a FOURTEEN PAGES PRICE TEN CENTS FOR THE NEEDY — All records for local Christmas cheer giving were broken last week when 115 baskets of food and other gifts were distributed in the Southern Pines area, the gifts going to families certified as needy by the coun ty welfare department. Coordinated by the John Boyd Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, the cheer program received help in money and food items from many local organizations and indi viduals, including the active assistance of Alex ander Graham VFW post in West Southern Pines. VFW committee members are pictured hers with a few of the baskets at the Straka Building where they were packed for delivery. Gifts included four bicycles, 14 tricycles and seven children’s wagons. Fred Hall, Jr., headed the committee in charge. (Photo V. Nicholson) Mayors, Officials To Discuss Plans ^ For No. 1 Highway state Highway officials and the mayors of all towns and cities on No. 1 highway in North Carolina have been invited to meet in Southern Pines January 18 to dis cuss long-range plans for making No. 1 a first class modern high way throughout the state. Expected are A. H. Graham, chairman of the State Highway and Public Works Commission; Forrest Lockey of Aberdeen, Eighth Division highway commis sioner; and Donnie A. Sorrell, Fifth Division highway commis sioner. The luncheon meeting is planned for the Mid Pines Club. Plans for the meeting took shape in view of the fact that the entire length of No. 1 high- Uway in North Carolina lies with in the fifth and eighth divisions, offering an opportunity for co ordinated planning on a scale not possible before realignment of highway divisions created the • present situation. The proposal was brought be fore the town council in Novem ber by Mayor Voit Gilmore and 'Continued on Page 8) Public Invited To Watch Night Service The Watch Night Service at the Church of Wide Fellowship will be held from 11:30 p.m. to 12 mid night, Saturday, with a brief de votional service conducted by the minister. Dr. W. C. Timmons. The public is invited. Preceding the service in the sanctuary, various recreational and social activities will be con ducted in the Fellowship Hall. Young people, especially, will be welcomed to these activities, be ginning at 9 p.m.. Dr. Timmons said. ‘High Power’ Saved Him Says Victim Of Brutal Attack General Holiday To Be Observed Here Next Monday Most stores and offices in Southern Pines and this area are expected to close for a holiday Monday, January 2, since New Year’s Day falls on Sunday. The Citizens Bank and Trust Company here and other banks of the county wiU be closed. The post office will follow a regular holiday schedule—no city deliv er, windows closed all day, mail distributed to boxes and outgo ing mail dispatched as usual. The town office will be closed Monday, said City Manager Tom E Cuningham, and there will be no garbage collection. An attempt will be made to collect from all businesses and residences on Tuesday. The courthouse in Carthage wiU close at noon, Saturday, and reopen Tuesday morning. Regu lar meeting of the board of coun ty commissioners and the regular session of Moore County Record er’s Court will be held Tuesday. The Southern Pines Library will be closed Monday. Schools Open Tuesday Christmas holidays for students in the schools of East and West Southern Pines will end when they return to a regular schedi:\le Tuesday morning. Deane To Leave For Washington Congressman C. B. Deane will return to Washington from Rock ingham on January 2, for the sec ond session of the 84th Congress which will convene on January 3. Mr. Deane’s office address will remain the same. Room. 209, Old House Office Building, the tele phone number being National 8-3120, Extension 626. After office hours, he can be reached at his apartment in the Methodist Building across the street from the Capitol. His apartment tele phone is Lincoln 7-1467. MAYOR SPEAKS TO SOUTHERN PINES Happy New Year To All! Let’s make 1956 the “Year of Good Feelings”! Our town is at its best when everyone is pulling together on worthwhile projects. Right off, we have the Presbyterian Col lege challenge, with an excellent chance to be chosen in March as the site for this class-A four-year, coeducational school. The “mess” of clearing right-of-way for the U.S. One by-pass will be behind us in 1956 and this impressive new limited-access thruway wdl move well along toward completion. The town administration is watching carefuUy to take advantage of every opportunity to beautify the new route, and the highway depart ment promises full cooperation to make this a model road well engineered and well landscaped. The renewed program to be “good neighbors” to USAFAGOS begun in 1955 will continue in 1956. We appreciate the wonder- lul personnel attached to the school and will continue in every way possible to prove our appreciation of Jheir being in Southern Pines. Our hospitahty likewise will go to the fine new group of Amerotron families who came to Southern Pines in 1955, and to •others yet to come. Their presence adds greatly to our commun ity and we welcome them warmly. always. Southern Pines attracted other newcomers during 1955 and all the town wishes to make them welcome. There is a tradition that our new citizens immediately start taking active roles in community life. There is a place for every one. We can be thankful that 1955 saw a strengthening of religious life, including the start of the new Methodist church, and a mini- mum of crime and disasters. The new Catholic school and en largements to the public schools advanced our desires for im proved education. Sometimes we art so close to our blessings that we lose sight «f them. Recently the Presbyterian trustees, inspecting Southern Pines as a possible college site, reminded us that we are one of toe prettiest, most charming, most friendly towns to be found That will continue to be true during 1956. It will be a good year o appreciate all we have, to be even more neighborly and to €njoy a year full of good feelings. ' s y ana to VOIT GILMORE, Mayor. Fifty - one - year old Howard Whitaker was thro