# VOL. 40—NO. 38 Compromise By Boards Reached In Money Hassle The Moore County board of ed ucation considered they won a victory in a compromise settle ment this morning at Carthage after the arbitration hearing they had called against the county commissioners in a budgetary dis pute was dismissed. The settlement was for $2,185 —a long way from the $9,900 they had asked to be transferred from one section of their current ex pense budget to another. But the $2,185 covered the most controversial item, a $2,000 sal ary supplement for Supt. Robert E. Lee. It also covered a $185 per year increase to be matched by federal funds for the county schools’ guidance director, C. E Powers. Temporarily foregone were two other items, raises for the cleri cal staff of the education office and the salary of a library super visor. They said it was too late anyway to find a librarian for the coming school year. As the arbitration hearing op ened before Clerk of Court C. C. Kennedy, with both boards ready for an all-day interrogation, M. G. Boyette, counsel for the com missioners, moved for dismissal on the ground the clerk had no jurisdiction. He cited law show ing that any supplement to the state-paid salary of the superin tendent was a matter exclusively for approval or disapproval of the commissioners. The clerk, acting as arbiter, allowed the motion. W. D. Sabiston, counsel for the board of education, gave notice of appeal to the Superior Court. Both boards then went into pri vate conference. Within a short while the school board made the compromise offer, which the com missioners accepted, ending a con troversy which had built up be tween them since early in June. The stage for this morning’s events was set Monday at a joint meeting of the commissioners and the board of education, when their official disagreement over how the $9,900 in current expense funds are to be spent resulted in a dead locked vote that, by law, sent the mattdr to Clerk of Court Ken nedy for arbitration. At the Monday session, the full membership of the two boards was present; for the, commission ers, Chairman L. R. Reynolds and Commissioners Tom Monroe, W. S. Taylor, J. M. Pleasants and John Currie; and for the board of education, ChairmEm J. A. Cul bertson, and Jere McKeithen, Howard Matthews, T. Roy Phillips and Roland Upchurch. The Monday meeting was ad journed from the previous Mon day when the commissioners had refused to allow the board of ed ucation’s request to transfer $9,- 9Q0 in county school current ex pense funds from maintenance to four uses they said were vital to SIXTEEN PAGES i SOUTHERN P],NES, N. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1960 SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE: 10 CENTS LITTLE LEAGUE FETED—C. L. Dutton of 610 S. Bennett St., veteran coach of Little League teams in former years in Southern Pines and a lifelong baseball fan is pictured (cen ter in striped shirt) presenting trophies to winners and run ners-up in the 1960 Little League championship race during a chicken supper gathering with the local Elks Lodge as host. At Mr. Dutton’s right is Coach Joel Stutts of the winning Car dinals and at his left is Frank Buchan, coach of the Pirates, runners-up. Boys in the photo include members of the Cardinals and Pirates and also of the other Little League teams, and the Minor League and Pony League teams. On the table are in dividual trophies presented to the Cardinals (left) and Pirates (right). Gold baseballs for presentation to the players on the other two Little League teams, the Braves and the Dodgers, had not arrived for the gathering last Wednesday at the Country Club. They are now on hand and will be presented soon. About 100 boys were entertained by the Elks at the event, many of whom are visible in this picture. (Humphrey photo) Commissioners Okay Start of Airport Work In actions taken at a special meeting in the courthouse at Car thage Monday, the county com missioners gave a strong push for ward to the Pinehurst-Southern Pines Airport improvement pro gram. The board authorized the Air port Committee to sign a con- Move Begun To ‘Affiliate’ With Town In Europe Preliminary plans were made Wednesday morning for partici pation by Southern Pines in the program of “Operation Town Af filiations, Inc.,’’ an organization with headquarters in New York j dared on the warrant and trial Superior Court Term To Open Monday At Carthage; Judge Bundy To Preside Judge William J. Bundy of Greenville, an assigned judge, is scheduled to preside at a one- week term of Moore County Su perior Court, for trial of criminal cases, opening at the courthouse in Carthage Monday morning. Morq than 50 cases are calen- City, to promote “international people-to-people understanding.’’ Prank Warner of Southern Pines is a member of the board of directors of the organization and chairman of its New Neigh bors Committee. It is through his efforts that local interest in the project was aroused. The New York office serves as a clearing house in coordinating and arranging contact between towns and cities in the United States and towns and cities in Europe. Once such an affiliation is agreed on, the governing heads of the towns correspond and con tacts are encouraged between club, church and school groups and individuals in the two towns. A group of interested persons, most of them representing civic organizations, elected officers and (Continued on page 8) dockets, of which more than 20 are for traffic law offenses, in cluding many appeals from lower courts by defendants charged with drunken driving. More than 20 defendants are scheduled to go before the grand jury. Two of the defendants, in cases rousing county-wide interest at the time of their arrests, are charged with assault with intent to commit rape. Nathaniel Terry, young West End Negro, faces this charge and also a charge of burglary in con nection with his entry of the Rob ert Conrad home at West End and his alleged assault on Mrs. Betty Conrad who said she was chased out of the house by Terry and attacked in the yard nearby. The other defendant, a Route 1, Aberdeen, white youth, is accused by a Negro woman who told of ficers Rex Venable attacked her but she freed herself by promis ing to meet him later. Venable was committed to a state mental hospital June 30 and it was not known here this week if he would be judged able to stand trial. Of local interest is the case of John Robinson, Negro resident of Youngs Road, who will also go before the grand jury. Robinson is charged with per mitting an unauthorized person to drive his automobile and aiding (Continued on Page 8) Band Practice Begins Aug. 15 Regular high school band prac tice will start Monday, August 15, at 10 a. m., William McAdams, band director, said this week. The sessions will be held each day, Monday through Friday, at the band room in the high school, until the opening of school. The municipal summer recrea tion band program, of which Mr. McAdams is in charge, will con tinue through Friday, August 26. Sandhill Tennis Tourney Slated To Begin Today Sam Daniel of Leaksville, top- seeded in the 12th annual Sand hill Invitational tennis tourna ment starting here today, may be hard put to hang on to his thrice- won crown. With finals in all events set for Sunday, both defenders—Daniel and Mrs. Raymonde Jones of Fort Bragg—face topnotch com petition. Entries listed from both Carolinas, Georgia, Virginia and Tennessee include some familiar stars as well as bright luminaries whose quality is as yet untested here, though their fame has pre ceded them. Daniel is fresh from his victory at the Kedmont Closed held at Greensboro last week-end — his latest in a string of wins all over the South. Among challengers are the No. 2 seed, Ed Hudgins of Greensboro; No. 3, Malcolm Clark of Southern Pines and No. 4, Charlie Shaffer, Jr., of Chapel Hill. Shaffer, too, has a new scalp on his belt. Just emerging into men’s play after virtual domi- (Continued on page 8) | Schools Faculty Announced; New Teachers Named All administrative and teach ing positions in the Southern Pines schools have been filled witn the exception of two teachers in the West Southern Pines units, Supt. Luther A. Adams said this week. There are nine new teachers in the East Southern Pines schools and one in West Southern Pines, with two more to be appointed, as of this week. Information about the new teachers appears following the faculty lists for all the schools: EAST SOUTHERN PINES Elemenlaiy Miss Mary Jane Prillaman, Mrs. Alice Caddell, Mrs. Betty Foushee, first; Mrs. Faye Worsham, Mrs. Jean Bennett, Mrs. Jean Wallace, second;' Miss Peggy Blue, Mrs. Edla Wicker, Mrs. Penelope Broughton, third; Miss Margaret Frye, Miss Hilda McConnell, Mrs. Jean Jenkins, fourth, Mrs. Grace Farrior, Mrs. Doris Wilson, Mrs. W. C. Callaway, fifth; Miss Kay Buice, Mrs. Eva Frye, Mrs. Ruth Deaton, sixth; Junior High Miss Margaret Brewer, Miss Edwina Rookes, Mrs. Jane Mc- Phaul, Ralph Foushee, Mrs. Eliza beth Adam, John Williams, Don Moore, principal; Miss Mary Logan, music super- (Continued on page 8) Football Practice To Start Monday Southern Pines High School football practice will start Mon day, Coach Billy Megginson an nounced today. The new coach, who comes here from Mount Holly High School in Gaston County, asked that all high school ‘boys interested in playing football meet at the high school building at 9 a. m. Monday for a conference on plans for the coming season. Practice sessions will be held each day early in the mprning and late in the afternoon, with about an hour and a half for each ses sion, Megginson said. tract with the Southern Mapping and Engineering Co. of Greens boro to make the needed engi neering studies for the $115,000 runway extension and paving pro ject. Half of 'the cost of extending the runway to 4,500 feet and pav ing the runway will be borne by the federal government. Gordon Cameron of Pinehurst and J. E. Sandlin of Southern Pines, Airport Committee mem bers appearing before the com missioners, also asked the board for funds up to $3,200 for land purchases and easements to ob tain the required land in and a- round the runway project site. The government also is paying half of, this cost. Mr. Cameron said that easments have already been tentatively obtained qn all the land except three tracts at the south end of the project. The engineering fee, Mr. Cam eron told the commissioners, will be six per cent of the contract price, plus “extras.’’ The county owns the airport and operates it under contract. Body of Mrs. Boggs Exhumed Today; Bullet Is Recovered the school program: 1. A $2,000 salary supplement for Supt. R. E. Lee. 2. A $6,000 salary for a school library supervisor. 3. A salary supplement of $185 per year (to be matched by fed eral funds) for C. E. Powers, guid ance director. 4. Increases averaging $50 per month for clerical help in the board of education office. At the meeting this week, the board of education offered to drop the request for librarian salary and cut the clerical worker re quest to an average of about $25 per month increase, but the com missioners would not agree. Going into executive session, the commissioners then came,out with a counter proposal — they would allow the board of educa tion to use only $1,000 of the sum in question as they chose. This the board of education re jected and the two boards found themselves in official disagree ment. The locked vote followed and the matter went to the clerk of court for today’s hearing. (Editorials appearing on page 2 of today's Pilot, deal ing with the controversy and other related matters, were written prior to this morning's compromise settlement that makes posidble a requested salary supplement for Supt. Lee.) 'The body of a woman some two months dead, found in a tumble- down house at Manly Saturday, July 30, was exhumed this morn ing from- a grave in the Douba Ghapel Church cemetery in an intensive search for more clues as to the cause of death. The body was returned to the grave before noon, after an autopsy. The county commissioners on Monday authorized the expendi ture Of funds for the exhrunation tion of the remains of Mrs. Evely: Boggs, 41, on request of the sher iff’s department. , A brother of Mrs. Boggs, cooperating with thi officers in their continuing in vestigation, agreed to sign th( exhumation order. Deputy Sheriff J. A. Lawrence handling the investigation, said that all available scientific meth ods are being employed in trying to determine if the woman com mitted suicide or was murdered. The pistol bullet, which showed up in the chest region by X-ray, was recovered during today’s au topsy performed by Dr. P. P. Green, pathologist of Moore Memorial Hospital. Because of the decomposed con dition of the body, an autopsy performed before Mrs. Boggs’s btu-ial July 31 was inconclusive. Two men are being held in jail for questioning—her husband Henry Boggs, a former mental hospital patient; and an admitted former lover of the woman. 7^1 Billy Needham, 21, Held In Shooting Of Wade Maness Wadfe Maness, 41-year-old far mer of near Carthage, is in Moore Memorial Hospital in serious con dition and his nephew Billy Need ham, 21, who makes his home with the Maness family, is being held in Moore County jail charged with shooting him, according to the sheriff’s department. Though gravely wounded, Man ess was reported still living at the hospital this morning. He was shot Saturday morning. Needham has been charged with felonious assault but has been denied bond and the char ges are being help open pending Maness’ condition. Said Chief Deputy Sheriff H. H. Grimm, “Maness received the full blast from a shotgun in his side at a range of five or six feet.” Maness was able to give his version cleEirly, Grimm i^eported. He told the officer he had come into the house to- find his nephew drunk and creating a disturbance, and tried to quiet him down. Bil ly’s response was to grab the shot gun and fire at close range. Arrested later Saturday, Billy admitted'the shooting but said it happened “in a scuffle over the gun.” He is iinder a suspended sentence in Moore Recorders Court. Maness, married and with sev eral children, is a respected far mer on land belonging to Dr. Co lin G. Spencer of Carthage. MURDER OR SUICIDE?—Photo at left shows the aban- ■ doned, dilapidated house where the body of Mrs. Evelyn Boggs was found several weeks after she died of a bullet wound. Window at left is to the room where the body was found on a bed. The door from the rotted-out porch leads to a central hall. At right is window of room where a note in Mrs. Bogg’s hand writing was found accusing a 26-year-old local man, now be ing held in the Moore County jail, of having shot her. She was pregnant when she died. At the rear of the house are two other rooms. The whole house, where Mrs? Boggs had lived some months ago but not immediately prior to her death, is in an advanced state of disrepair. In the photo at right, two of the investigating officers, SBI Agent Gary Griffith, left, and Deputy Sheriff J. A. Lawrence, are pictured going through the contents of a pocketbook found in the house. It contained snap shots, letters and 35 cents. Other letters and a few personal possessions were found scattered around. The house is located a half mile north of the Midland Road intersection on the unpaved road that is a continuation of N. W. Broad St. (Photos by V. Nicholson. Lions Announce Chicken Supper To Aid Projects Plans for a chicken supper—to raise funds for their community service projects—were announced today by Southern Pines Lions. The club’s supper will be held at the outdoor cook-out area at the Southern Pines Country Club, Wednesday, August 24, from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. Joe Marley, club president, said there will bfe free home delivery of box suppers for those ordering them and that suppers can also be picked up at the Country Club. Walter Harper will be in charge of the food preparation. Similar suppers staged by the club in the past have been most successful. Moore Boys Win Game at Sanford The Moore County Little Tar Heel League baseball team beat Wilmington 1-0 in its first contest at the state league playoffs in Sanford last night. The Moore team faces Greens boro at 9 o’clock tonight in their second game of the playoffs at Dalrymple Field. There’s a photo and more about the Moore'County team on page 13.