Page EIGHT
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1962
League
Bowling
BUSINESSMEN'S NO. 1
Results
Jackson Motors 4, Clark St
Bradshaw 0.
Sandhills Bonded Whse. 4,
Trimble 0.
Wedge Inn 4, Carthage Fabrics
0. '
Kennedy & Co. 3, Flinchum’s
TV 1.
High Team 3 games, Wedge Inn
2416; high team game, same, 826.
High ind. series, Jose Sotuyo
(Wedge Inn) 539; high ind. game,
Charlie Flick (Carthage Fabrics)
200.
Standings
MOORE GOUNTY, BASKETBALL
County Tourney to Start Feb. 23
BY JOEL STUTTS
W
L
Trimble
57
31
Wedge Inn
56
32
Carthage Fabrics
55
33
I linchum’s TV
42
46
Clark & Bradshaw
37
51
Jackson Motors
36
52
Kennedy & Co.
35
53
Sandhills Bonded
34
54
BUSINESSMEN'S
NO, 2
Results
Thomasson Furniture Co.
Food Lane Super Market 0.
4,
Piqkett’s 5 & 10 3, Lions Club 1.
S & M Credit 3, Wicks Chevro-
let 1.
Scott Insurance &
Household Store 0.
Realty
3,
High . ind. series.
L. McNeill
(Pickett’s) 616; high
ind. single.
J. Carter (Lions Club) 258.
High team single.
Lions Club
955; high team lines.
Thomasson
Furniture 2565.
Standings
W
L
Thomasson Furn.
69
19
Wicks Chevrolet
56
32
Lions Club
48.5
39.5
Scott Ins. & Realty
47.5
39.0
Household Store
43
44
Food Lane
33
55
Pickett’s
29
59
S & M Credit
25
63
MIXED LEAGUE
Results
Frandel 4, Black’s
Garage 0.
The Frahams 3, Twisters 1
Joe’s Grill 3, Upchurch & Bish
op 1
High ind. series, Mary Up
church 475 and Jack Matthews
563; high ind. single, Mary Up
church 170 and Chuck Lowstuter
226.
High team single, C. C. Riders
671; high team lines, same, 1862.
Standings
W
L
Frandel
43
21
Joe’s Grill
42.5
21.5
Black’s Garage
36
28
Upchurch & Bishop
33.5
31.5
The Frahms
32.5
31.5
The Red Hots
32
32
C. C. Riders
27
37
Twisters
23.5
30.5
0.
SANDHILL BOWLERETTES
Results
Carthage Fabrics 4, MiU Outlet
Trottettes 4, Howard Johnson’s
0.
BPO Does 4, Craig Drug 0.
Futrell Bros. 4, Style-o-Rama 0.
High ind. series, J. Safford 535;
high ind. single, same 221.
High team single, Trottettes
761; high team lines, same, 2212.
Standings
W
Carthage Fabrics 53 c
Trottettes 49 i
Style-o-Rama 47 2
BPO Does 43 4
Mill Outlet 38 A
Futrell Bros. 38 ‘
Johnson Girls 34.5 ‘
Craig Drug 33.5 !
PETTICOAT LEAGUE
Results
Warblers 4, Hummingbirds 0.
Woodpeckers 3, Bluebirds 1.
Chickadees 3, Cardinals 1.
High ind. series, Jean Safford
482; high ind. single, same 197.
High team single. Chickadees
561; high team lines. Woodpeck
ers 1558.
Standings
W L
Woodpeckers 59 13
Warblers 40 32
Bluebirds 36 36
Chickadees 36 36
Hummingbirds 27 45
Cardinals 26 46
The 1961-62 Moore. County
basketball regular season will end
Tuesday to be followed by the
tournament which opens Friday
afternoon of next week at Aber
deen. This will be the 35th County
Touriiament which always draws
capacity crowds and has proven
to be the outstanding basketball
attraction in this area.
West tend girls (14-2) continue
to dhallenge Pinehurst girls (14-1)
for the ■ girls’ regular season
championship. These teams were
scheduled to play at Pinehurst
Wednesday of this week in a game
which should decide the cham
pion. Results of this game were
not available when this report
was prepared and printed earlier
this week. West End girls have
yet to face Farm Life and Pine-
hurtt is scheduled to host High-
falls, each being among the
stronger teams in the conference.
The Southern Pines boys have
clinched the regular season cham
pionship as they have yet to lose
a game. This automatically gives
them a berth in the state 1-A
play-offs in March. Should Sou
thern Pines win the tournament
championship, the tournament
runner-up will also represent
Moore County in the State 1-A
play-offs. If Southern Pines does
not win the tournament, the
tourney champion will become
eligible.
Conference action continues
Friday as Carthage plays at Aber
deen, Robbins at Westmoore,
Farm Life at West End, Highfalls
at Vass-Lakeview, and Pinehurst
at Southern Pines. In the final
games of the regular season
Tuesday. Westmoore is at Came
ron, West End at Carthage, Vass-
Lakeview at Robbins, Southern
Pines at Farm Life nad High
falls is scheduled to play at
Pinehurst.
A meeting of the Moore County
coashes will be held at the Car
thage High School, Thursday at
7 p.m. to make plans for the
tournament next week.
Harrington is
Reelefcted GOP
County Chairman
FRIDAY RESULTS
Boys
Carthage 64, Farm Life 19
Southern Pines 53, Westmoore 38
Pinehurst 69, Aberdeen 40
West End 48, Vass-Lakeview 36
Girls
Farm Life 42, Carthage 41
Westmoore 57, Southern Pines 49
Pinehurst 54, Aberdeen 36
West End 49, Vass-Lakeview 42
TUESDAY RESULTS
Boys
Cameron 46, Robbins 49
Aberdeen 66, Farm Life 32
Highfalls 48, Carthage 70
Southern Pines 84, Vass-Lakeview
45.
Moore County Republicans met
■at their biennial convention in the
courthouse in Carthage last Sat
urday, to elect party officials and
lay plans for the forthcoming
elections.
Reelected chairman and vice-
chairman for the next two years
were James E. Harrington, Jr., of
Pinehurst, and Mrs. Katherine N.
McColl of Southern Pines. C.
Coolidge Thompson of Pinebluff
was elected secretary, and Mrs.
Merla Gaines of White Hill was
elected treasurer. In addition to
the officers, 27 delegates and 27
alternates for the district and
state conventions were named
with Harry Pethick of Southern
Pines elected chairman of the del
egation for each convention.
Coy S. Lewis, Sr., of Robbins,
was nominated to be rel appoint
ed to his present position as Re
publican representative on the
county Board of Elections.
All but three of the county’s 18
precincts were well represented
at the convention, which was
loud in its enthusiasm for Charles
R. Jonas, who is expected to be
endorsed for reelection to Con
gress from the newly formed 8th
District.
Two changes in the state plan
of organization were discussed,
and the delegates to the state
convention were instructed to
favor the proposed changes. One
would change the method of sel
ecting delegates to the National
Convention to permit apportion
ing delegates more equitably on
the basis of Republican voting
strength, and the other change
would provide a new finance pan
which is intended to insure prop
er distribution of funds to na
tional, state, district and local or
ganizations.
In an atmosphere of frivoli
ty near the end of the convention,
the delegates shouted through a
resolution -recognizing “the con
tribution made to the growth and
progress of the Republican Party”
by Governor Terry Sanford, and
invited the Governor and Mrs.
Sanford to attend the county Lin
coln Day Dinner on February 20,
the day that Sanford is scheduled
to speak at three education rallies
in Moore County. Mr. Harrington
said this week that two tickets
for the dinner had been forward
ed to Gov. Sanford.
HIGH AWARD—The high “God and Country”
Scouting award was presented Sunday (Boy
Scout Sunday throughout the nation) to Tommy
Blue, 14-year-old Scout of Troop 851, Eagle
Springs Tommy is pictured here with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Blue of Eagle
Springs, as he received the award from the
Rev. Dawes Graybeal, pastor of Bensalem Pres
byterian Church where the ceremony took place.
Tommy is a Star Scout and a member of the
Order of the Arrow, an honor camping group in
Scouting. (Humphrey photo)
had an opportunity to sell it.
In another action Monday, the
council authorized the manager
to negotiate for purchase of a
small triangular piece, of land,
adjoining the town-owned Mount
Hope Cemetery, between ^he ce
metery and No. I highway park
way.
The council had been asked by
the land’s owner. Miss Evelyn
Thomas, if the Town would be
interested in buying it, explaining
that it was a portion of a lot left
after other parts of the tract had
been taken by the state for the
highway right of way.
Mr. Rainey said the land would
not be useful for cemetery pur
poses but, if owned by the town,
could be kept up to beautify the
area of the cemetery. In fact, he
said, the town has planted rye
grass on the land, though it was
n’t yet owned by the town, to
improve the appearance of
area.
the
Reynolds to Run
Again; Kerns is
Out For Coroner
L. R. Reynolds, chairman of
the Moore County board of com
missioners, announced this week
that he would be a candidate for
renomination in the May Demo
cratic primary. Breviousl^ an
nouncing their intention to run
were two other board members,
W. S. Taylor of Aberdeen and
Tom Monroe of Robbins. J. M.
Pleasants of Southern Pines and
J. M. Currie of Aberdeen have
not yet made known their in
tentions.
E. R. Kerns of Robbins, a^for-
mer police chief at Carthage, an
nounced this week for county
coroner. Already on record as a
candidate for coroner is W. K.
Carpenter, Sr,, of Pinebluff. Pre
sent holder of the office is Ralph
Steed of Robbins,
Kerns lost to Steed in a pri
mary race for coroner four years
ago.
Girls
Robbins 83, Cameron 28
Farm Life 49, Aberdeen 32
Carthage 50, Highfalls 46
Southern Pines 60, Vass-Lakeview
59
STANDINGS, through Tuesday
Boys W L
Southern Pines 18 0
Pinehurst U 4
Robbins 12 5
Cameron U 3
Aberdeen 10 0
Highfalls 8 9
West End 1 9
Carthage 1 10
Westmoore 6 10
Vass-Lakeview 3 13
Farm Life 0 ' 18
Girls
Pinehurst 14 1
West End 14 3
Farm Life 13 E
Robbins U ^
Highfalls -- 11 (
Vass-Lakeview 7 J
Westmoore 6 -K
Southern Pines 6 .12
Cameron .. 5 1‘
Carthage 5 11
Aberdeen 1 1*
Church to Sponsor
Training Sessions
The first of two sessions of a
Leadership Training Institute
will be held Monday, February
19, at the United Church of
Christ, sponsored by the Board of
Christian Education.
A second session will be held
Monday, February 26, said the
Rev. Carl Wallace, pastor of the
local church. Each meeting will
be from 7:30 to 9;30 p. m.
Speakers for the February 19
meeting will be Dr. William Wis-
seman, minister of the First
Church, Greensboro, for the past
26 years, who will speak on
“Church Leadership Opnortuhi-
ties in Our Day,” and the Rev.
John Graves, chaplain of Elon
College, whose topic will be
“Church School: A Total Church
Concern.”
Mrs. Dwight Hoskins will be in
charge of the devotion Monday.
Details of the February 26 ses
sion will be announced next week.
CREDIT BUREAU
(Continued from page 1)
suggested that some help could be
obtained through Mrs. Fentriss
K. Money, executive secretary of
the Madison County Merchants
Association, who is also secretary
of the Associated Credit Bureaus
of North Carolina. She heis had
HUNTER TRIALS
(Continued From Page D
Thoroughbred Hunters — the
Little Trip Challange Trophy.
Children’s Hunters—the Enid
Walsh Challenge Trophy.
Non-thoroughbred Hunters—the
E. Louis Meyers Challenge Tro
phy.
Open Hunters—the W. J. Brew
ster Challenge Trophy.
Hunt Teams—teams of three,
with no special trophy.
The Field Hunter Challenge
Trophy was given two years ago
for the first time by Mr. and Mrs.
wide experience in the credit umc uy ivn. ana ivrrs.
field, and will come to Moore for H. E. Walsh to the horse which
the Monday aneeting and discuss has given the most ‘
Board Members Attend
Program at Samarcand
Two Moore County members of
. the State Correction and Training
Schools Board attended the Wed
nesday night program of the first
annual workshop for cottage
counselors Of the'North Carolina
correction and training schools,
held for three days last week at
54amarcand Manor near Eagle
Springs.
The Moore board members are
Mrs. John'L. Frye of Robbins and
Clyde Auman of West End.
Archeological
Group to Meet
The Upper Cape Fear chapter
of the Archeological Society of
North Carolina will meet at the
Bel Aire Restaurant on Highway
301, three miles south of Fayette
ville, at 7:30 p. m. Friday, Febru-
are 16. A number of Moore Coun
ty residents are members of the
chapter which includes several
central and eastern North Caro
lina counties./
The prograin Friday night will
be based on work by several per
sons at the Cameron (or Huckle
berry) Indian mound on the Cam-
eron-Cameron Hill road in west
ern Harnett County.
All interested persons are ih-
vited to attend.
Dinner Given for
Mr. Hazelhurst at
Richmond Friday
Charles M. Hazlehurst of South
ern Pines, retired executive of
the Seaboard Air Line Railroad,
was honored ‘Friday night at
Richmond, Va., when a testimoni
al dinner was given for him by
Seaboard officials in the Man
sion Room of the Hotel Richmond.
Mr. Hazlehurst, who retired De
cember 1, 1961, was presented
with a gold wrist watch to mark
the occasion. Warren T. White, as
sistant vice president of the Sea
board,. was toastmaster. Attend
ing were about 30 officials of the
Freight Traffic Department and
of the Engineering Department
with which Mr. Hazlehurst was
formerly connected.
Mr. and Mrs. Hazlehurst drove
to Richmond from Southern
Pines. On Friday night, Mrs. War
ren White gave a dinner for Mrs.
Hazlehurst,.: attended by a group
of friends, at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. White in Richmond.
Returning to Southern Pines,
Mr. and Mrs. Hazlehurst spent
Sunday in Raleigh with Mr. Haz-
lehurst’s sister-in-law, Mrs. Eliz
abeth Graham Hazlehurst.
$400 Raised by
PTA Talent Show
'The Variety Show sponsored
Friday and Saturday nights by
the East Southern Knes Parent-
Teacher Association turned out
to be both a financial and enter
tainment success.'
Mrs. Albert Grove, PTA presi
dent, said this week that a little
over $400 clear profit had been
made on the show, to be applied
to PTA school-aid projects.
Mrs. Grove asked that her
thanks be publicly expressed to all
who took part in the show in any
way. Special thanks, she said, are
due those persons who are not
connected with the PTA but who
did much to help the program.
The show—with a large group
of adults taking part in singing,
dancing, instrumental and other
acts—has been highly praised by
persons who saw it.
There were 625 dairy herds on
the Dairy Herd Improvement As
sociation testing program in
North Carolina in 1960. Herds en
rolled in some kind of production
testing program totaled 771.
Legal Notice
NORTH CAROLINA
MOORE COUNTY
Twenty-five per cent of the
dairy herds in North Carolina are
. on some kind of production test-
1 ing program.
Score Clock at
School Installed
A new score clock in the gym
nasium of East Southern pines
schools is now in use.
Purchase of the clock was made
possible by three gifts to the
school—a fund of $100 given by
the Beta Club of the high school
in 1956; a fund of $300 given to
ward purchase of a score clock
by the Class of 1961; and the bal
ance of the cost by the Aberdeen
Coca Cola Bottling Co.
Total cost of the clock and ins
tallation was about $600.
The 1956 Beta Club gift was or
iginally earmarked for purchase
of an athletic trophy case, but
this has been taken care of from
other sources.
Pinehurst Girls
r
Defeat West End
The girls’ basketball team of
Pinehurst High School moved a
step closer to the couhty girls’
regular season championship,
when they defeated West End
girls 40-39 at Pinehurst last nighr.
Pinehurst boys ^at the West
End boys 63-56.
Pinehurst leads the girls’ divi
Sion of the county title race, with
West End in second place. Un
less Pinehurst loses its two re
maining games and West End
^Is. win. their two, Pinehurst
girls will be the coimty season
champions.
PILOT ADVERTlsmo”pXYS
MAKE-UP DAYS
The Southern Pines schools
will nvake up lour d*T» 1®**
because of indement weather
on March 14,15 and 16 and on
April 20 (Good Friday). Supt.
Luther A. Adams announced
this week.
All flie make-up days were
approved last week by the
board of education. The three
March days had been tenta
tively set as a Spring vaca
tion. Over the Easter week
end. students were to have
had Good Friday and also
Easter Monday as holidays.
Under the new schedule,
barring further loss of school
time due to weather. Easter
Monday (April 23) remains a
holiday. Mr. Adams said.
Under and by virtue of the
power of sale contained in a cer
tain Deed of Trust executed by
Harry A. Gorezyea and wife,
Mary Elizabeth S. Corezyea, to
Charles H. Ball, Loan Guaranty
Officer. Trustee, dated February
21, 1957, and recorded in Bock
of Mortgages 124, at page 225, in
the Office of the Register of Deeds
of Moore County; and under and
by virtue of the authority vested
in the undersigned as Substituted
Trustee by an instrument of
writing dated the 9th day of Jan
uary 1962, and recorded in Book
252, page 363, in the Office of the
Register of Deeds of Moore Coun
ty, default having been made in
the payment of the indebtedness
thereby secured and the said
Deed of Trust being by the terms
thereof subject to foreclosure, and
the holder of the indebtedness
thereby secured having demand
ed a foreclosure thereof for the
purpose of satisfying said in-
debtedness, the undersigned Sub-|
stituted Trustee will offer for sale
at public auction to the highest:
bidder, for cash, at the Court
House door in Carthage, North
Carolina, at twelve o’clock. Noon,
on the 14th day of March, 1962,
the land conveyed in said Deed of
'Trust, the same lying and being
in McNeill Township, Moore
County, North Carolina, and more
particularly described as follows:
BEGINNING at the intersec
tion of the southeast line of Leak
Street and the southwest cor
ner of Wisconsin Avenue, South
36-45 East 100 feet to a stake;
thence South 53-15 West 100
feet to a stake; thence North 36-
45 West 100 feet to a stake in
the southeast line of Leak
Street; thence as said edge of
said Street North 53-15 East 100
feet to the beginning. Being
Lots No. 12 and 13 in Block Q
and Six as is shown on the of
ficial map of the Town of
Southern Pines, North Carolina.
This, sale will be made subject
to the 1962 taxes and municipal
assessments.
This 13th day of February,
1962.
Robert N. Page, III
SubSjtituted Trustee
F15,22,Ml,8c
the financial and physical needs
for such an agency.
All merchants, institutions or
individuals interested in seeing a
credit bureau established for
Moore County are invited to at
tend the meeting on Monday.
Anyone wishing additional in
formation should ask Jim Ritchie
in Southern Pines, Landon Tyson
in Aberdeen, Earl Moore and L.
L. Marion in Carthage, and Henry
Williams in Robbins.
COUNOL
(Continued from page 1)
surface water drainage entering
the lake. After water tests show
ed it unfit for swimming, an ordi
nance prohibiting swimming in
the pond was adopted in 1956.
Four of the councilmen voted
for the motion to deed the pond
area back to Mills, but Council
man Capel abstained. Before the
vote, he had stated he thought an
appeal should be made to Mills
to allow the town to put the prop
erty in use for recreation purpo
ses again.
However, Town Manager F. F.
(Bud) Rainey and Councilman
Hobbs said they had talked to
Mills and felt sure he was deter
mined to repossess the property,
as it had been mentioned that he
competent,
safe and from all standpoints
most satisfactory performance
with the Moore County Hounds
during the hunting season. ’This
trophy will be awarded again this
year.
The Stoneybrook Perpetual Tro
phy is awarded for the champion
ship, for which first or second
placers in any class are eligible
to compete.
Judges this year are Mrs. Fran
ces Rowe of Manokin, Va., and
Theodore Pugh of West Town, Pa.
Mr. Winkelman’s Little Trip
entered in the Thoroughbred
Hunter Class, was the champion
in 1955 and 1956 and the reserve
champion in 1958 and 1959. Little
Trip was the winner of the Field
Hunter Cup two years ago.
A by-day fox hunt will be held
Friday, in addition to the regular
hunt today, by the Moore County-
Hounds, because of the many
riders here for the Hunter Trials.
An informal schooling horse
show will be held Sunday after
noon, starting et 1:30, at Second
Wind Farm on Youngs Road, with
four junior horsemanship classes,
a rninjmum of two green hunter
classes and an open v/orking
hunter class. There will be no
entry or spectator fee.
,emo
fpeciai
Stoles
M
Jackets
*45®®
Now is the time to have your fur garment
remodeled to a new style jacket, cape or
stole. Our special low off-season prices in
clude cleaning and glazing and a new
lining. All work is done by skilled furriers.
Come in today and choose the style gar
ment that loolra best on you.
Mrs. Hayes Shop
Southern Pines, N. C.