea 'ifant daughter. Patricia Ellen, of versity, is spending the week-end Waterhouse nad Mrs. M. W. Marr. Durham arrived Saturday and are with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R.; Miss Doimthy McKenze is vi.siting uests of Mrs. Blanche Wescott. Viall. He brought two classmates, friends in Sarasota, Fla. The high Mr, and Mrs. Joe Doggett and chil- Thomas Markham and Fletcher Ball- ■ school in Concord where Miss Mc- *ren, Nancy and Billy, of High Point oy of Elizabeth City home wtih him. Kenzie teaches has closed on account vere guests Sunday of Mrs. Dog- Mrs. J, M. Hagood is a patient in of the flue epidemic, sett’s biother, Lloyd M. Tate and the Mootie County Hospital. | Mrs. Isabel Cabot McMullen has as 'smily. Miss M. P. Smith of Boston has her guest her sister-in-law, Mrs. Ca- Mrs. Harry Hogg has returned returned and opened the Romanes bot of Boston. The Girl Scouts were rom Englewood, N. J. and Patterson Shop for the fourth fortunate in having Mrs. Cabot, who Mr. and Mrs. Douglas MacMillan season. .is a member of the National Board and Mrs. J. L. MacMillan of Red Mrs. Ralph Barrett. Mrs, Norman Scouts, speak to them ■Springs were week-end guests of Calcutt, Mrs. Roy Kelley, and Mrs. ^ Miss Ruth McEnery entertained at Miss Jane Gibbs. | Harold Kelly, were hostesses at the luncheon at the Gray Fox Friday for Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Smith an- Community Church tea last Thurs- the following guests: Mrs. John S. nounce the birth of a son at the day. This week Mrs. Frank McCaa- Zeiie, Mrs. George E. Fletcher. Mrs. Moore County Hospital Monday, kill, Mrs. H. J. Callaway and Miss John Watson, Mrs. James Tufts, January 20th. Elsie Thomas were hostesses. ‘ Mrs. Edward Ol.sen Field, Mrs. Glenn Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hale left Mrs. Lewis Johnson was hostess to C. Thompson, and the Misses Carol Tuesday for St. Petersburg, Fla. They hei' bridge club last Thursday even- Hotchkiss, Eleanor Sanford, Peggy plan to return in February to spend ing and last night the club met at W'arren, Stella Phillipps, Jane Mc- .he Spring season with Mr. and Mrs. the home of Miss Helen Ruth Cole. Mullen, Anne Hotchkiss and Mary A. P. Thmopson. ! Among those entertaining with Evelyn Phillips. J The first bill introduced in the House thi.s session by Moore county’s lepresentative, J. Hawley Poole ot West End, has to do with the fight on the Japanese beetle. In collabor ation with R('X Gass of Forsyth county, Mr. Poole asks $50 000 for combatting the pest which scourges crops and shrubbeiy. The bill says that unless the State makes an ef fort to control the insect, the U. S. quarantine North Carolina “All of the huge building program leaders. One hundred percent of j the schools contributed some-] thing, and more than in any i previous year. They did it in va-j^^ ^ _ rious ways; some children went| without candy for a week and Secretary of War turaed in their savings; caddies I informed.” h€Llped others with a percentage ^ of their earnings. They sacrific ed, and they worked. At a meeting in Carthage, a rising vote of thanks was given to Mrs. T. A. Cheatham of Pine hurst, county chairman, for the help she had given the colored people in helping stamp out tu berculosis among their people. Thirteen of the 21 schools re porting will receive a ten per- advertising pay? cent bonus for raising their quo- subscriber in Wade.sboro. We spotted him and a party of five at Sunday's polo game in Pinehurst r.nd a.sked him what brought him r.way over here. “Saw the polo game ad. in The he said. result of falling off of or out of mov ing automobiles or trucks on North Carolina streets and highways has heen noted in recent weeks, the High- v.ay Safety Division reported this wok. Five such fatalities were recorded in December', and two more during the first two weeks of January. .ALBERT WEBSTER COLTON WEDS IN CLEVEL.XND, O. the National Defense Advisory Com mission, issued January 14th. It con tinues: “As a result, about 7.900 of ficers and men already have moved into housing cifTXpleted sfhce Sep tember 1, 1940, and construction of buildings to accommodare the re mainder of nearly 65,000 men is pro gressing mpidly.” MODERN MERCHANDISING LaLst Christmas the volume of goods sold at retail was the largest in our history. Millions' puot of Americans thronged stores of i all kinds. Some of them bought! From Urbana, Ohio comes this ten-cent gifts. Some bought' news item: presents costing thousands of I "Persons prominent in national and dollars. All of thenj got what | state harness racing circles were they wanted—and they got it at’among the 300 persona attending a a reasonable price, whether it dinner here Tuesday night (Jan. 1!) was a fur coat or a box of groc- in honor of Hugh M. (Doci Parshall. eries. They bought nationally noted Urbana reinsman, ivvice-win- known brands of goods, and they | ner of the famed Hambletonian.” bought private brands. And | Among those present was Ben they knew that they were get-, Mayo, of North Carolina, member of ting the quality they were pay- | the National Board of Review and of Elizabeth Ann Sibbing, of Cleve land, Ohio, daughter of Mrs. John Sibbing. became the bride ot Albert Webster Colton, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Colton, on Jan uary 11, in St. Peters Church. Cleve land, The Rev. George Dennerle, pas tor, pei-formed the marriage and read the nuptial mass. The bride was .^maitly attired in a cost\ime suit of golden beige and wore a beautiful shoulder spray of brown orchids. Her attendant, Mrs. Elmer Bodenlos, of Detroit, wore a costume suit of wa- tei-fall blue, with a corsage of yellow tea roses. The br-idegrooni, former resident of Pouthern Pines, is a brother of George Colton of Colton and Fergu son. and of Mrs. H. J. Maloney, also of Southern Pines. PINERLUFF Miss Louise Britton and H. L, Britton returned after spending sev eral weeks at their home in Great Kiles Staten Island. Mr. and Mrs. John Fiddner and Mrs, Howard Troutman spent Thurs day in Salisbury visiting Dighton Fiddner who is a patient in the Row an Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Warren Smith is getting along j nicely after undergoing an opera- | tion in the Moore county Hospital. I Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Bell of Fay- > etteville wei’e week-end guests of Mr, and Mrs. E. G. Adams. ; Mrs. J. V. Adams ard daughter, I MiSs Elizabeth, and Ralph Graham j spent Sunday afternoon in Laurin- j burg visiting Mrs. Adams’ brother The Sandhills Kiwanis Club’s Annual Baby Pagf, for the sujiport of its bod in the Children’s Ward of the Moore County Hospital, was jjublished in The Pilot on Jan uary 10, with a long list of generous con tributors. In the printing, however, one list ot Southern Pines names was overlooked through error, and The Pilot takes pleasure in publishing this addenda. Those whose names appear here have each contributed to help the Kiwanis Club help the county's underprivileged children: Macks 5 and 10 Store Dr. W. E. Overcash Postal Telegraph Dr. William C. Mudgett Eugene C. Stevens Hiram Westbrook Montesanti’s H. A. Lewis P. Frank Buchan Southern Pines Laundry Jack’s Grill R. F. Potts N. L. Hod;,kins Garland A. Pierce Broad Street Pharmacy Paul T. Barnum The Belvedere Hotel Tots’ Toggery Franjeans L. D. McDonald BAKER’S FOOD STORE Dial 5681 Southern Pines, N. C. Dial 5681 Specials for Friday and Saturday, January 24th and 25th, and for All Next Week; Pork Chops Maxwell House Fresh Electric Cut Any Thickness Coffee Country Eggs Lb.—19c Lb.—24c Dozen—29c FLOUR (Every Bag Guaranteed) 24 lb. Bag 67e All Pork Sausage, Home-Made, lb. ,19c Skinless Franks, lb 19c Smoked Sausage, lb. 19c Pot Roast (Steer lleef), lb. 19c Good Stew Beef. 2 lbs. 19c Oleomargarine Butler, 2 lbs 19c Pa. Cream Cheese, 2 for 19c Hams (Small Country Pork) lb 19c Virginia Oysters, pint 19c Fat Back Meat. .3 lbs. 19c Pure C()ffee. lb. -Matches (,^c size). .3 for P. & G. Soap (5c size). 3 for New Potatoes. Florida (Jrown, lbs. Nice Yellow Onions. lbs. Cabin Syrup, can l*an Cake Flour. 4 20-oz, pkgs. Corn (Fancy .Maine) 15c value IJnen White qt. .size Beech-Nut Catsup, large size ing for. i the board of trustees of the U. S, Most of us don’t give much Trotting Association, thought to the retail industry. “The speakers’ table was set up We take it for granted. We know, before a black backdrop, and above ^ that the stores are always ready |V.-as suspended a sulky with a large ^ho is a patient in the hospital there. | „ to serve us—that their shelves j drawing of “Doc," match in mouth. I Mr. and Mrs, Willie Overton and i n are filled with the luxuries and pentered, between the shafts,” the Mr. and Mrs. Wayland Corzort of necessities we want. Retailing article said. The affair was sponsoi - j Durham were guests at the home of j today is a miracle of efficiency, Fraternal Order of E.-Igies, J s Cozort Sunday. ! ;• Behind the particular stores we ^ “Doc” Parshall, until his recent re-, The annual business meeting of the ll patronize lies an intricate, su-[ t'^ement from the trotting arena. Pjnpijjuff Library Association was perbly developed system which 1 trained his horses in Pinehurst has no counterpart elsewhere in the world. That goes for the chain store, the progressive in SMARTY DOG FOOD, Mb. Can 9c 10c lOc lie lie 15c 2.5c 10c Me 10c 4e 11 Armour and Star Milk, 4 Large Cans—27c .3 Small Cans—10c Pure Lard 2 lb. Pkg—18c 4-lb. Bucket—39c Pillsbury Best Flour 5 lb, Bug—24c dependent store, and the super market. All 'of ihem want our trade—and all of them are striv ing to do a better job, and to give the consumer more for his money. The service they render the public has resulted from free competition—which is the Amer ican way of doing business. In this country, any man has the right to open a retail store. He has the right to take customers away from his competitors if he can. He has the right to try new ideas, new innovations, new sales techniques. And those rights are the consumer’s best guarantee of a fair deal. The It grew pretty cold the first of the week, but it hasn’t been cold enough yet this winter for Eugene (General) Woodward to don an overcoat. held Wednesday afternoon at the Li brary building. Mrs. Charles War ner, president, presided. Interesting reports rrelating to the year's ac tivities and the book circulation were given. OfficeiB were elected as fol- I lows; President, Mrs. Anna McMinn. An “epidemic of accidents in director for two years, Mrs. Hazel which persons have been killed a j a j Allison and Mrs. Than Wells. ~~~ Mr. and Mrs. John Morgan an- “gyp’ merchant doesn’t last nounce the birth of a son, John David, long. ' fit their home on Sunday, January Think of that next time you i2th. Miss Anna Mae Diehl left Satur day for Durham where she will un dergo treatment in a hospital there Miss Winnifred Hicks of Friend ship, N. Y„ is a guest at the home of Mrs. Helen Hawley and Mrs. Vi- via Sherman. Mrs. Dan Mangnira, Mra. Margar et Folley and Mrs. Abby ?hank spent .Saturday in Durham. go shopping^. Remember that no where else in the world has re tailing reached so high a peak of efficiency and service. The person who lives in a tiny town gets the same goods at the same prices as the person who lives in a great city. That’s how mer chandising, in all its many branches, serves its country. MAINE NO. 1 POTATOES, 10 Ihs. 19c STEAKS ~ STEAKS Round Steak, lb. 25c T-Pone Steaks (small) 29c Sirloin Steak, Ib. 39c Hamburger Steak, lb- 19c CHICKENS Home Fed and Dressed Broilers, lb. oQr Fryers, lb. 29c Roasting Chickens, lb. 29c Fowls 24c BROOMS (29c value) 2\c . Peanut Butter Mb. Jar—lie Closing Out School Tablets 3 For—5c Odds and Ends Xmas Candy l-<b.—5c DELIVERY SERVICE EVERY HOUR-CHARGE ACCOUNTS FOR CONVENIENCE Mill I Ill t
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Jan. 24, 1941, edition 1
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