Friday, September 2, 1949.
THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina
Page Nine
No More Pups, Say
Smul Club Members
Members of the Smut club of
Knollwood, formed for the aid
and protection of an ailing mon
grel puppy named Smut, this
week were forced to notify the
public that they can’t take on any
more stray pooches, as school is
about to begin.
Doorstep babies of the club
since its fame spread abroad
through the land have included,
in addition to Smut, a “spitz-ish”
canine they have named Snow
ball, and a wee brown nonde
script, Mitzi, abandoned in the
vicinity just Tuesday night.
The organisation would like to
take on all strays it reported
through its spokesman, Johnny
Cornwell, and so intended when
it was formed, but other duties
loom pressingly as of next Wed-
jnesday. They figure three pups
is about their limit.
Other members of the Smut
club are Donald Walter, Billy Da
vis and Kay Davis.
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CARTHAGE NEWS
The 1949 Premium List of the
Moore County Agricultural Fair
to be held at Carthage, Septem
ber 19th through 24th, has been
released by the Carthage Junior
Chamber of Commerce, Inc.,
sponsor of the fair. The pre
mium list is in the form of an
attractive booklet featuring not
only the long list of premiums
but sketches of each town in the
county, giving its history, chief
industries, et cetera, as well as
the history of Moore County and
the Sandhills. The Jaycees hope
to make this the best fair ever
held in this section. Premier
Shows will furnish the amuse
ments.
Premiums cover a wide variety
of products in the home econo
mics department including all
kinds of capned goods, jellies,
preserves, pickles, catsup, fruit
juices, breads, biscuits, cakes,
butter, cheese, eggs, and soap. In
the arts, crafts, and sewing de
partment, prizes are offered for
dresses, aprons, and other articles
of wearing apparel; articles made
from sacks, crocheting, tatting,
hemstitching, quilts and spreads.
The winner in the crochet con
test at the Moore County Fair
will receive a gold Sunray tro
phy, hand engraved, and will be
eligible to enter the national cro
chet contest, sponsored by the
National Needlecraft Buteau.
The grand prize in the national
contest is $500 in cash plus a free
trip to New York City or Chicago
with all expenses paid. Other
prizes are offered for the best oil
paintings, water colors, drawings,
and photographs; best flower ar
rangements, cotton, corn, tobacco,
potatoes and. many other farm
products.
A junior dairy cattle exhibit
will also be held open to boys and
girls of public school age living
in Moore County.
The Carthage Junior Chamber
of Commerce is a club made up
of young business men who spon
sor the following projects: annual
July 4th celebration; anti-polio
campaign of spraying and fog
ging, hospital drive for polio,
Christmas welfare fund, Ameri
canism program, clean-up pro
gram, cancer drive and the coun
ty fair.
Gilbert Bailey is president. Da
vid Ginsburg and Colin G. Spen
cer, Jr., are co-chairmen of the
Moore County Agricultural Fair
for 1949.
On Tuesday all white school
children will be admitted free,
and on Friday aU colored school
children will have free admit
tance.
On Thursday there will be
held a Mutt show. A prize of $10
is offered for the prettiest dog
and a $10 prize is also offered
for the ugliest dog. The dog must
be entered by children under 16
years of age.
Organ Recital
Dr. Austin Lovelace, Minister
of Music of the First Presbyterian
church in Greensboro, wiU pre
sent an organ recital in the Pres
byterian church on Sunday night.
Sept. 11, at 8:00 p. m. Dr. Love
lace is an associate of the Amer
ican Guild of Organists, and a
graduate of the School of Music
of Union Theological Seminary,
New York.
Brief Mention
Miss Elizabeth Anne McDon
ald is Ijome after attending the
second summer school at Chapel
Hill She plans to enter there this
fall.
Others returning from summer
school at Chapel Hill are Mrs.
Leilla Cox, Miss Catherine Cox,
Miss Jane Davis, Miss'Ruth Ty
son, and James, A. Davis, Jr.
Miss Anne Golden left Sunday
night for Philadelphia, after
spending her vacation here with
her parents. Rev. and Mrs. W. S.
Golden.
Miss Mary Gee Willcox left
Tuesday for Clayton where she
will teach in the public schools.
Mrs. Woltz is visiting Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Currie.
Mrs. Margaret Penn of Fort
Bragg spent a few days this week
with Mrs. Gilliam Brown.
Miss Frances Golden of Peace
College faculty spent the week
end with her parents here.
Miss Katie Lee McLeod of Rich
mond, is spending a fortnight
with her sister. Miss Bess McLeod.
Rev. and Mrs. W. S. Golden
and family have returned from
a two week’s vacation at Crescent
Beach, S. C.
Friends regret to lear that Col.
G. W. McNeill, who has been con
fined to his bed for several years,
has not been doing so well lately.
Miss Harriette McGraw and
Miss Isobel McDonald attended
wedding this week.
Miss Gladys Thomas of Jones
boro Heights, Sanford, has arrived
for the fall session of school. Miss
Thomas is a member of the ele
mentary school faculty.
Mrs. Gilliam Brown, Mrs. Holt
McNeill and Mrs. L. P. Tyson at
tended the funeral of Mrs. Frank
Page in Aberdeen last week.
realistic \ filmi with the best of
them.
Thats vJ-hat he did with “T*
Men” and that’s what he has done
in Columbia’s Walk a Crooked
Mile,” playing at the Sunrise
theatre with Louis Hayward and
Dennis OKeefe starred. This story
of the teaming up of the FBI and
Scotland Ysrd to fight and smash
a spy ring was filmed with heart-
in-mouth realism.
To impart this realism. Small,
among other things, used $75,000
of FBI crime detection equipment
in the film, which will' play at
the Sunrise Theatre, Thursday and
Friday, September 8, 9.
Carolina
Coming to the Carolina thea
tre Friday and Saturday, Septem
ber 2, 3 at 8:15 p. m. with-a mat
inee Saturday at 3 is a superior
crime-busting melodrama that is
head and shoulders above the us
ual run of melodramas—“Scene
Of The Crime” starring Van John
son, Arlene Dahl, Gloria DeHaven,
and Tom Drake.
This is the story of a police de
tective on a tough case, who neg
lects his wife for duty, gets in
trouble with another woman but
straightens everything out when
the criminal is caught.
Van Johnson plays the role of
the detective, which is quite dif
ferent from anything he has ever
done before. Arlene Dahl plays
his wife to perfection and Gloria
DeHaven is a very lovely show
girl, as the “other woman.”
The story was written by the
same author as “Red River” and
should prove exciting screen fare.
At the Carolina theatre Sunday
through Wednesday (four days)
with a matinee Tuesday, is that
swell “Going My .Way,” “Welcome
Stranger” team, Bing Crosby and
Barry Fitzgerald in “Top O’ The
Mrning” with Ann Blyth, Hume
Cronyn and Eileen Crowe.
Playing his usual blithe role,
Crosby is cast as an investigator
for a Wall Street insurance house,
sent to Ireland to ferret out the
criminal who made off with the
Blarney stone. On that breezy but
novel idea is woven a tale that is
full of blarney but skips along at
a lively pace.
The role is a natural for the
talents of the Groaner and he
sings many lovely old Irish bal
lads as only he can do—also two
new songs which are sure to make
the hit parade, witlji him to in
troduce them.
Barry Fitzgerald is perfect as
the local police sergeant, and
adds much humor to the story.
Ann Blyth plays the lovely Irish
lass who provides the romantic
interest.
All this adds up to whimsical,
genial and tuneful enjoyment such
as only Bing’s, singing and Barry’s
comedy can produce.
It’s a swell show for the whole
family.
Sunrise
Although Edward Small, pro
ducer of such flamboyant costume
dramas as “The Black Arrow”
and “The Return of Monte Cris-
to” allows his fancy free play, he
can also produce a down-to-earth
BACK TO SCHOOL
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Belvedere Hotel Bldg.
Southern Pines
Lots Ot Folks
IN
Southern Pines
from
Mclver’s!
OF
A good shearer can shear from
100 to 200 sheep a day.
The first sailing club was estab
lished in 172.0 in Ireland.
SANFORD
N.C.
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