» VOL. 35—NO. 34 Council To A8kl()%Of ABC Profit Measure To Assure Division To Go To General Assembly The town council voted Tuc's- day night to accept an offer (f the Moore County board of com missioners and Alcoholic Bever age Control board to give tin- town of Southern Pines 10 per cent yof the profits of the local ABC store, provided a local bill authorizing such a distribution is adopted by the 1955 General As sembly. Under the agreement, the dis tribution would be retroactive to the beginning of the 1954-’55 fis cal year on July 1. On the basis of recent years’ sales, the 10 per cent division would bring the town about $10,000. The town had asked lor 25 per cent of the profit from the Southern Pines store, a division that was considered reasonable in view of the proportion of profits taken by municipalities elsewhere under the ABC sys tem. Mayor L. T. Clark reported that the offer of the board of commissioners to agree to the 10 per cent division was made to him recently by County Commis sioners G. M. Cameron and J. M Pleasants. Tbe county ^/officials said that this was the only offer they had been authorized to make. The mayor said they re ported that a larger allotment of the ABC profits to Southern Pines would mean that the coun ty would have to increase its tax rate. The greater part of ABC profits from both the Southern Pines and Pinehurst stores now go for school construction. A visitor at the meeting, Capt. A. R. McDaniel, said that he thought the town should hold out for what it had asked for, 25 per cent of the profits, and get all' that was asked for or nothing. The councilmen, however, seem ed to feel that the 10 per cent was the best that could be hoped for at present and that this was con siderably more than the small allotment the town has been re ceiving from the ABC funds for, law enforcement. Plans were made by the coun cil to confer with Aberdeen offi cials about a proposal for zoning outside ‘town limits—another matter that would require action by the 1955 General Assembly. Some discussions of the matter have already taken place with a view to possible zoning to con trol development along No. 1 highway, between Southern (Continued on Page 8) SOUTHERN PINES. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY. JULY 16, 1954 General Jenkins Takes Over As Commandant Of School PRICE—TEN CENTS f M. Gross, right, receives frona Mayor Lloyd T. Clark a framed and sealed resolution by the town council honoring the general for his cooperative serv- ices to the town while he was commandant of the USAF Air- Gt-ound School here. Presentation was made during an outdoor program at the Southern Pines Country Club last Friday night. (Dhoto by Emerson Humphrey) General, Riding In Engine, Given Lively Send-Off Brig. Gen. W. M. Gross, USAF, ending a three-year tour as com mandant of USAFAGOS, left for his new assignment Tuesday night riding high, Wide and hand some in the cab of a diesel loco motive. Serviee Clubs of Town Entertain Gen. & Mrs. Gross Miss Etbel Jones Will Be Honored Miss Ethel S. Jones, assistant cashier of the Ctiizens Bank & Trust Co., is retiring after more than 40 years of continuous serv ice to the institution, according vo an announcement made this week by N. L. Hodgkins, president. Miss Jones, whose retirement took effect July 15, will continue to keep her home in Southern Pines. She and her sister. Miss Ella Jones, live at 130 N. Ashe St. Mr. Hodgkins in his announce ment praised Miss Jones for her faithfulness and loyalty over a long period of years. “To many of our customers Miss Jones is the bank, and she will be greatly missed,” Mr. Hodgkins added. The directors 'and staff of the bank are planning a picnic supper at Paint Hill Farm on Tuesday, July 20, honoring Miss Jones. Through special arrangements made by local citizens who are friends of the Seaboard Air Line, “General Bill” was surprised to find himself ushered onto the en gine of The Pahnland, to “drive the train” to Raleigh. In a Pullman, where he was to join her later, rode his wife Ruth. From New York he will fly to Germany Sunday, to his new post as deputy commander of the 12th Air Force. Mrs. Gross will go to California, where their two sons, Billy and Tommy, are visiting her family, and they will join General Gross at Ramstein, Germany, within two or three weeks. At the station, to give their former commandant and his lady a real VIP send-off, was the en tire staff of the USAF Air- Ground Operations school, also a large number of townspeople. They waved small flags bearing the letter “S,” replicas of the “Sparkle flag” hoisted at the Brig. Gen. -William M. Gross who admitted that he has a “bad case of Sandhills fever,” was hon ored by civic clubs and other or ganizations with an outdoor sup per last Friday night at the Coun try Club—along with Mrs. Gross and other Air-Ground School of ficers and their wives—before his departure for Germany Tuesday. He had commanded the USAF Air-Ground Operations School in the Highland Pines Inn for the past three years. While storm clouds rolled up in the west and north, bringing early darkness and a threat of rain that held off until only min utes after the crowd had broken up, a bright half-moon could be seen in and out of clouds in the southeast behind the table where General and Mrs,. Gross were seated, flanked by Mayor and Mrs. Lloyd T. Clark, the Rev. and Mrs. C. V. Covell, and Mr. and Mrs. David Gamble. Lights around the picnic shelter were turned on during the program. | Mr. Gamble, president of the Lions Club, presided diming the brief program that followed supper of fried chicken, baked beans, slaw, corn on the cob, hush puppies and iced tea. More’ Brig. Gen. Daniel W. Jenkins'^" I became commandant of the's I USAF Air-Ground Operations i i School at the Highland Pines Inn ' ; Monday, succeeding Brig. Gen. ! William M. Gross. I General Jenkins comes t) j Southern Pines from Ramstein, ^ Germany, where he was deputy ' commander and chief of staff foV I the Twelfth Air Force. General j Gross is succeeding him in this! I position and is nc-w en route to [ Germany after leaving- here Tuesday night. General Jenkins and his wife who is the former Effie Murphy i of Columbia, S. C., and their, daughter, Patty Lynn, six and aj half years old, arrived in South- ern Pines last week. They are now living, at the Southland Ho- ' tel until they find permanent quarters. General Jenkins was born in Floydada, Texas, on August 5, 1907, and spent his early years in the Lone Star State. He at tended West Texas Teachers Col lege and Texas Technological College before entering flying school at March and KeUy Fields from which he graduated in 1929 as a second lieutenant and pilot. During World War II, General Jenkins’ assignments ranged from service with the Air Training Command, to a series of combat assignments with the Eighth Air Force, at that time stationed in England. He was wounded in combat over Belgium in a B-17 and was later a priso-ner-of-war in Germany between August, Bids Asked On Moore Bridge, Highway Work No. 1 Below GENERAL JENKINS Legion of Merit, the Air Medal, and the Purple Heart. A graduate of the Command and General Staff School in Leavenworth, Kansas, General Jenkins’ post-war service inclu ded assignment with the staff of the National War College in Washington, D. C., which was fol lowed by duty in Germany as As sistant Chief of Staff for Opera tions with Twelfth Air Force Headquarters in 1951. General Jenkins was appointed brigadier general in September, 1952, and soon after was desig nated Deputy Aberdeen To Be Dual Lane Two projects of wide interest in this area qre among 53 on Which the State Highway Com mission asked for bids this week. They are a new bridge over the railrc'ad at Vass, and convert ing No. 1 highway into a dual lane road between Aberdeen and Drowning Creek. Contracts on the projects will be let July 27 and Highway Com missioners, including Forrest Lockey of Aberdeen, Eighth Di vision commissioner, will meet at Raleigh July 29 to review the low bids. The No. 1 highway job calls for 6.17 miles of grading, pav ing and structunes from a point just north of the Drowning Creek bridge to Aberdeen. Under the 1 A - “—'I —Commander and 1943, and April- 1945. The 46-year Chief of Staff for the 'Twelfth Air old general has been awarded the Force. Corunty Budget Estimate Shows Big Part Of Revenue Going To Schools Tax Rate Remains $1.35; Non-Tax Revenue Is Lower A summary of the Moore Coun ty 1954-55 budget estimate, pub lished elsewhere in today’s Pilot, shows that a tax rate of $1.35 and an estimated property valuation school when some special than 200 persons filled to achievement is to be recognized. “Make it sparkle!” has been his typical command. A huge sign borne by four staff members bore the words “Good Luck!” General Gross held a brief review of the staff before the train pulled in, and made a short farewell speech. As The Palm land departed with its new en gineer, the crowd sang “Auld Lang Syne.” In the gathering was the new commandant. Brig. Gen. Daniel W. Jenkins, with his wife and daughter. They mrived last weekend from Germany, where General Jenkins held the post General Gross will assume. SERMON TOPIC The Rev. William H. Hill, in terim pastor at the Church of Wide Fellowship, will preach Sunday morning at the 11 o’clock service on the subject, “Until I Went Into the Sanctuary.” Grosses Express Appreciation In a letter to Mayor Lloyd T. Clark, Brig. Gen.* and Mrs. Wil- liani M. Gross express their appre ciation for the farewell dinner and p^rogram given in their honor last Friday. The text of the letter follows; “Before I depart from Southern Pines, I want to thank you and the Service and Civic Clubs of Southern Pines for the very great honor you bestowed upon me last Friday. Ruth and I have been station ed in many places, but we have never, and do not expect in the future, to have the opportunity of living in such a splendid commun ity as this. “We look foiVard to the day when we can return to enjoy the hospitality and friendship of you and all the fine citizens of South ern Pines. Please forward our sincere thanks and best wishes to Reverend CoveU, Mr. Gamble and the participating Clubs.” flowing the picnic tables of the Southern Pines Country Club that were ranged on the lawn near the cocking and serving shed. The occasion was informal with military personnel dressed in civilian clothes. General Gross came in a boldly patterned color ful short-sleeved sport shirt and (Continued on page 8) 100 RECORDED One hundred degrees was the top reading Wednes day on the official Weather Bureau thermometer here, it was reported by Mrs. T. A. Kelley,, observer. Many per sons said they felt the heat more Wednesday than on Sunday, June 27, when the mercury hit 104. Wednesday's heat was more -noticeable, perhjaps, because it followed by a few days some of the pleasantest and coolest weather of the summer. Thursday morning was cloudy, breezy and much cooler, afifording a welcome relief after Wednesday's heat. The combination of the heat and the half-holiday made Southern Pines down town streets practically de serted Wednesday afternoon/. of $40,000,000—both the same as last year—are expected to produce $485,364 for the county from taxes. The theoretical amount that could be produced by the tax levy is $539,294, but uncollectible taxes, commissions on collections and taxpayers’ discounts are expected to reduce this to the $485,364 fig ure. Taxes, however, are expected to produce only a little more than half the revenue that will keep the governmental services of Moore County operating through the coming year. Revenue “to be available other than the tax levy” is estimated at $483,278, bringing the amount available for total budget require ments to $968,642—about $40,000 less than total requirements for last year. Additional Revenue Sources of the additional reve nue other than taxes are chiefly ABC store profits and lines and Town Lake Now Clear; Odor Not From Any Sewer Water at the town lake off Mid land Road has cleared up and swimming conditions there are much improved, it was reported this week by W. A. Leonard, adult supervisor at the lake who is there daily from 1 to 6 p.m., except Monday. Heavy rains at the end of June, when surface run-off water was deposited in the lake, caused the water to become cloudy and cre ated an odor from the water that has now disappeared, Mr. Leonard said. The matter of the odor was brought up at the town council meeting Tuesday night by Harry Menzel, a vistior at the meeting, who reported that a rumor was being circulated that the odor was same contract the existing surface of ,U. S. 1, which parallels the new work, will also be paved. Commissioner Lockey said this week that it was found practical to use the old No. 1 and buUd a new road parallel to it, creating a dual lane highway that will be 55 feet from center to center of the two lanes between Aberdeen and Pinebluff «nd 100 feet, center to center, below Pinebluff to Drowning Credk. The new construction will go no farther than Drowning Creek at present, as a new bridge over the creek is not included in the present contract. Going through Pinebluff, the two lanes will merge to form a single roadway 72 feet wide. The lane to be constructed will run all the way on the west side of the present highway. This will require moving several houses to give adequate right-of-way for the highway, Mr. Lockey said. Also included in the projects on which bids are asked is hard- surfacing the “old” Southern Pmes-Pinehurst road, which leaves Southern Pines at the baseball park and enters Pine hurst at the stables. A bridge over Bear Creek on NC 705 near the north city limits of Robbins is the fourth Moore County project on which bids were asked this week. 17-Year-Old Held For 3 Break-Ins On No. 1 Highway He from a broken sewer line, pointed out—cind this was con firmed by Town Manager Tom E. Cunningham—that there is no sewer line near the lake that could break. The odor that had been noticed there was from vegetation in the water after very heavy rains, it was decided. A test was made of the water about June 1 and again while the water was not clear and there was an odor from it, around the end of June. According to County Sanitarian E. T. Dunn, these tests both showed the lake safe for swimming, it was reported at the town office. Jimmy Menzel, lifeguard at the lake, is on duty from 1 to 6 p.m., daily. There are three picnic ta- forfeitures in Moore County re- ' bles available and soft drinks 2,000 I>OUNDS TOBACCO PER ACRE? corders court. ABC profits are declining over the state and the revenue in Moore County to be derived from other, than the tax levy is estimated for the coming year at over $100,000 less than it (Continued on Page 5) Irrigation Opens New World Of Farming be purchased there. can Irrigation is proving its worth in Sandhills farming and may lead to vast improvements in produc tion of tobacco, peaches and pos sibly other crops, E. H. Garrison, Moore County farm agent, said this week. ' Citing the experience of a half dozen Moore farmers who have irrigation systems now operating on their land, Mr. Garrison said the possibilities of irrigation ap pear unlimited. The process, which pumps wa ter from farm storage ponds through light aluminum piping that can be taken up and re-in stalled at a desired location quick ly, may lead to production of 2,000 pounds of tobacco per acre, the farm agent said. ’ According to J. A. Kelly of the Soil Conservation Service offi6e he and SCS County Supervisor Bill Austin are busy helping a number of Moore farmers plan the construction of farm ponds that will be used for irrigation pur poses. “We seem to be in a dry weath er cycle,” Mr. Kelly said. “Farm ers are realizing that they can af ford irrigation if it will produce for them larger peaches and keep their tobacco from drying up, giv ing them increased yields and bet ter prices.” Irrigation requires a source of water not too far from the fields to be treated, and, at present, it requires a considerable outlay of money for pumps, pipe, sprinkler heads and other equipment. Typical of the systems is one on the Herman Matthews place at Clay Road Farms,’ costing about $6,000, with which Mr. Matthews is irrigating about 20 acres of to bacco. The system treats about two and a quarter acres at one time, Mr. Garrison said. In three hours it will put one inch of wa ter on an acre of land. The pump’s motor burns about three gallons of gasoline per hour. On the John Blue farm Carthage a system costing about of water dM Ciori. ® on seven success $1,&0(>. is'being used acres of tobacco. Both operators report with their efforts. Contrast in size ,of irrigation systems is shown by the big sys tem used by Howard Harrison of Eagle Springs on a peach orchard. It uses a 125 horsepower motor, while the system at the Blue farm uses a 25 horsepower motor. Farm Agent Garrison says studies are being made in use of autofhobile and tractor motors for irrigation pumping and thinks that develop- along this line may soon bring the procedures within the financial reach of many more farmers. Other farmers in Moore County using irrigation include A. A. Goolsby near Union Church who has been irrigating for two years or more; J. D. Parker at Eagle Springs; and Clyde Auman of West End. Irrigation is being used even more extensively in Lee County, it is reported. One Lee County man has come to Moore County to irrigate a farm here on a rental \ A 17-year-old youth, Robert Charles Wells of Perkinsville, N. Y., is in Carthage jail in default icf $1,500 bond for breaking into three business places along US Highway 1 early Sunday morning. Officers H. F. Chandler and Drake Rogers spotted him in Fer guson’s Sandwich Shop at the northern city limits while on rou tine patrol, and caught him as he came out of the back door. He had gained entrance by breaking a window. Monday, it was found that the Dairy Mart near Lakeview and Danny s Grill near Cameron had also been broken into. Wells, then in jail, admitted this was his work. Fingerprints taken by the SBI at each place corroborated his story. Visiting the places with Chiei C. E. Newton, Wells demonstrated just how he had broken in. He had secured a total of a little over $4 in change from his night’s work. The car he was using, which bore a Pennsylvania licesse, ’he said at first belonged to his broth er but he later admitted he had stolen it while making his way fromi New York toward Florida. At a hearing in Carthage, bond of $500 was set on each of three counts for his appearance in su perior court. He could not make bond and remains in jail at Carth age. The car will be turned over to Pennsylvania authorities. Chief Newton said. Dr. on an acre of land for $25. The rental system may help to extend use of irrigation also. Garrison thinks. The farm agent sees irrigation as one of the most interesting and promising developments in the i county’s farming. DR. PHILLIPS WITH HOSPITAL - Charles A. S. Phillips, native of Chatham County and a 1938 gradu»te of Southern Pines High School, has joined the staff of Moore County Hospital, specializing in urol ogy. He is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of North Carolina and received his medical degree from Northwestern University, Chi- cago. He and his family are living in the former Frank Buchan home at the comer of Ashe St., and Massachusetts Ave. Fire Destroys Aberdeen Plant Early Sunday Fire of undetermined origin destroyed the “Linen White” washing solution manufacturing plant near Aberdeen on the Rose- land road early Sunday morning. Robert N. Page, Jr., who oper ated the plant as Robert N. Page Co., Inc., estimated the loss at about $25,000. The building was partially covered by insurance, it was reported, although the contents were not insured. The Page company had resunk ed operation of the plant only a few weeks ago, after having re gained ownership of the concern from a group to which the plant had been sold a few years ago. It had been operated by the pur chasing group as Linen White Inc. The original portion of the building was built by M. L. Pon der in 1938. After acquiring the business, Mr. Page made two addi tions to the structure in 1944, making it a building of about 9(j by 100 feet in size.