-^^OUNA ROOvf WOORE COUNTY’S LEADING NEWS-WEEKI.V THE A Paper Devoted to the Upbuilding VOL. 20, NO. 22. Aberdeen >^AHTHAOe aACUK SPAINCS E.NO I 0ACKSO«—^ ^MANUEV SPRihOS UkK EVISW Pines ^SHUSY MKICHTS PILOT FIRST IN NEWS, ClRCl'LATION & ADVERTISING of the Sandhill Terri tor;,, ^ North Carolina Southern Pines. North Carolina, Friday, May 2nd. 1!>41. Plnehurst \ Noore County to Play Part DEFENSE SAVINGS In Largest Army Maneuvers | Ever Held In United States; BONDS, STAMPS, GO ON SALE HERE Area Between Forts BraKK and Jackson To Be Used in October, November On State Board Scores Visit Postoffice On First Day of Offerinjfs by Government 100,000 TROOPS IN FIELD SIMILAR TO “BABY BONDS” Moore county will play a part in i the largest field nianeuvers ever held in the United States, with 400,000 troops actively participating. Morej than 5,000 square miles between Fort' Bragg and Fort Jackson, S. C., will ' be used for the maneuvers, to be held during October and Novenibcr, ac- | cording to announcement by General Hugh A. nrum, commanding the I First Army. The announcement was made Tues day following a conference held by General Drum and other high rank ing Army officers with Governor Broughton in which satisfactory ar rangements were made for securing use of the land in the North Carolina counties. A similar conference, meet ing with similar results, was held earlier with Governor Burnet May- bank of South Carolina, where eight counties are included in the desig nated area. Governor Brioughton Immediately issued one of the very few procla- tion of his administration, deslgnat- ^ ing Col. .Vjhn W. Harrel.TOU, dean of ' the State College unit of the Great er University of North Carolina, aa maneuver director for the State and calling upon all citizens to cooperate. Acquisition of permission to use the necessary land is to be complet ed by June 15, and Col. Harrelson will innnedlately act up a council in each of the eight N(4rth Carolina counties, working with State College Extension Service agents and AAA committees in making his selections N'eed TrespaHN Rights Trespass rights are to be secured on most of the open land in Union, Anson, Stanly, Montgomery, Moore, Hoke, Richmond, Scotland and Cum berland counties. In addition, the army will lease small areas to be used for two months as bases. There will be no permanent acquisttlon of any land and there will be no build ings erected as men engaged in the rr.jinuuvers will live In tents. Two opposing forces will engage in mock battle, one from Fort Bragg and the other from Fort Jackson. Soldiers engaged will be drawn from the entire Eastcn\ soaboard and other nearby states. Two mechanized divisions, one on each side, will be engaged and the Army air force will play an important part in the mane uvers, and It is expected that the KnollwooU Airport here will be headquarters for one or more squad rons. Two entire armored divisions will be tested thoroughly over the sandy terrain, which encompasses the Pee- dee and Wateree rivers. General Drum said the two principal streams in the area were a major factor in choosing the site. Bulk of the troops to engage in the maenuvers will be from the east ern seaboarxJ, from Maine to Georgia, with additional men from Alabama, Tennessee and other states. Largest previous maneuvers in volved 95,000 troops and were held last year in northern New York un der command of General Drum. The General said plans had not been completed, but indicated the op erations would be held under “actual war conditions,” and snid that was ‘ why the vast area was chosen.” It has been officially announced by the War Department that the Sandhills Resettlement Area of 65,- 000 acres in Richmond and Scol1aii.d aunties has been acquired for the maneuvers. The resettlement project is only 25 miles from Fort Bragg and is on the main line of the Seaboard Airline railway and U. S. Highway No. 1. The Army has not required owner ship of the land, says the War De partment. The title is now held by the State Agricultural Department's Soil Conservation Division. Other sources report that the Army Is con sidering taking over the land, how ever. rk;h.\rd TUFTS of by Richard S. Tufts, president Pinehurst, Inc., was appointed Governor Broughton last Saturday as a member of the board of the State Department of Conservation and Development. Tufts, with Irving Hall of Raleigh and Oscar Breece of Fayetteville, r«present the Com merce and Industry division of the board. R. Bruce Etheridge of Kan- teo was reappointed director of the department which he has seiTfed for the past eight years. The United States Defense Savings Bonds and Postal Savings Stamps were placed on sale in postoffices in the Sandhills at the opening of bus iness yesterday as part of the na tional effort to make America Im pregnable. Postmaster P. Frank Buchan of Southern Pines announced that on the opening day of the sale, scores bought their first stamps and took home the albums irv which to keep them until they have acquired enough to exchange them for bonds. The first purchaser’ was Attorney W. Duncan Matthews, who told Mr. Buchan he had heard on the radio that mayors were supposed to pur chase the first bonds or stamps in each city, and "I am just anticipat ing.” Postmaster General Frank C. Wal ker, in a letter to postmasters throughout the country, said that the help of local postmasters would be “a real service to the country.” He transmitted the thanks of Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau for the help that local postmasters had al ready given in the sale of United States securities, and also Mr. Mor- genthau's thanks in advance “for the co-operation which he knows you will give to this new effort.” The new Defense Savings Bond Is similar to the familiar "Baby Bond, FIVE CENTS Stevens, Builder of Panama Canal, Hale and Hearty on 88th Birthday Noted Engineer Celebrates An niversary With Family Dinner at Home in Southern Pines S. P. COUNTRY CLUB PROPERTY SOLD TO MRS. NICHOLS Rid in at Receivership Sale for $6,000 by Corporation’s Largrest Creditor Attorney U. L. Spence of Carth age.- representing Mrs. Mortimer G. Nichol.s of Southern Pines, was the sole bidder at the sale under receiv ership of the Southern Pines Coun- tiy Club, anc., property yesterday morning at the courthouse In Carth age. Sold in two parcels, under the terms of the advertisement appear ing In The Pilot during the past four week.s, Mr. Spence bid $1,000 for the first parcel, $5,000 for the sec ond. The two cover the entire prop erty of the bankrupt corporation, in cluding the clubhouse, golf courses and building sites. The sale was madej by Howard F. Bums, receiver. Born In West Gardiner, Maine on April 25, 1853, John F. Stevens obsei’v- ed his 88th birthday at his home on Orchard Road, Southefn Pines last Friday. Here to celebrate the occa sion with him were his three sons and their wives: Mr. and Mrs, Don ald P'. Stevens of Baltimore, Md., Mr. and Mrs. John F. Stevens. Jr., of Boston, Mass., and Mr. and Mrs- Eu gene C. Stevens of Southern Pines. Mr. Stevens was in excellent health and fine spirits for the birthday din ner. Mr. Stevens, prior to his greatest achievement in the capacity of chief engineer of the Panama Canal Com mission at the time of its building, was engineer successively for the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad, the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul and the Canadian Pacific, and then was in charge of locating and build ing the Duluth, South Shore and At lantic which follows the south shore of Lake SupeVlor from Duluth bo Sault Ste. Marie. His services were then enlisted by Janies J. Hill, ■'the empire builder of the northwest,” to run Hill’s Great Northern Rail way from Montana to the Pacific Coast. Honored In West At that tim.j only tw'o feasible routes across the Rockies had been found. One was in the southern part 4 Score and 8 JOHN V. .STEVEN.S MRS. GREARSON OF HIGHLAND LODGE DIES SUDDENLY Proprietor of Popular Inn First Came to Southern Pines in 1917 iiV :/.G.Stutz Vs. Matthews For Mayor No Withdrawals, No “Deals” Sight, Just Fight to the Finish CAUCUS AT 8:00 P. M. in ac- Her numerous friends and of Montana, the other beyond ’ the'‘l^^intances of many years were pro- Canadian border. Mr. Stevens found ^o«ndly shocked by the news of the a middle route which permitted Hill's ®i*dden death of Mrs. Maud Harris road to run directly west from Havre, Grearson In the Moore County Hospi- Montana. This was Marias Pass, and o clock last Sunday morn- of-which more than five btlHon dol- there a statue paying homage to ^health lars worth have been bought by stevens was erected in 1925.;''“'' more than two and a half million Americans since 1935. A Defense Bond may be purchas ed $18.75. In ten years, this lK)nd will be worth $$25.00. This Is an Increase of 33 1-3 per cent, equal to an annual interest return of 2.0 Further west. In Washington, he proprietor of Highland Lodge. located a pass which has been nam ed in his honor. He was made chief engineer of the Great Northern sys tem In 1895 and general manager In 1902. In 1903 he went to the Chi- Southern Pines, was not known to be seriously 111 until her admission to the hospital Thursday night. Born at Bradford, Vt., in 1873, the daughter of Henry E. Harris and V. C. Watson Harris, Mrs. Grearson , cago. Rock Island and Pacific as per cent, impounded se'^‘-annual-j yjcg.president in charge of operation, ^'"an’e to Southern Pinns with her *^*’®[and on July 1st, 1905 was picked to i Walter H. Grearson in ^ p Wallace as chief, hopes that the climate would date of purchase, the bond may be ledeemed for cash, in accordance with a table of redemption values printed on the face of the bond. engineer of the Panama Canal. In 1907 he served ns chairman of the Canal Commission until the canal To spread investments widely placed in charge of the War De- among all the people in America, a partment. limit of $5,000 has been set on the (Please turn to page eight) Noted Hotel Manager Coming to Pine Needles John F. Sanderson Has Been Connected With Many Lead ing Hotels in U. S. John F. Sanderson, who, during his lifetime, has been associated In the management of many of America's best known hotels, will be the new manager of the Pine Needles in Sou- I them Pines, succeeding Emmett E. The property is sold subject to become lease held by the Town of Southemi management of The Pines which extends until July 1st, 1942. It is anticipated that Mrs. Nich ols, who was the largest creditor, offer the clubhouse and golf courses for further lease by the town. With a purchase option. There is also some talk that outside inter ests are negotiating for purchase- MISS JL'UA BURT TO UTED NAVAL OFFICER Mr, and Mrs. Struthers Burt yes terday announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Julia Blecker Burt of Southern Pines, to Elnsign George Charles Atterberry of the U. S. Naval Flying Corps- Mr. Atter berry is the son of Mr. anj Mrs. Char-les Atterberry of Kansas City, Mo., and is a graduate of the aviation school at Pensacola, Fla. He is sta tioned at Panama, where the wed ding is expected to take place dur ing the Summer. BANKS TO CM>SE MAY 10 The Citizens Bank & Trust Com pany, Southern Pines, and the Bank o>’ Plnehurst, with branches in Aber deen and Carthage, will be closed all day on Saturday, May 10th, Memor ial Day in this state. Inn at Buck Hill Falls, Pa. Mr. San derson will assume his new duties in the Fall. Among hotel properties which Mr. Sanderson has served as manager or associate manager are the following: The Waumbeck, Jefferson, N. H., Mount Washington, Bratton W’oods, N. H.; Ritz Tower, Ritz Carlton, The Barclay, The Madison, the Savoy Plaza and Delmonico’s, In New York City; The Homestead, Hot Springs. Va., and the Bon Air in Augusta, Ga. He was also at The Balsams in New I Hampshire in 1900 where he was as sociated with Harry W- Norris now of The Carolina, Plnehurst. Mr. Sanderson, who was interested irw coming here by George T. Dunlap, president and O. H. Stutts, treasurer of the Rne Needles, la pxpected to make the Inn here one of the best known and most popular in the South through his wide acquaintance- .“hip gained through years of hotel work. Mr. Boone left this week to assume his new position as associate mana ger of the popular Buck Hill Falls Inn in the Pocono Mountains. His many friends, deeply sorry to see him leave, are wishing him all suc cess In his new position. { Returning to railroad work, Mr, Stevens then became vice-president in charge of operation of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Rail, load until 1909, then spent two years as president of a group of Great Northern subsidiaries in the Pacific northwest. When the United States joined in the World War, President Wilson commissioned Mr. Stevens as chair man of a grv)up of experts to solve rtussla’s transportation problems, and he became chairman of the Allied technical board which kept the Trans-Siberian Railway running des pite revolutions until 1922 when the last of the Allied troops left Siberia. Mr. Stevens retired from active service several years ago and has made his home here since. W. C. Arkell President of Beech-Nut Company Former Southern Pines Resident Succeeds Father on 50th Anniversary of Founding W. Clark Arkell, Sandhills prop erty owner and for many years a Winter resident of Southern Pines, has beon elected president of the $22,800,000 Beech-Nut Packing Com pany, succeeding his father, Bartlett Arkell. Mr. Arkell senior retired on ;he 50th anniversary i-i thv’ founding of the company which he started with capital of $10,000, ten employes and hut one product, hickory-cured ham. The company now lunks third in the U. S. in the confectionery industry. Mr. Arkell and his family owned md occupied the residence at the cor ner of Connecticut avenue and High land Road, In the Weymouth Heights section, for several years, selling to Mrs. George W. Johnson two years ago. He still owns a large tract of and near Hoffman which is under cultivation. prove beneficial to Mr. Grearson It’s Dorsey G. Stutz vs. W’. Dun can Matthews for Mayor of South ern Pines In tonight's caucus. No withdrawals are in view, no "deals” The Pilot has been able to ascertain. Just a fight to the finish, and may the best man win. Mr. Stutz has held the office of Mayor since 1929. He Is the repre sentative here of the Seaboard Air Line Railway and of the Railway Ex press, and is one of the three mem bers of the Moore County Alcoholic Control Board. He is an Episcopal ian, Mr Matthews is a practicing at torney, a former Mayor of Vass and former Principal of the Vass-Lake- view School. He is a member of the Rotary Club, and a Congrega- tionalist. t Chan N. Page, former president of the Chamber of Commerce, has been added to those mentioned for the Board of Commissioners, and other suggestions of names not pre viously mentioned which may be pre sented at the caucus include Herbert Camerion and Carl G. Thompson. The names of four of the present board are expected to be presented, L. V. O'Callaghan, Charles S. Patch. Eu gene C. Stevens and Hugh J. Bet- terley, and The Pilot has already announced the candidacies of Rich ard F. Tarlton and Dante Monte- santi. Robert L. Hart, a present commissioner, is not a candidate. The five highest in tonight's ballot ing will comprise the caucus ticket for next Tuesday's election- Close Fight Expected Both sides agree that the balloting for Mayor should be very close. May or Stutz is running on his r?cor(j og Buying the then small Highland ycsi** o( sei-vice. Mr. Mat-' Lodge in 1918, Mrs. Grearson grad-1 candidate of a large ually rebuilt and added to the prop- i "'^o feel that it is time for erty and with the annex on May' ^ change, that new blood should be street, built in 1922, the Lodge be- ti^Light to the office, as well as to came known for its select clientele board of commissioners, patronizing the house from season to j Only duly registered voters may season. i cast ballots at the caucus tonight Mjs, Grear.son was a member of l^md at Tuesday's election. Thf-re are the Baptist church of Southern Pines, i 535 names on the town’s register, and for many years a leading mem- | Mrs, J. H. Tilghman, registrar, said ber of the choir of that congrega-1 yesterday. A number of eliglbles Lion. Active in civic affairs she was ' failed to register last Saturday, the long a director of the Civic Club and;final day, some in the belief that a member of the D. A. R. A prayer service was given by her pastor, the Rev. J. Fred Stimson, in the Powell Funeral Home at 4:30 o’clock Sunday afternoon. The body, accompanied by her brother, W'. Frank Harris, was taken to her Sum mer home in Windsor, Vt., where funeral services were held Tuesday.: Mrs. Grearson is also survived by another brother. Henry B. Harris, and a sister, Mrs. D. F. Davis, both of Windsor, Vt. School Music Festival , j.- everything goes well and all Next Thursday Night I Seniors pass their final tests, Moore — I county high schools will g'l aduate Three Hundred StudenU^ of 222 boys and girls this year, exclu- the registration last Fall fpr the na tional election was sufficient. Those will be unable to vote. The meeting will be called to order in the High School auditorium at 8.00 o’clock High Schools in County To Graduate About 270 Many Holding Exercises Today —Aberdeen To Present 36 Diplomas May 26 Southern Pines on Program Free to Public The ninth annual Music Festival will be givtn In the Southern Pines High School Auditorium next Thurs day evening, May 8. at 8:15. Pupils from each elementary grade, boys' slve of Southern Pines and Plnehurst. The number to be graduated by each of the high schools is as follows; Aberdeen, 36; Cameron, 24; Car thage, 26; Farm Life, 13; Hemp, 44; High/falls, 188; Vass-Lakevie\v, 22; W"est End, 35; Westmoore, 4. Highfalls held its graduation ex glee club, girls' glee club, mixed i rrcises at 8:00 oclock April 29th. chorus, girls' trio, double quartet, and|Other graduation dates are; band will participate. Approximate-! Vass-Lakevlew, May 2; West- !y 300 students will sing on the pro-jmoore. May 2; Calrthage, May 2; gram which includes a great variety, West End, May 6; Cameron, May 7; of songs. Everyone is cordially in vited to attend the performance. There will be no admission fee. A group of Chilean journalists on tour In this country will arrive ia Southern Pines tonight from Atlan ta, Ga., spend the night here, look over Fort Bragg tomorrow and leave late tomorrow' night for the north. Farm Life, May 99; Elise, May 13; Aberden, May 26. All of these pro grams will begin at 8:00 p. m. ex cept the one at Eaise, which will be at 10;30 a. m. Plnehurst and biiuthern Pines High Schools, separate units from the county system, should add close to 50 more, making the grand total in the county over 270.