One observer of the missle-caused light in the sky early Monday night tells how it looked. Page 19. ^iqbral fGl^ndon ql«5pqL Cameron pi ’Vaj» Mlo'JlS ™‘sa= lora/ A mink ranch in the Sandhills? Yes, and it’s proving successful. For a report and photos, turn to page 20. VOL. 42—NO. 10 TWENTY PAGES WAS LAST SEEN SATURDAY NIGHT SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1962 TWENTY PAGES Body of James Herbert Briggs, 33, Reeovered From Car in Little River The tip of a car hood, showing five or six inches above the flood-swollen water, Tuesday afternoon was the clue to a car which had submerged, drowning its driver, at the Little River bridge on US 1 between Lakeview and Vass. State highway department School Absences Declining After 23 Per Cent Top ^ An outbreak of illness that on j ^ Wednesday caused absences of| 235, or 23%, of the students in the i East Southern Pines schools ap- : pears to be on the decline, Supt. Luther A. Adams said this morn- j ing. He said there is nqw no ques tion of closing the schools. Today’s absences in East South ern Pines schools numbered 228. Monday’s absentee count was 168, 16% of the students, jumpmg to 205 on Tuesday. There have been only one or two faculty absences, Mr. Adams said. Illnesses have included a light type of flu and various virus in fections. Absences in West Southern Pines schools have been normal, for this time of year, all this week, Mr. Adams said, reflecting no serious outbreak of illness in, that part of town. Cameron Youth Named Candidate For Annapolis John Atlas Phillips III, a senior ^ at Cameron High school, is very happy to have received Congress man A. Paul Kitchin’s nomina tion as a principal candidate for the U. S. Naval Academy at An napolis. He said this week he knows he will have a hard row to hoe to meet all the requirements, b.ut is going to do his best. Judging from past performance, his best is going to be mighty good. In senior superlatives this year. Johnny was voted “most likely to succeed,’’ and said he hopes this will hold true for the Naval Academy exams. He is awaiting instructions as to when these will (Continued on page 5) workers replacing a highway sign I at the bridge alerted the Highway Patrol about 4 p. m. Nearly two hours later, the car with the body of James Heroert Briggs, 33, of Cameron, Rome 1, had been drawn out with great difficulty by a wrecker. Coroner Ralph G. Steed render ed a verdict of death by drowning but said that, because of the cold ness of the water, it was impos sible to tell how long the boay had been submerged. Investiga tion by Patrol Sgt. J. S. Jones and Trooper H. A. Hight, Jr., indica ted it had been there since Sat urday night. Trooper Hight said Briggs, who was unmarried and lived with a brother, had not been seerf by members of his family since early Saturday evening, though he was reported seen later that night at (Continued on Page 8) Minister Elected Rotary President PRICE: 10 CENTS -i Democratic Officials To Seek Reiiomination AT CARTHAGE TUESDAY The Rev. Carl Wallace, pastor of the United Church of Christ, was elected president of the Southern Pines Rotary Club, at the club’s luncheon meeting in the Southern Pines Country Club Friday. Other new officers are: Marvin Cornell, vice-president; John A. McPhaul, treasurer; and L. D. McDonald, secretary. Robert Bis hop and Arthur Rowe were elect ed new members of the board of directors. All the new officers will be in stalled in June. Robert Leland is the current president of the club. Roy Palmer of CUiai^otte, ..-an illuminating engineer with the Duke Power Co., spoke to the clifb on residential lighting, say ing that while lighting in busi ness establishments and office buildings is generally good,, home lighting is often poor. Residential bghting should be planned when a house is planned, he said, noting that new fixtures such as hidden lights and light panels can give adequate light without glare. FIRM WINS AWARD— 'Thomas T. Hayes, Jr. (left) and W. Calvin Howeb, of the local architectural firm, Hayes-Howell and Associates, are pictured with enlarged photos depicting exterior and interior views of the Southern Pines Savings and Loan Association building, designed by the firm, which has received a Merit Award in a contest sponsored by the North Carolina Chapter of the American In stitute of Architects. This and other awards were presented at last week’s convention of the Chapter at the Mid Pines Club here. Out-of- state judges picked the winners of the architect ural awards. Meeting with the architects was the Tar Heel Chapter of the Illuminating En gineering Society, of which John L. Ponzer of Southern Pines is president. (Hemmer photo) Two State Troopers Assigned Here ’Two troopers arriving here to day, assigned to Southern Pines, bring to six the strength o fthe State Highway Patrol in Moore County. Sgt. J. S. Jones, who heads the three-county district Patrol office at Siler City, said the troopers assigned here are: Pfc. Jack F. Cardwell, a native of Ellerbe, who was transferred here from Parkton in Robeson County; and Pfc. F. Ray Wicker, a Sanford native, who comes here from Wendell. Both of the officers said this morning that they had not yet found living quarters here. Pfc. Cardwell is married to the former Essie Dawkins of Rock ingham. 'They have two sons. Jack, 7, and Bobby, 5. Pfc. Wicker’s wife is the for mer Carolyn Spinks of Burke County. They have twin daugh- ,ters will six years old next month,’ Leslie Carol and Lisa A^ne, and a son, Ricky, 9. Today’s assignment of two new troopers to Moore County in creases l^y one the allotment the county has had for a number of years. A request for an additional trooper was officially made by the county commissioners at their December meeting. Pfc. W. R. Austin, who came from Ansonville, went on duty '■December 15 and is now living in Pinehurst. Former patrolmen now not on duty in Moore are E. G. Sho- maker, who was transferred Dec ember 15 from Southern Pines to Salisbnry and J. Frank :^waim of Aberdeen who . was suspended, at first temporarily and then per manently, late last year, on charges never made public by the Patrol. Troopers who have been serv ing in Moore and remain are Pfc. R. R. Samuels of Southern Pines; Pfc. Henry Hight of Carthage; and Pfc. Tommy Clark of Rob bins. Collection Of Blood Set Here Monday A bloodmobile from the Red Cross blood center at Charlotte, will be at St. Anthony’s School auditorium from noon to 5:30 p. m. Monday, to give residents of ihe Southern Pines area an op portunity to give blood in the continuing program that supplies Moore County’s two hospitals. The Jaycees, with President Tom Ruggles as chairman of the project, have taken over sponsor ship of bloodmobile visits here and are busy lining up donors o meet the 125-pint quota for the collection. Mr. Ruggles.urges that all persons who have signed don or cards previously honor their signatures by giving blood Mon day. He pointed out that Moore County, whose residents have failed to give as much blood as the amount used by the county’.s hospitals from the Charlotte cen ter, will lose its blood program, if quotas are not tsurpassed, to make up a large deficit, in forth coming visits of the bloodmo bile. The bloodmobile will visit Car thage Tuesday, stopping at the high school gymnasium from 11 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. T. Roy Phillips is donor chairman. It’s early in this Election year, but at least five county officials were found this week ready to state they’ll be running for re nomination in the Democratic pri mary in May. In fact, one of them. District Superior Court Solicitor M. G. Boyette, who files with the State Board of Elections, has already filed as a candidate for a fourth four-year term. Sheriff W. B. Kelly, who won the office in a race and runoff in 1958, said, “Yes, I will be' a candidate, and if you’d asked me four years ago I could have told you the same thing.’’ Nothing has happened since, he noted, to make him change his mind. Clerk of Court C. C. Kennedy, elected in 1950 and twice reeiect- ed since, answered, “Indeed I do want to keep my job—preferably without any opposition!’’ This was in essence the same answer as that of Mrs. Audrey B McCaskill, register of deeds, who is completing her first term. She had worked at various times un der two previous registers and noted, “There is more and more to learn about this job. I feel I have learned a lot and want to keep on using it.” Rep. H. Clifton Blue, who is in a race for speakership of the House in 1963 and—from reports all over the State—well in the lead, noted, “I am definitely plan ning to be a candidate for renom ination.” After eight terms. Rep. Blue is currently the second in length of service in the House. (Continued on Page 8) Old Man Acquitted by Jury on Murder Char;4e Beck Succeeding Swaringen in Post The State Highway Commis sion has announced the appoint ment of Fred H. Beck of Carthage as District Two engineer for the Eighth Highway Division. Mr. Beck is being promoted from a position as resident engin eer in Asheboro, to replace Dis trict Two Engineer Sam Swarin gen of Aberdeen, who died re cently. As District Two engineer, Mr. Beck will be responsible for road work in Hoke, Moore and Lee Counties, with district headquar ters in Aberdeen. The son of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Beck of Linwood, Mr. Beck is 43 years old, and began working with the Commission in 1945 as a rodman. He is married to the former Miss Bessie E. McDonald and they have two children, Fred Henderson Beck, Jr., and Lauree Beth Beck. Though working out of Ashe boro, Mr. Beck has ' maintained his home at Carthage. He is ac tive in Boy Scout work at Car thage. THE WEATHER Maximum and minimum tem peratures for each day of the past week were recorded as follows at the U. S. Weather Bureau obser vation station at the WEEB studios on Midland Road. Max Min January 25 68 45 January 26 76 58 January 27 73 54 January 28 59 29 January 29 53 19 January 30 51 22 January 31 41 21 Alec Everett, past 80, was ac quitted Wednesday by a jury of second-degree murder in the fatal shooting of Henry Boggs, 49, last September. The trial took place in Moore County Superior Court at Carthage. 'The little old man with grey hair fringing his bald pate, wear ing a battered brown jacket rag ged at the elbows, had freely ad mitted to th4 shooting at the time of his arrest, but said it was in self-defense. The jury was out only 30 minutes at the close of a day and a half of testimony, ■most of it taken up with Everett’s rambling and hair-raising tale of terror covering a period of several months. Cupping his hand at his ear to hear the questions, jabbing the air with his forefinger to empha size his answers, he got lost in his own testimony several times, ad mitting that “I don’t remember very well.” Apologetically he told Judge John D. McConnell, “My intellect comes and goes.” As defense counsel H. F. Sea- well tried to keep him on track under examination, but his client admonished him briskly, “Well, all right- I’m gittin’ there, I’m gittin’ there!” When his defender intimated at one point that Eve rett was repeating himself, the old man retorted, “I ain’t begun to tell it all. I ain’t made a hole in it, even. I got it all banked up.” The tale he had to tell was of an univited guest, who moved in on him at his isloated farm home, shared his meager food without repayment, wouldn’t leave when asked to “find another place to board,” then began “drinking wine,” hiding bottles in the woods, and beating, choking and injuring his unwilling host. Referring to Boggs, who had been a Butner Hospital patient, Everett said, “He wam’t crazy at all, he was smart as the very mischief. He wanted to kill me but so as the law wouldn’t find out he had done it.” After several beatings, he said, he armed himself with a pistol, then when Boggs started chok ing him on that September day, told him, “Turn me loose or I’ll shoot.” It took three shots, he said, to make Boggs “turn loose” and fall face down in the sandy road. Everett went into his house and sat with his shotgun on his lap, afraid “he’d get up and come after me.” The next day he went and looked and Boggs was still breathing. Everett waited another night, and went in the morning to poke Boggs with a stick and watch him a while. He “warn’t gettin’ any air” so the , old man went to a neighbor’s to phone the sheriff a man had been “found dead.” While the shooting might have been in self-defense. Solicitor M. G. Boyette told the jury—and Judge McConneU indicated in his charge—leaving the man two days in the hot sun to die was a different matter. The not-guilty verdict perturb ed Judge McConnell, who asked the jury foreman, “What do you think we should do with him?” The foreman answered, “We think he ought to be put some place he can be cared for, but we don’t think it is up to us to say.” To defense counsel the judge coon- mented, “We don’t want people to think that in Moore we condone shooting people and leaving them in the road for three days to die.” “We don’t condone it but this old man had lived there 40 years and hadn’t given anybody a speck of trouble, and he isn’t going to now,” said Seawell. In his youth, Everett admitted, he had killed another man, and had served 15 years at hard labor in prison at Raleigh till 1919. A couple of years later he bought (Continued on Page 8) FIRST TIME IN MOORE COUNTY GQP ^uvejatioii Set for Feb. 10; Races Expected Moore County Republicans will hold their 1962 county convention at the courthouse in Carthage at 2 'p. m., Saturday, February 10, James E. Harrington, Jr., of Pine hurst, county chairman, announc ed this week. The convention will elect coun ty officers for 1961-62 and dele gates to the 8th District and State conventions. Current county GOP officers, in addition to Mr. Harrington, are Mrs. Katherine McCpll of South ern Pines, vice chairman; and Ar nold Garner of Robbins, secretary and treasurer. “Some years ago,” Mr. Harring ton said in announcing the meet ing, “these conventions were con sidered nominating conventions. However, it is now our policy that nominees be selected by in dividual filing and primary elec tions where there is a contest for any particular office. “A number of people,” he con tinued, “have indicated to me their interest in running for va rious offices, and there appears to be a good possibility of several primary contests. Democrats Will Recommend 2 for Elections Board \ A meeting of the Moore Coun ty Democratic Executive Commit tee has been caUed for Monday, February 12, at Carthage at 5 P- m. it is announced this week by County Chairman Lament Brown of Southern Pines. The meeting has been called for the purpose of recommending appointees as Democratic mem bers for the Moore County Board of elections. The county execu tive committee will select the names of three Democrats to sub mit to State Chairman Bert Ben nett, who in turn will make rec ommendations to the State Board of Elections for appointment for iwo-year terms. In a letter to all Deanocratic county chairmen, Bennett asked that the county committee submit the names in the order of local preference, since two will be rec ommended. The third member of the local elections board is a member of the Republican Party selected in a similar manner. 'The State Board of Elections will meet in March to make the official appointments for both parties. Harding Speaks to Historical Croup; County History to Go to Press Soon rv^ 1 i ^TT.^ —l-t— ,.i It Judge McConnell Presides at Court Snowy weather brought a wel come surprise to Moore County this week—Judge John D. Mc Connell of Southern Pines pre siding over the Superior Court term at Carthage for the first time since he was sworn in as a special judge last July. Judge Robert M. Gambiil of North Wilkesboro, who presided over last week’s civil term, was expected back for the criminal term this week but found himself pretty well snowed in Monday morning, with travel precarious in his mountain area. Judge Mc Connell, slated to hold court in Wilkes, didn’t care to travel so far from home either, so the two judges arranged a swap of com missions. Judge McConnell, in his home county courtroom, found himself amid familiar surroundings and friendly faces. He also conducted his court under a portrait of the late Judge W. A. Leland Mc- Keithen, his former law partner. The portrait hangs on the court room wall. The Pinehurst firm of McKeithen and McConnell is be lieved to be the only one in the history of the State in which both partners were appointed to the Superior Court bench. JUDGE JOHN D. McCONNELL .. . ai Carthage Edmund Harding of Washington in Beaufort County, who is na tionally known as an after-dinner speaker, entertained the Moore County Historical Association with many of his humorous anec dotes Tuesday night, while urging them seriously to “keep history green” by revering “a heritage of which we can be proud” and by working untiringly and enthusi astically to preserve the best of the past. The Association, with nearly 100 members and guests attend ing, met in the court room at the municipal center, with Norris L. Hodgkins, Jr., president, presid ing. Mr. Harding was introduced by Mrs. Ernest Ives and by J. Talbot Johnson of Aberdeen, an old friend. The Beaufort County man is chairman of the Historic Bath Commission which is restoring the old community of Bath and is immediate past president of the North Carolina Society for the Preservation of Antiquities. A specific suggestion made by the speaker was that members of the Historical Association search out old neglected grave yards and try to clean them up. “We owe something to those who have gone on,” he said. A unique and entertaining feat ure of his talk was his rapid-fire commentary on the lives of all 69 sons fathered by the 24 presi dents of the United States who had sons, many of whomj were ap parently considerably less dis tinguished than their fathers. Reporting on various aspects of the Association’s work, in the business session, were: E. T. McKeithen who said that the completion of the second vol ume of the County history by Manly Wade Wellman had been delayed because he (Mr. Mc Keithen) had been injured in a fall and that it is now expected that the completed work will be in the hands of the printers by the middle of February. Mrs. Katherine McColl who an nounced the opening of the Shaw House, v^ith several improvements (Continued on page 8)