4' O ^Gl^don ^lt«rbe VOL. 40—NO. 48 EIGHTEEN PAGES Crisis in Red Cross Blood Program Discussed in 4-County Session Here SOUTHERN PINES, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1960 EIGHTEEN PAGES Representatives of Red Cross I Parish hall of Em- ood collection program in ®P*®copal Church were: Mrs. Kennedy, the Rev. Martin blood collection program Moore, Hoke, Richmond and Stan ly Counties met here Monday af ternoon to discuss lagging collec tions in areas served by the Red Cross Blood Center at Charlotte, with increased recruitment of donors as the goal. Use of blood by hospitals ex ceeded collections in 27 of the 37 Red Cross chapter areas served by the Charlotte Center, in the period from July through Sep tember, the group was told. In Moore, for instance, 324 pints were used during this period and 120 collected, the report by offic ials of the program showed. A visit of a bloodmobile to Vass last week collected only 26 pints, said Mrs. Audrey K. Kennedy, e.xecutive director of the Moore County chapter, who presided at the meeting. Present on- Monday at the gath- Dr. Heinitsh Is President State ^ Wildlife Group Dr. George Heinitsh of South ern Pines was elected president of the North Carolina Wildlife Federation at its annual conven tion held at Fontana Dam last weekend. The State Federation is com posed of more than 7,000 mem bers in some 100 affiliated clubs. Dr. Heinitsh has been its secre- tary for the past two terms. He is also ciurrently serving as presi dent of the Moore County Wild life club, in which he h^ been active since its organization a dozen years ago. Dr. Heinitsh, who has practiced as an eye, ear, nose and throat specialist in Southern Pines since 1946, is an active hunter and fish erman, expert marksman and collector of firearms, dedicated to the principles of outdoor sports and to the conservation of natural resources for which the Federa tion stands. It supports legislation and the program of the North Carolina wildlife Resources Commission to preserve the benefits of soil, water, forest and stream for the best use of the State and its peo ple. ^ “A ^eat challenge before us * today is the fight against water pollution,” he said this week, noting that “the appointment of the State Stream Commission by Governor Hodges last year was a great forward step.” Dr. Heinitsh was born in Spar tanburg, S. C., took premedical work and his first two years of medical studies at the University of North Carolina, and graduated ^ from Duke Medical school in 1932, remaining at Duke Hospital for five years for training in medi cine, surgery and his specialty of ophthalmology. He was married in 1932 to Nel lie Graves of Carthage. They lived for two years, 1939-40, in Fayette ville, where he was associated* (Continued on Page 8) Hj Republicans to Stage Carthage Rally Saturday Moore County Republicans, making their liveliest bid in years for county offices as well as the state and national tickets, wiU have another free supper and Tally Saturday night, at the American Legion hut near Carth age. Some 300 persons were reported attending last Saturday night’s rally and supper at Aberdeen. Speakers included James E. Harrington of Pinehurst, county GOP chairman and Stait Senate candidate who stressed the need for a two-party system in North Carolina; A. I. Ferree of Asheboro who spoke on the importance of working in the local precinct; Mayor Robert S. Ewing of South ern Pines who discussed the na tional phase of the campaign and Drewry Troutman of Pinebluff, candidate for member of the coun ty board of education, from Sand hill and Mineral Springs town ships, gave his ide2ts for improv- ing the county schools. Caldwell, rector of the church; Dr. Charles Phillips and Dr. Phil ip Green, representing Moore Me morial Hospital; Dr. Raymond Daugherty, representing St. Jo.s- eph of the Pines Hospital; Robert Cross of Asheboro, past regional Red Cross blood collection execu tive chairman and a member of the committee; William Cade, di rector of recruitment for the reg ion; John Petty, blood program chairman for Stanly County; C. A. Hostetler, chairman at Rae- ford; Mrs. W. R. Wilson and C. A. Royston, of Hamlet; and press representatives. LTnder the system used through out the 37-chapter area, blood is supplied by the center, in types called for, to hospitals of the area, in the expectation that periodic collections by bloodmobiles will return to the center at least the equivalent of the amount sent to hospitals in the territory of each of the chapters. It is this return flow of blood that has been slow ing down and threatening to cut off blood from the Charlotte cen ter to the hospitals. It was apparent from the re ports given Monday that the slow down is not local in Moore Coun ty but has affected most of the chapters in the 37-county area. The Southern Pines meeting was one of a series of four region al meetings to discuss the serious ness of the situation and seek for answers that will promote dona tion of more blood frpm all of the lagging chapters. All the officials agreed that many persons who pledge to give blood often don’t give and that the burden of giving is falling too much on a relatively few persons who are generous in their dona tions. Recruitment of new donors; an efficient organization to involve many people in the program; and the help that can be given by clubs and industries—all these were mentioned as important fac tors in stepping up blood collec tions in any community. PRICE: 10 CENTS Stevenson in Sandhills For Rest, Will Speak at Noon Rally on Saturday AT PAINT HILL FARM — This hill-top, re stored pioneer cabin residence of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Ives, near Southern Pines, will be the weekend relaxing place for Mrs. Ives’s brother. Adlai E. Stevenson. Also at Southern Pines for the weekend will be two of his three sons, Adlai, Jr., of Chicago, and Borden of Cambridge, Mass. BENNETT TO SPEAK Elmer Bennett, Under-Sec retary of the Interior and a member of the Republican national "Truth Squad," will address a county-wide Moore County GOP rally on Thurs day, October 27, at a place . and time to be announced, James E. Harrington, Jr., Moore County Republican chairman, said yesterday. Hodges, Sanford To Attend Travel Council Meeting Governor Luther H. Hodges and Democratic Governor - nominate Terry Sanford will attend the meeting of the Travel Council of North Carolina here Sunday night at which the new survey showing tiavel to be North Carolina’s third largest industry will be released Governor Hodges will be the speaker at a dinner beginning at 7 p. m. at the Mid Pines Cl)ub. President Lynn Nisbet of the Travel Council said that Gover nor Hodges would not only re ceive the first copy of the new survey to come from the press, but would be presented with a special award in recognition of the fact that he appointed the committee which organized the Council in 1955. Members of the organizing committee will also be recognized. They are: Robert L. Thompson, public relations counsel, Raleigh; Richard S. Tufts, president pf Pinehurst, Inc.; S. Gilmer Spar ger, executive secretary of the hiorth Carolina Petroleum Com mittee; S. B. Jones, former pres ident of the North Carolina Motel Association, and Marley M. Mel vin, former executive vice presi dent of the North Carolina Asso ciation of Quality Restaurants. The Travel Council, a non-stock, non-profit corporation .dedicated to development of better facilities (Continued on page 8) FAIR NEXT WEEK The Moore Counly Agricul tural Fair will open Monday at Carthage to run through Saturday. The fair, sponsored by the Carthage Jaycees, will fea ture aigricultural and com- mercial exhibits; a "Miss Moore Counly High School of 1961" beauty contest, Wed nesday night, with Miss Ann Herring of Winston-Salem, "Miss North Carolina" as one of the judges; and other spe cial events. There will be a (fireworks display each night at 10. Many Add Names In Registration Registration for the November elections is continuing through out Moore County, with registrars to be at polling places this Sat urday and Saturday of next week. The voting will take place Tues day, November 8. Registrars reported unusually heavy registration last Saturday. In Southern Pines precinct 85 names were added—51 Democrats, 32 Republicans and two indepen dents. Eighty new names were added at Aberdeen—50 Demo crats, 22 Republicans and eight independents. There were 41 new legistrations in Pinebluff—20 Democrats, 18 Republicans and three independents. Grange Will Open State Convention; Caldwell to Speak Dr. John Caldwell, chancellor of N. C. State College, will be the featured speaker next Monday night at the Fellowship Dinner at the convention of the N. C. Grange which opens here Sunday. The event will take place in the Southern Pines High School cafeteria. Special awards will be made on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, with 100 granges ex pected to receive special recogni tion for community service and other programs. A vesper service will be con ducted Sunday evening at 7:30 in Brownson Memorial Presbyterian Church. Headquarters for the con vention will be the Hollywood Hotel with registration to take place there Sunday. Granges of Moore and Hoke Counties are hosts for the conven tion. The state convention of the American War Mothers is being concL’ded at the Hollywood to day. ' Walter Cronkite, CBS-TV, to Talk With Stevenson Among the many celebrities due to arrive here for the Stevensoq, Rally is Walter Cronkite, star commentator for the Columbia Broadcasting System. Mr. Cronkite is due here Fri day, bringing with him from CBS’s New York studios a full team of cameramen and technic ians. The network will hold a working session Sunday afternoon when, as part of CBS’s “Presiden tial Countdown,” a remote video taping will be made of a meeting between Governor Stevenson and Mr. Cronkite in which the two men will discuss the candidates and the campaign. Plans were being made for the trip down and visit here by War ren Bush of CBS NEWS who calL ed The Pilot Tuesday to discuss arrangements. Mr. Bush said the performance would be aired by the networks Monday, October 24, from 10:30 to 11 p.m. and could be picked up here, he believed, over Greensboro’s Station WFMY. A radio broadcast of the interview is scheduled for Tuesday, October 25, at 8:35 p.m. Local Children to Collect UNICEF Funds, Halloween 'PUBLIC SPEAKING' Two letters to the editor writ ten for “The Public Speaking’ column which usually appears on The Pilot’s editorial page appear today on page A. One other let ter to the editor, however, is on the usual page. GOP Campaign Caravan to Visit County Tuesday The colorful Republican Cam paign Caravan will bring Robert L. Gavin and other top G.O.P. candidates to Moore County next Tuesday, October 25. The Cara van, which will cover the state from the coast to the mountains, will make two stops in Moore. Carthage is first on the sched ule, with activities set for the courthouse square at 8:45 a.m. The program calls for speeches by state-wide candidates, headed by gubernatorial nominee Gavin, and a brief address by A. M. Snipes, candidate for Congress from the 8th District. G.O.P. coun ty candidates will be introduced on the platform. From Carthage, the Caravan will move to Southern Pines, where another stop js scheduled at 9:45 a.m. in front of Republi can Headquarters on N. E. Broad Street. Local candidates and party of ficials will accompany the Cara van from the county line. AU in terested citizens are invited to meet the candidates. 5* * Southern Pines children will join more than two million boys and girls in over 10,000 American communities in collecting dona tions for UNICEF—the United Nations Children’s Fund—in place of the traditional “trick or treat” handout on Halloween, Monday, October 3-1. The collection will take place from 5 to 7 p.m. and so will not conflict with the Rotary Club’s Halloween Carnival at Memorial Field. Mrs. J. S. Hiatt, Jr., chairman for the collection, said that all Protestant churches of Southern Pines are participating and urging children of the churches to take part. At a meeting of leaders in the project last week, the town was divided into territories for groups of children to cover, in an effort to prevent each house from being solicited more than once for UNICEF. This is the 10th year Halloween collections have been made for UNICEF in the United States, Mrs. Hiatt pointed out, with con tributions increasing from $36 collected by a single Sunday School class in 1950 to $1,500,000 last year. UNICEF is the world’s largest international organization devot ed entirely to the health and wel fare of children and mothers. Dr. Bruce Warlick, Cubmaster of Cub Scout Pack 73, which is sponsored by ■ Brownson Memor ial Presbyterian Church, said this week that Cubs of Pack 73 will take part in the UNICEF collec tion, as the Pack’s project for The Sandhills will welcome an old friend and visitor this week end, who hasn’t been back for four years—Adlai E. Stevenson, form er two-time Democratic Presiden tial candidate and Governor of Illinois. Hundreds of persons will have an opportunity to hear him at a noon rally in the Southern Pines High School gymnasium Satur day, when he will speak on a pro gram that will also feature Terry Sanford of Fayetteville, Demo cratic candidate for Governor, and A. Paul Kitchin of Wadesboro, candidate for re-election to the U. S. House of Representatives. While here. Governor Stevenson will be the guest of his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Ives at their Paint Hill Farm^ which for many years has been a favorite vacation spot with the Democratic leader. 'The Saturday rally, sponsored by the Moore County Democratic Executive Committee of which W. Lament Brown is chairman, is slated to start at 11:15 a.m. with a free lunch for all attending. Voit Gilmore heads the rally arrange ments committee. The public is in vited, regardless of party affilia tion. The rally will be the fourth public appearance of Governor Stevenson in two days in North Carolina. He is expected to ad dress a big rally at Clinton Fri day afternoon; will speak at the Duke University indoor stadium at Durham, at 7:15 p.m. Friday; and will appear at a breakfast in Raleigh Saturday morning, wind ing up the Young Democrats’ State convention. Arrangements for the Stevenson visit to North Carolina are being handled by John D. McConnell of Southern ■ Pines, secretary of the N. C. Democratic Executive Com mittee. Democrats of 8th District to Rally Monday in Sanford Democrats from the Eighth Congressional District will con vene at Central High School in Sanford, Monday, October 24, for a rally led by state Democratic leaders. J. C. Pittman, chairman of the executive committee of Lee Coun ty Democrats, said today Malcolm B. Seawell will be chief speaker at the rally and free barbecue, which begins at 4:30 on the high school campus. Lee Democrats will be hosts to visitors from the other 11 counties in the district: Anson, Davidson, Davie, Hoke, Montgomery, Moore, Richmond, Scotland, Union, Wilkes, and Yadkin. Bert Bennett, Democratic state chairman, will present officials and members of the Council of State for their parts on the pro gram. Commissioner of Labor Frank Crane is scheduled to speak, along With North Caro lina’s U. S. Senators Sam Ervin, Jr., and B. Everette Jordan, Con gressman Paul Kitchin, and the Democratic candidate for lieuten ant governor, Cloyd Philpott. Pittman will present guberna torial nominee Terry Sanford, who will introduce Malcolm Seawell, former state attorney general and gubernatorial candidate ui_ 1 ♦ i. y." ’ ’ — ^-aixuiuate in the helping others —one of four pro-i spring Democratic primary. Meets the Pack is undertaking in competition for an award in con nection with the 50th anniversary of Scouting in the United States. .11 ij.’ REPUBLIC./^ CANDIDATES for state offices are pictured here. They will be touring the state next week as a “campaign caravan”, and are expected in Moore County Tuesday morning. They are, seated: Robert L. Gavin, left, candidate for governor Md Kyle Hayes, candidate for the U. S. Senate. Others standing, left to right, are: Paul C. West, candidate for State Supreme Court; Fred R. Keith, candidate for state treasurer; A. H. Farm er, candidate for commissioner of agriculture; Mi;s. Walter Zach ary, candidate for superintendent of public instruction; Donald L. Paschal, candidate for attorney general; Dallas M. Reese, can didate for state auditor; T. Paul Messick, candidate for commis sioner of labor; S. Clyde Eggers, candidate for lieutenant gover nor; Julian E. Cameron, candidate for commissioner of insurance and David L. Morton, candidate for secretary of state. Gifts Lagging in I Girl Scout Drive Persons who have not given in j the Central Carolina Girl Scout Fund Drive are asked to send their contributions to Max Rush,' treasurer, by the end of October [so that the campaign can be /closed out. Mrs. Albert Grove, local drive I chairman, said that many persons I to whom appeal letters were sent I have not responded. Only about 1 60 per cent of the Southern Pines quota of $2,500 has been sub scribed, she said. The program will be held in the large auditorium at the school, and a barbecue for district Dem ocrats will follow on the school grounds. Work Slarls on New Wing of High School Excavation work for the “Phase C” wing of East Southern Pines High School has begun, with fur ther construction expected to move along rapidly. The wing will run parallel to New York Ave. and join to the north end of the existing high school building. Cost of the wing will run to about $180,600, a figure which in cludes some but not all of the equipment for it. Classrooms in the wing will enable the four classes now meet ing out of the school to be housed .on school property.