«- VOL. 37—NO. 33 FOURTEEN PAGES SOUTHERN PINES. NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY. JULY 5. 1956 FOURTEEN PAGES PRICE TEN CENTS NEW ROTARY OFFICERS were installed at a dinner meeting at the Country Club last Friday night. At the meeting, to which Rotary Anns were guests, A. C. Dawson was installed as pres ident, succeeding James Perkinson, who will be come vice-president. New officers, left to right. front row, are James Hartshome, secretcuy, Dawson, and Perkinson. Back row, left to right, are Ed Smail, reelected treasurer, and Earl Hub- hard and Joe Scott, ne wdirectors. Absent when the picture was made was Lt. Col. Paul Kinni- son, also a new director. (Humphrey photo) Home Here Entered, Occupant Is Slugged, Robbed; No Clues Found Mrs. E. W. Cole Unable To Describe Assailant Southern Pines police were continuing their round-the-clock search today for an intruder who broke into a Connecticut Ave. home Tuesday night and slugged its occupant, Mrs. E. W. Cole, be fore making off with aboutl $35 from her pocketbook. Chief C. E. Newton said today that several leads have been tracked down but nothing defin ite has come of them. In reporting the breaking and robbery. Chief Newton said Mrs. Cole, who lives with her husband, a civil engineer for the Ninth Air Force, at 335 E. Connecticut Ave., was sitting alone Tuesday night watching a television program. Her husband was away in Sum ter, S. C., on business. Sometime near 10 p. m., Mrs. Cole told police, she leaned over from her chair to cut on a light. When she did something hit her and she was knocked uncon scious. When she came to, probably about 30 minutes later, she dis covered blood running from her forehead and went to the kitchen to try and stop it. She then called Dr. Joseph S. Hiatt and the po lice. Dr. Hiatt took Mrs. Cole to thfe hospital where she is reported in good condition today. The police investigation shov ed that the intruder entered the house by an unlocked back door. There were tracks leading into the house (a slight rain had fall en, making tracks easily visible) and out the same way. Chief Newton said it looked as though the weapon used had a sharp edge. Members of his department made a thorough search of the grounds outside the house and in other nearby places but so far have been unable to locate the weapon. The money was taken from Mrs. Cole’s pocketbook, lying on the dining room table. Nothing else was bothered, she said. No one else was in the house with her at the time, she told po lice, which is not unusual since her husband, a retired major, is often away on business trips. The Cole home is located just one house away from busy US Highway 1. Chief Newton said the corner nearest the Cole house was a favorite spot for hitch hikers, going either north or south, or to Fort Bragg or Pope Air Force Base. Members of his department have conducted a systematic search of the neighborhood for any evidence of the weapon, and have questioned many of the near neighbors as to whether or not they saw any strangers around the area Tuesday night. Soldiers Receive Prison Terms In Local Rape Case Prison sentences for three sol diers accxised of raping a 15-year- old West Southern Pines Negro girl were handed down following general courts martial at Fort Bragg over the weekend. The three were James A. Campbell, who received five years; Leroy Martin, 15 years; and H. D. Moslby, 15 years. In ad dition to the prison sentences, all were given dishonorable dis charges. There has been no announce ment of the sentences other than that given at the trial, the usual procedure in Army courts ma3> tial. The three are all members of the 82nd Airborne Division. The other defendant in the trial, an airman named Gordon stationed at Pope Air Force Base, was tried Monday. He was sen tenced to two years in prison and was dishonorably discharged. The rape took place on the Fort Bragg reservation May 21. The young girl, who had an excellent reputation, said the soldiers and airman raped her at gunpoint and threatened to kill her if she ever told anyone of the affair. The girl, whose identity has not been made known because she is a juvenile, has left Southern Pines to spend some time with a relative in another city. Soap Box Derby In Carthage Won By Gayle Frye Gayle Frye, 13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Frye of Car thage, was the happiest boy in Carthage yesterday. He won the annual Soap Box. Derby feature of the July 4 cele bration in Carthage and the right to represent the county at the state races held in Charlotte next June. Some 23 boys competed in the Derby, which the sponsoring Junior Chamber of Com;merce said was the best held yet. Competing from Southern Pines were Kenny Holliday and Butch Ryder, sponsored by the Elks Club, and Kenny Morten, sponsored by Southern Pines Motor Company. Finishing behind young Frye was Melvin Preslar and Mack Bailey. Beauty Contest Janet Carter, 16-year-old daughter of Mrs. Dan Carter of Carthage, was winner of the an nual beauty contest. Runners-up were Patsy Lou Baker of Carth age and Lois Williams of Rob bins. Miss Jimmie Ann Garner of Robbins, 1955 winner, crowned the winner, who was seljBcted from 22 entries. ' During the morning nart of the celebration the Donaldson Air Force Base band paraded. Patriotism On The Wane? Few Flags Flying Yesterday Is July 4, the nation's birth day, losing its importance and meaning? The question was asked this morning by a man who visit ed The Pilot office to report on a survey he made Wednes day afternoon. There were, he said, only eight flags dis- . played in town—or at leeist a great portion of it—with the exception of tiie ones the town had placedf along the streets. « The man, who asked not to be named, said he and his wife had spent a considerable part of the afternoon driving around Southern Pines. They covered most of the town, he said, and were shocked to dis cover the small number of flags out. "I read in a daily paper this morning," he said, "of a wom an in Charlotte who had made a flag . . . couldn't afford to buy one. . . and had it dis played for the holiday. An other man in Greenville, S. C., couldn't even buy one in stores. The thought that peo- ople are forgetting the impor tance of the holiday is dis turbing." He hoped for something better next year. Baseball Jamboree Planned NextWeek At Memorial Field A “baseball jamboree,” featur ing members of the Southern Pines Pony, Little, and Minor baseball league, will be held next Friday night, July 13, at Memorial Field. According to Major Erskine Crew, who is in charge of the event, other features of the jam boree will include a home run hit ting contest, a brief flag cere mony, the singing of The Star Spangled Banner, and display of a color guard. Nine innings of baseball have been planned. The first game, four innings, will be between the Short Sox and the Bantam Bomb ers. Players on the teams are between eight and 11. The second game, five innings, will be between the Pony Leagu ers and the Little Leaguers. No admission will be charged but donations to help defray ex penses for players selected for county all-star participation will be accepted. Major Crew said everything that a big league baseball game features will be available, includ ing peanuts and soft drinks. The Veterans of Foreign Wars, Lions Club and the Southern Pines Recreation Department are co sponsors of the jamboree. Complete details will be an nounced in next week’s issue of The Pilot. Zoning Answer Due At Council Meeting Tuesday May Name Committee To Handle Promotion Bypass zoning is due for more discussion at the regular meeting of Town Council Tuesday night. The Council, which will meet in the library at 8 p.m., will discuss a request made by W. P. Davis, large property owner along the bypass, to change the square foot age building requirements in a part of his property in Residential Section 1, which now requires a minimum of 1,500 feet. Davis has requested that the property bounded by Crestview Road, Saylor Street, the new high way, and Rhode Island Avenue be zoned so as to require only a min imum of 1,200 feet. Council will also consider the matter of soliciting on town streets by outside interests. At a meeting a month ago. Council re quested City Manager Tom Cun ningham to make recommenda tions for possible ordinances that would curb soliciting. Cunningham has indicated the best way to handle the growing problem is to adopt an ordinance now in use in many towns that would require solicitors to obtain a permit; the permit would re quire that a complete breakdown of funds received and the ex penses involved in collecting them be made. Cunningham heis emphasized that such an 'ordinance would not put a cramp in soliciting by worthwhile organizations, particu larly those in Southern Pines and vicinity. The proposed ordinance would, he said, act as a deterrent to groups from out of . town who solicit here and do no charitable work in this area. Council will probably discuss the appointment of a committee to administer a proposed $2,000 fund for advertising and promoting Southern Pines. The funds, which by the Council’s orders won’t be made available unless matched by a like amount from business inter ests in Southern Pines, were in cluded in this year’s budget. No Accidents Are Reported July 4 Moore County has apparently come out of the July 4 holiday without a single traffic accident to blemish the record. State Highway Patrolmen said that traffic, while still a bit heavy, was not what was original ly expected. They said it was probably due to the fact that the holiday fell in the middle of the week. All the patrolmen were on duty during the day and night, as was the case in the rest of the state, which apparently enjoyed a deathless holiday so far as high way traffic was concerned. County Budget Set At $1 $1.35 Tax Rate Remains A tentative county budget with an increase of some $80,000 more than last year was adopted by the Board of County Commissioners Monday. The budget, a siunmary of which is published in today’s is sue of 'The Pilot, calls for no change in the present tax rate of $1.35 per $100 valuation. Basing its needs on an estima ted property valuation of *43 mil lion dollars, the Board of Com missioners set a figure of $1,186,- 880 as budget requirements for the fiscal year beginning July 1 and ending June 30 next year. Biggest item in the budget is $531,000 for capital outlay in the school hudget. A total of $323,500 was budgeted for new construc tion in county schools, $84,000 for new construction in the Southern Pines school system, and $42,500 for Pinehurst school construc tion. All the schools in the county had asked for considerably more than was available, Gordon Cam- Commissioners, said. There was, he said, more to give this year than last year. Agricultural Building A beginning fund of $25,000 was set up in the budget this year for the eventual construction of an agriculturual building that would serve the entire county. A delegation of farm people had made an initial request from the county several months ago, sug gesting the fund be established. The delegation said the cost of an adequate building would prob ably run between $100,000 and $150,000. Valuation Up '* The county’s property valua tion is standing at an all-time high this year. Present valuation is $43,000,000, an increase of $1 million over last year. Property valuations on several new constructions, including homes and business establish ments, pushed the total figure up. Welfare Work The welfare budget, which eron, chairman of the Board of' calls for an expenditure of $94,- ,186,880; Unchanged 691 this year, is up approximately $7,500. Chairman Cameron said that $5,000 of the increase will be used for indigent care. “We’re in sound financial con dition,” Cameron said, adding that the county now owes about $350,000, very little in compari son to the total valuation of property in the county. By law, the budget is open to inspection at the courthouse for 20 days. If no revisions are asked or made in that time, final adop tion is expected at a special meet ing of the board later this month. At the meeting last Monday, all members of the board were present and worked into the eve ning getting the budget in shape in order to make the summary., John C. Muse of Sanford, a certified public accountant, drew up the final tentative budget with the commissioner’s approv al. Hearings on the budget had been going on for the past two months. TO BE t>LAYED THROUGH SATURDAY Annual Sandhills Junior Tennis Tournament Starts Here Wednesday Many of the state’s finest yoimg tennis players are expected here next week for the eighth annual edition of the Junior Sandhill In vitational Tournament. 'The tournament—which came last year under official sanction of the Southern Lawn Tennis As sociation—will be played off Wed nesday through Saturday or Sun day, on the municipal courts. Invitations were mailed early this week, according to Kenneth Tew, tournament chairman. Kenneth himself, rated for years one of the best of the young er players, who was state boys’ champion at the age of 13, just this year outgrew his eligibility for junior play. Marshall Happer of Kinston, state champion, is expected to re turn to defend the junior boys’ singles trophy he won last year. Billy Weaver of Durham, 1955 runner-up, may be on hand as challenger. It is anticipated that John Talley of Gastonia, who won the boys’ championship last year Gilmore Appointed To Head Legislative Body Mayor Voit Gilmore has been appointed chairman of the legis lative committee of the North Carohna League of Municipali ties, it was announced from League offices in Raleigh this week. Mayor Gilmore will head a committee that will study the needs of various municipalities in the state and make proposals for needed legislation to the October General Assembly. Marshall Kurfees of Winston- Salem is president of the League. Cpl. M. S. Parvin Transferred Corporal M. S. Parvin, who has headed the State Highway Patrol in Moore County for the past five years, was transferred early this week to Jacksonville. , He is being replaced by newly appointed Corporal J. A. McCol- man, who has been stationed at Newton Grove the past seven years. Cpl. Parvin, who came to Moore County from Smithfield, has been in the patrol for 15 years. Since coming to Moore he has been ac tive in church work in the Car thage area, where he maintained his home. Several county officers, com menting on Cpl. Parvin’s transfer, said the county was losing the “best public relations man” the highway patrol has ever sent to Moore county. One officer said: “Cpl. Parvin is an ardent cam paigner for safety on the high ways. He took the message not only to schools, where he thought it would do the most good, but to civic clubs, business groups, and even to churches.” A renowned cook, Cpl. Parvin was vice-president of the coimty Law Officers Enforcement Associ ation and honorary “chief cook.” His “pine bark stews” and fried CORPORAL PARVIN chicken dinners at the American Legion hut near Carthage were eagerly-awaited affairs and al ways successful. The new corporM, who has also been in the patrol 15 years, is a former resident of Aberdeen. His appointment t<^ corporal was an nounced Monday. His new duties began Wednesday. in his first away-from-home tour nament, wiU also be back. Janie Haynie of Belton, S. C., last year’s No. 1 junior girls’ play er in the South, won the trophy in her bracket last year, but is be lieved to have moved since then past the age deadline. If this proves true, the field will be open to the runner-up, Lillian Bullock of Southern Pines, to reassert her claim on the trophy which she won in 1953 and 1954. Julia Blake, also of Belton, de feated Judy Fitzjohn of Charlotte to win girls’ singles. Judy is com mitted to a tournament elsewhere, and can’t be here, it has been learned. There has been no word from Julia as yet. Deadline for, entries is Monday night, as pairings and seedings must be made Tuesday. Most en tries are traditionally deadline af fairs, leaving the tournament sponsors in suspense until that time. However, judging from past records, some| 30 to 40 teen-agers from all over North Carohna, with a sprinkling from other states, will join the local tennis-playing youngsters for a wonderful weekr end. Besides the tennis, which the boys and girls play with dedicated zeal and astonishing skill, they en joy a busy social hfe in off-court hours. Evenings see numerous informal get-togethers, while on one night—usually Thursday—the host group entertains. Sometimes this fxmction is a buffet supper, sometimes a wiener roast or wa termelon party beside a lake. The visitors will be put up in several local homes, also in rooms turned over to the group by the Southland Hotel. Local restau rants give them a special discount on their meals. Members of the Sandhills Tennis association help out in various phases of the tour nament, which turns out to be generally a community affair. Trophies for winners and run ners-up in each event, also the dozens of balls required for the tournament, are provided by the association. Events to be sched uled include singles and doubles in junior boys’ and junior girls’ brackets (15 to 18 years of age), also in boys’ and girls’ (up to 15). Mixed doubles are played if there are sufficient entries. SWITCH Somebody puUed a neat switch in West Southern Pines Tuesday night. Pohce reported this morning that a 1949 automobile owned by Charlie GiUis was stolen from its j parking place in front of his home. In its place, they said, was a 1941 model with the bearings burned out. Police are checking the owner ship of the earlier model with the State Depsirtment of Motor Vehi cles. They were unable to'learn from residents of the neighbor hood who left it there, nor why. Quite possibly, they figured, whoever pulled the switch did it in the dead of night. Gillis, they said, is walking. Two Injured When Driver Fails To Make Sharp Curve Two people were seriously in jured Tuesday night when the car in which they were riding failed to make a curve on West Pennsyl vania Ave. extension and slam med into a pine tree. The driver, identified as Badie Willard Faulk, 29, of 545 W. New Hampshire Avenue, was charged with exceeding the safe speed limit. Faulk told officers he was driv ing at 55 miles per hour on the road, which is not paved, going west when the curve loomed in front of him. 'When he started to make his turn, he told investigat ing Highway Patrolman R. R. Samuels, one of the passengers, Henrietta McLeod, 30, grabbed him by the arm and he lost con trol. The car, a total wreck, slammed into a large pine tree causing the right front wheel to jam into the front seat. Henrietta McLeod was hospitalized with a dislocated shoulder. Another passenger, Willie Wad dell, of Southern Pines, received a fracture of the right, foot and abrasions about the neck and face. Faulk received superficial cuts and bruises about the head and neck. Poll Indicates Sharp Division OnByp ass Zoning Partial results of a poll cop- ducted by the Chamber of Com merce among its members to indi cate zoning preferences along the new Highway 1 bypass were re leased this week. The poll, conducted over the past two weeks, shows that ap proximately 45 per cent of the re turned forms indicate a preference for no business along the bypass; 35 per cent prefer business; 12 per cent indicated a, preference for a combination of the two, business in certain areas emd residential in others; and eight per cent were undecided. Mark King, president of the Chamber of Commerce, said today that the poll' was made “simply to help the Town Coimcil and the planning board to know the de sires of a cross-section of business people in Southern Pines.” ’The poU, King said, had been a good thing, particularly in view of the fact that some members of the Chamber of Commerce who are business people in the town, are unable to attend the Council meet ings and have definite preferences they wanted to make before the Council. King forwarded the results of the poll to Town Council this week. In the meantime, he said, should any more answers to the poU be turned in, he would add them to the totals and have them ready for the regular meeting of the Town Council ’Tuesday night.