UNITCO STATES WINGS OMDS VOL. 22, NO. 9 FATHER WILUAMS GOES TO KINSTON; HERE SINCE 1935 To Kinston Southern Pines. North (l^arolina, tVidav, January 30, 1942. ■ I/C/JNIO Farewell “Open House” Being Given Catholic Priest at Parish Hall Thursday WAS ACTIVE IN COMMUNITY' Father Thomas A. Williams, since 1S35 pastor of St. Anthony's Catho lic Church here, was this week ad. vancpd to a pastorate in Kinston lo he in charge of the Church of the Holy Trinity there. Ho is to be succeedcd here by the Rev. Herbert A. Harkins of Hiph Point, it was unofficially reported. To pay tribarishi- oners are holding an open house Thursday evening, January 29, at the Parish Hall on Broad street to bid him farewell. Especially invited are the Mayor and town commissioners, scout executives and scoutmasters of the county, as well as members of the scout fi;;iops, the school board and ether local pastors. .Aoflve With B«> Scouf.s Father Williams ha.s boon especial-i 1y active in Boy Scout work while in, Southern Pines and is scoutmaster ofi Troop 63. besides beinp State Chap lain of the Catholic Youth Council., Much of the scouting which has been developed in the county during recent years has been due to his efforts in I this field. I During his stay here, the Church of the Holy Child in Pinebluff was I built and the mission there was im.j fier his charge. In his own church, he; has been active in building the active i congregation to its present number of 167, not including approximately pn equal number of Army families v.-ho are included. Many improvements have been' made to the Church, and the Parish' hall during his stay. Ho also has been ] school chaplain for Notre Dame | Academy, which was established herei by the Sisters of Notrp Dame do Na. mur. Fathers Williams came here^to S'.^o-^ SEAWELL CLAIMS ‘AMBITION’ LIES BACK OF CHARGES Innes-Taylor Gets '' Medal For Rescue Of Drowniu^"" /oman N«*4‘eml>er 7tli attack and machine gun bullets and siirap. nel went into the house in which they were living, hut none of the family wa.s Injured. fully clothed, dived from the launch. fiwam 75 feet to Mrs. Ludwig, and I for braveiy. SCHOOL BUSSES WILL GET TIRES A. GUNTHER DIES; WAS VASS MAYOR I. Hayes, who .several years ago appointed Seawell as referee in bank ruptcy for this district and who Is .scheduled to preside at the regular teem of Federal Court in March. Two bills of indictment drawn last June charged Seawell with ninp cases , of false reports and two embezzle ments. These he immediately denied in a public statement, which pointed out that no individual or corporation [{ationing Board Approves 10 brought charges. His statement this. Certificates for Board of week was similar. ,, , _ , , AttomeVs s.atement | Education; Others Issued ''o not like to i.ssue statements to newspapers about matters that are to be tried in court. I can say this, however, that no firm, person, cor poration, partner.ship, trustee, law. yer or anyone else has contended or is contending that I owe them a penny in regard to any matters that have ever ponded before me in bankruptcy," his statement .said on Fairway Road near the Country ('lub, has related several of his ex. periences before local civic clubs, but he has never talked much locally about this action for which he was awarded the bronze Carenegie medal LIBRARY CONCERT GREATLY ENJOYED Piano and Violin Presentation Attracts Large .\udience of Sandhills Folks Tire rationing in Moore County continued this week with a number of applications being approved by the Tire Rationing B«>ard. including 10 certificates i.ssued to the Moore County Board of Education for bus tires and tubes for use on the school bu.sses. The Board meets each Thursday in The entire matter seems to be a' the rourthouse to consider applica- matter of personal ambition on thel'iffs for purchase of tires and tubes, Pvopiilivo nf Va««j nip«i all someone in the Attorney Gen- Hnd an office is maintained other days irst Executive of Vass Dies government is con. with a .secretary to assist in filling tSon S Mome^ in fiorina, , ponding that I have charged more in | out applications, VV’as Scientific Farmer the administration of estates than fj Following applications were ap. i .should have charged. 'proved by the board: The death in Kustis, Fla,, of A. Oun-l “Without any warning, any ques-l Foster J. Dawkins, Aberdeen, two mavor of Vass and for'or any notic-e, the government car tires and tubes: Mrs. ll.rst and h'is ''‘ar.s a scientific farmer in the coun- proceeded to get bills of indictment, Maggie Lee Kelly, Carthage, one pas. o f f was reported late last week to again.st me which on their face ap- spnger car tire; W. R. Kennedy Moore County except Pinehurst and' ‘ . that part of Hoke County, west of Sanatorium. He was ordained in Bos ton by Cardinal O'Connell in 19.33 an- for bool.s l>plng collectod for distri- ttutlon to .Army rainp lil»rarips. Throughout fho country, an ap. peAl has gonp out for iniiividualM to donat<»h sand hil!, | Carolina citizens. The other da,y. at, • iboiil eight miles east of Aberdeen, the S’>-’«''S been in the forefront of tlio ueath r:ite in the State. iioldets meetino- v, iT i^ .sea.se of tuberculosis. 1.7rt9 deaths in North Carolina at.l'™" ^ank offices at Pino- Tho State Sanatorium is not ,a tributed to tuberculosis, compared new institution to the Sandhills but with 1,782 in 19)0. Becau.se of the it is one that often gets attention increase in births and population in- l.ist week that unless they concerned , , . ^ .u -4i, *,,k nte themselves more directly iwth cur. "J ft lent affairs and their solution, .such; "'••’‘'u the Tuberculosis Associations, dropped yn more things as Rotary clubs might pas.s.»''«‘ conducting seal .sales out of existence during the next few,"’0"<'y to finance patients who are rate was 4^ during meeting Friday confined to the .'Sanatorium. ,dred thousand, while in 1941 this had nt From Moore C’ount,v, at the pres.; dropped to 48.8 per 100,000, Dr, Mc- years. TTliis wooJc » 1 y t»v ^oi.thern Pines Countrv Chib the;*'"’- time, there are 12 per.sons, seven Cain said. Rotary Club will hear John H. Es-^ white and five Negro undergoing, He recalled the death rale during quirol of Fairfield, Conn., who I visiting in Pinehurst. treatment for tuberculosis at the 1915, the first year of accurate vi. HAIX TO POST OP'FICT’- ; Sanatorium. Of this number 10 are tal statistics for the State, In that i able to receive the needed treatment year the rate was 155 deaths per becau.se of the county tuberculosis i 00,000 population, showing a trem- ; association, which is paying for the endous drop. L. T. Hall, who has boon employed AocldrnU Trf! at the A. B. C. store here, will be- Marked rroRress McCain, with grim ein Monday as a clerk at the local; During recent years, there ^ *u post office. His place at the liquor j been marked and proved progress >reported 1-^2 deaths from store will be taken by George Christ-1 made in the battle to diminish the called preventable acci. mas. toll of tuberculosis among Northl (Pleast tttm to page four) Kloctod by the boanl of diroctorp as officers wore Richard S. Tufts president; F. Shelby Cullom. execu tive vice-president: Paul Dana, vice- president; Carlton C. Kennedy, ca.sh. ier: and Mi.ss Mary Ritter, assistant cashier. The directors, all re-elected, are A L. Burnev and Frank D. Shamburg. er, Aberdeen; F. Shelby Cullom, Paul Dana, Isham C. Sledge and Richard S. Tufts, Pinehurst; Wilbur H, Cur. rie and S. H. Miller. Carthage; and J. Hawley Poole. West End. Francis Pleasants continues as manager of the Aberdeen branch and P. K. Kennedy of the Carthage branch. The cashier reported the bank in sound financial condition, referring to a six percent dividend declared on commoin stock during the past year. Victory in the war and victory in the peace dei^ends unon this nation's ;ii'coptance of a “bill of duty” as veil ,Ts a Bill of Kights, declared Dr. William Adams Rroun, former faculty member of TTnion Theological Si'minary in New York, at the Ki. u.'inis Club meeting Wednesday. Kiwanians enjoyc'd a double pro- irram at their meeting, which led off with the rendition of several popular ■ind religious selections by the .South ern Pinos Hi£rh Sihool Glee- (''lub un- ('•'r the direction of .Mi.ss .'?elnia Ste- rr.-ill. The fine harmony and balanced I'Xeeution of the hymns, spirituals and nopular numbers bv the young stii. dents brousilit round after round of r>npl.iu,se from the chib member.-!. Charles Picfniet introduced the club, and decl.'ired it "was a pleasure that n* vc' dunlie.iti'd" to hear the half- of singring bv th,- mixed choru.s. Kd. Horne of Pinehurst introduced Dr Brown who addressed hi- re. marks not iiist to the Club but to the ’nit.’'!, school students, who ioined the Kiwanians after they had fini.shed their sineing. Derlarina: that Hitler had indoctri nated til.* people of his counti’v with a ■'philosophy of duty without any ritrhts." Dr. Brown said that the '.veakness in this countr>- was that we had followed a “philosophy of rights without any dutv.” "We have forgotten that democrarv calls for a ‘bill of dutv'. -of sacrifice, I'scinline, unselfishness and self.for. getfIllness; but unless we remember this in time and bring ourselves to a ce>mmon mind, forpetinjr our petty liifferences, this *var and the peace '’annot be won," Dr. Hrown said. While "Mein Kampf" has boon the textbook in Germany, in the democ racies the textbook of The Bible has been allowed to go into disuse, the •speaker added. It is in The Bible that we will find that common purpose that will bring eventual victory and peace, he concluded. Memorial t'Pon motion of I'. 1.^ Spence, a committee composed of M. O. Boyette, H. F. Seawell, Jr., and W, I>, Sabistnn, Jr., was appoint ed in (’ourt last week to prepare and report to the next term of •Su|)erior Court suitable rcsolu. tlons upon the life and death of Frank W. McCIuer for action thereon by the Moore County Bar in a memorial servkw to ba held at the next term ef coart.