d ' INVEST IN YOUTH GIVE TO GIRL SCOUTS Jugj< Uiqh roll 9 GlwJon &}mc(i;canol V &. ^^Ml^Spqs. Cameron pli , , lakwKj/'Vass f perbe Iblofe x”" ' INVEST IN YOUTH GIVE TO GIRL SCOUTS VOL. 31—NO. 51 Crowd Admires Moore Hospital’s Memorial Wing All New, Modern; CoIot, Comfort, Conveniences Seen 16 PAGES THIS WEEK SOUTHERN PINES. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1950 16 PAGES THIS WEEK iB TEN CENTS Duke University Ensemble Gives Concert Here Tonight K Sf' t- The people of Moore county turned out in throngs Tuesday afternoon, to be guests at the Moore County hospital’s ‘‘'open house” and rejoice at the long- anticipated completion and open ing of the memorial wing. ' Members of the Hospital auxil iary and staff stood at the en trances and were posted along the way to guide the Visitors along the best route to “see everything.” This started for most of them at the new outpatient department, with terrazo tile floor, creamy- tiled walls and leaf-green plastic upholstered built-in seating. Be yond were seen the new offices and examining rooms for Dr. Hol lister, Dr. Pishko and Dr. Monroe; electric cardiograph room, drug room and surgical supply room. Through a portion of the main building, the route led past cheer ful dining rooms for staff and help, to the spacious kitchen—^the heart of a newly devised system for the serving of meals. Food is sent from the stainless-steel kitch en in mobile steam tables to the different floors; there, in decen tralized diet kitchens, it is serv ed and sent out to the patients, fresh and hot. Color Is Used On the second and third floors, (Continued on Page 5) ■ Mayor Appoints Commissioners For Recreation, Zoning Overton Named To Adjustment Board; Duties Are Outlined Left to right, personnel of the Duke University Ensemble: Jean Mueller, violinist, director ^f the ensemble; Loren Withers, pianist; William Klenz, ceilo, and Allan Bone, clarinet. Pinehurst Lions’ Minstrel Revue Thursday Night An entertainment highlight of the coming week will be the Pine*- hurst Lions Club Minstrel Revue, to be held at the Pinehurst thea tre Thursday at 8 p. m. The Lions and some selected and talented friends have pre pared a show replete with songs, skits and dances, combining (ac cording to Bob Speller, director) the best features of the old-time minstrel show and the smart vnod- ern revue. M'artha Aden is directing the dances. The large cast includes men, women and beautiful girls of both Southern Pines and Pine hurst, with an Aberdeen lady, Mrs. Lamar Smith, at the piano. Maxine Speller is in charge of costuming, assisted by Miss Vio let Caulfield, of Southern Pines, who is also doing makeup. Thirty-two acts promise a full evening’s entertainment. Proceeds will go toward the piano and li brary fund of the Pinehurst school, to help repair disastrous losses sustained when the school (^urned down September 6. Annual Boy Scout Banquet Tuesday; Parents Invited Sandhills Music Association Presents First Concert of Winter Series Tonight Chamber Of Commerce Is “Selling Service” In Membership Campaign The annual banquet of the Moore district, Boy Scouts of Amejapa, will be .held , Tuesday at *! p.m.. in the Southern Pines school cafeteria, it was announced by W. Lamont Brown, district chairman. All adult members of the Boy Scout prograni in Moore county are invited to attend, and this year for the first time they are being asked to bring their ladies. Also, said Chairman Brown, in vitation is being extended to all parents of Boy Scouts. Hereto fore, attendance has been limited to the volunteer leaders. , D. Rodney Sener, of Raleigh, camp director of the Occoneechee Council since last June, will be guest speaker. Also taking part in the program will be Harold Makepeace, of Sanford, president of the Occoneechee Council; Wel- ty y. Compton, Raleigh, council executive: and other leaders well known to scouting here. Annual reports will be present ed by the chairmen of district op erating committees. Election of officers, however, formerly held on this occasion each year, will not take place. A recent change in the by-laws of the constitution of the Occoneechee Council set the time of the annual election in the spring instead of fall, as the fiscal year was changed from January 1-December 31 to July 1-June 30. ARMISTICE DAY The bank and post office will observe Saturday. Armis tice day, as a holiday. The Citizens Bhnk and Trust company will be closed all day. The post office will close at 10 a. m. Mail delivery, however, will be made and the incoming and outgoing mail worked as usual, said Postmaster A. Garland Pierce. \^alshes Ride To Victory, Madison Square Garden Pinebluff Girl Will Get Lifesaving Award At Girl Scout Court of Honor Presentation of a Silver Cross for Valor to 10-year-old Marilyn Mills of Pinebluff will be the highlight of the first countywide court of honor to be held by Girl Scout troops of Moore county, Tuesday night of next week. The court of honor will be held at the Ives Memorial Baptist church in Pinebluff, starting at 7:30 o’clock. Troops from Pine bluff, Aberdeen, Southern Pines, West End and Robbins are ex pected to attend. Pinehurst Girl Scout organizations are not affili ated with the Central Carolina Area Council to which the other Moore County troops belong. Presentation of merit badges and advancements in rank for a number of girls will be features Of the program. The Silver Cross for Valor—sec ond highest award a Girl Scout can receive—will be presented to Marilyn Mills by Mrs. J. N. Mc Nair of Sanford, president of the Central Carolina Area Council. Mrs. McNair will be a special guest at the court of honor. The award is being made in rec ognition of Marilyn’s heroism last May when she saved the life of her friend and fellow Girl Scout, Harriet Schnell. Harriet was pull ed by Marilyn from the water - Pinebluff lake after she fell from the top of the dam then under construction, struck her head and rolled unconscious into the stream: channel. The Silver Cross was au thorized as an award for Marilyn after detailed evidence of the he roic act had been submitted to National Girl Scout headquarters. The Silver Cross is topped only by the Bronze Cross, a rarely-given award bestowed only in recogni tion of heroism that puts the res cuer’s life in extreme jeopardy. An event of interest at the court of awards will be a moving pic ture showing girls of this area at the. “day camp” held at Pinebluff lake last summer. The movie was made by L. L. Hallman of Aber deen. Marilyn Mills is the daughter of Mayor and Mrs. E.' H. Mills of Pinebluff. She is a fifth grade stu dent at Aberdeen school. Harriet Schnell is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Schnell of Pine bluff and is also a student in Aberdeen schools. Bright Light, Kay’s Blend, Duel er and Twentieth Wave, four bright stars of the Seven Stars stables here, were back in their stalls at Stony Brook Farm Thurs day morning with a whole new collection of ribbons and trophies. Also back home, weary but hap py, were Mickey Walsh, trainer of the horses, and his daughters Joan and Kathleen, who rode the four fine hunters to victory after vic tory in the National Horse show at Madison Square Garden during the past week. Mrs. Audrey K. Kennedy, own er of the horses, was present at the show for the earlier events. Saturday morning, when the show was half over, Mrs. Mickey Walsh could stand it no longer. She took off for New York City where she had the thrill of witnessing some of the greatest triumphs of her husband and daughters, including those of Tuesday evening, the brilliant finale. Bright Light emerged as win ner of the conformation cham pionship. Kay’s Blend, Bright Light’s two-year-old half-brother, last foal of Reno Kay, vyas young (Continued on Page 5) PETITION The Duke University Ensemble will be presented in concert at the Southern Pines auditorium this evening at 8:30 o’clock, in a pro gram of chamber music including works by Beethoven,. Hindemith and Haydn. This is the first of a series of five concerts to be sponsored by the Association, in the first com munity venture of this kind for Southern Pines. Season tickets are still available for those who plan to ‘attend each concert from November through April, it was announced this week by the - membership committee. ■yVliile single tickets may be pur chased for any one concert for the especial convenience of transient guests, the season ticket purchase effects a saving in price. Season tickets for both general and re served admission may be bought at the Barnum Realty company, and single tickets at Hayes Book shop, also at the auditorium. The Association was organized and the concerts planned to an swer a demand for good music in the, Sandhills resorts. The first concert brings a group of four ar tists, all members of the music faculty of Duke university, play ing the violin, cello, piano and clarinet. The Ensemble has won the highest critical acclaim, and is recognized as one of the finest in its field in the country. Voit Gilmore, of Southern Pines, is president of the Association, a group of music lovers who are mostly year-round residents. Dr. and Mrs. W. F. Hollister are serv ing as co-chairmen in charge of ticket sales. Mayor C. N. Page appointed five citizens to the new City Rec reation Commission Wednesday night, and with five more ap pointment reactivated the City Zoning Commission, which has been inactive for a number of years. Appointed to the City Recrea tion Commission are P. J. Weaver, superintendent of Southern Pines schools; J. W. Moore^principal of the West Southern Pines school; John Pottle, Dr. W. C. Holland and Miss Birdilia Bair. The group will have the responsibility of set ting up a municipal recreation program, and handling all funds of the recreation tax levy voted by the citizens of Southern Pines in August. Named to the City Zoning Com mission are Donald G. Case, R. L. Chandler, Jr., W. H. MteNeill, L. D. McDonald and John Pottle. This group will enforce zoning regulations of the town and make recommendations concerning changes. Mayor Page also appointed J. T. Overton as a fifth member on the city’s board of adjustment, which has had only four members for the past several years. The board will hear and decide ap peals from decisions of the Zoning Commission, with further appeals going to the superior court. Terms of the Zoning Commis sion members will extend until next May, the end of the town board’s current, term of office. J. T. Overton’s term on the board of adjustment is for three years. Length of terms of the recreation commissioners are to be deter mined by the town attorney. All the appointments, presented to the town board in regular ses sion, were approved by the board. Reactivation of the Zoning Commission followed a report by Hoke Pollock, town attorney, that municipal laws require such a body to handle enforcement prob lems. The town board makes the laws, he said, but does not enforce nor rule upon them. GIRL SCOUT DRIVE The BPO Does, sponsors of Girl Scouting in Southern Pines, and other friends of the Girl Scouts and Brown ies, were out collecting with a vim this week, to reach and pass the $500 Girl Scout fund drive goal. The final report was not available at press time, but judging from the enthusiasm shown in the collection, suc cess has been achieved or is close at hand. Mrs. Louis Scheipers, chairman of the Girl Scout city committee and one of the campaigners, re ported an excellent response. John S. Ruggles is chair man of the fund drive, which will help finance local troop activities. It will also help pay Southern Pines' share in the Central Carolina Area program, of which the local program has become a part. Collection Will Determine Budget, Program of Work First Duty Is To Guard Assets, Says President Coleman Stevens Resigns From Town Board After 20 Years Eugene C. Stevens, a valued member of the town board for the past 20 years, submitted his resignation from the board Wed nesday night, giving as his rea sons the press of private business, and the fact that he is not in “the most robust of health.” " In his letter read by Town Clerk Howard F. Burns at the board’s regular meeting, at which Mr. Stevens was not present, he expressed appreciation for the op portunity given him by the citi zens to serve them for so long, and the deep satisfaction he had taken in such service. He sug gested it was time for “another, younger man” to take his place.” The resignation came as a shock to the board and the first tenden cy was toward non-acceptance of the resignation. Mayor Page said. A petition requesting a spe cial election on legal beer and wine sales in Southern Pines, signed by 157 citizens, was presented to the town board at its regular meeting Wed nesday night. No action was taken by the board pending a check of sig natures by the town attorney, to see that they are those of qualified voters in sufficient number to secure an election. Fifteen per cent of the voters registered for the 1949 muni cipal election are required. Allowing for the necessary advertising and' registration periods, the earliest date on which such an election cari be held here is early in Januctfy. TOWN BOARD If you want tO know what went on at the town board meeting this week, you will find it in about eight different stories, here and there in the paper. Wednesday night’s meeting' was a busy one, with many important matters before the commissioners. Each rated its own story and headline. We hope every local reader is suf ficiently interested to look up each story and read it. Town commissioners are human. They do their best work for an interested, in- . formed citizenry. Your inter est is your best guarantee of the kind of town government you want. Southern Pines - Ellerbe 52 -13 By Bill Welborn The quick-striking Blue and White gridders, taking advantage of the opportunities and mistakes made by a befuddled Ellerbe team, scored a surprising one-sid ed victory at Pinehurst Athletic field last Wednesday afternoon. The game was the first district playoff of two champion teams. The crowd rocked and swayed as Southern Pines, dominating the scoring from the outset and stymy- I ing Ellerbe’s offense with brilliant line play by Worsham, Ray, Bow ers, and Stuart, overpowered the outclassed Maroon and t)y five touchdowns. Southern Pines struck early for its initial score when “Niwtie” Newton took the ball on the first series of down and, flashing his heels, romped some 50 yards to paydirt. The attempted conver sion was blocked and the score stood 6-0. A few moments later fleet-foot ed “Newtie,” weaving and bob bing, scored from the 25 to make it 12 to 0. The placement was good, putting the home team out i in front 14-0. “Newtie” intercepted an Eller be pass on the Maroon and Gold’s 37 to set up the third marker. Stuart on an explosive line buck broke into the clear and galloped 37 yards to a touchdown. The place kick was good but a penalty nullified it, the score remaining 20-0. “Newtie” later dropped back to the midfield stripe and looped a beautiful aerial to Stuart who snared it on the 10 and countered standing up. “Newtie’s” conver sion made it 28-0. Second Quarter Checking a determined drive downfield by Ellerbe, Southern Pines gained possession of the ball on their 12, and in 4 downs ad vanced it to the 28 for the first down. Stuart, streaking to his left, spun a sizzling pass to Poe who gathered it in on the far side and outraced the secondary to sprint untouched into the end zone. Newtie split the goal post to give the, Blue and White an overwhelming 36-0 lead. A late Ellerbe attack, highlight (Continued on Page 5) Directors of the Chamber of Commerce and several non-di rector assistants breakfasted Wed nesday morning at the Hollywood hotel, then started out to visit other members and prospective members concerning a matter of vital importance to the Chamber program. This matter is the financing for the year, which it is hoped can be accomplished through the re newal of membership dues by old members, nad the taking out of new ones by those who have not joined before. The collection reverses the usual procedure in that this year •it precedes the setting up of a budget and work plan, President Arch Coleman told the member?. “What we can accomplish for the town this year is dependent on what we collect,” he said. “If it is only a modest amount, our plans will necessarily be modest. If it is a good one—^there’s no limit!” No quota was set. Selling Service The group was enthusiastic over prospects for a successful drive, in which service to the town and to each other as businessmen, is the commodity which is being sold. Even for those not strictly classified as businessmen, but nevertheless having the interests of the town .at heart, the Cham ber of Commerce work looms as essential. President Coleman presented briefly the immediate objectives. First, the money must be collect ed, bills paid, an efficient office secretary employed; then the pro gram can continue toward best however, he had tried hard to persuade Mr. Stevens to withdraw 1 use of the community’s facilities, the resignation, but “he has made development of resort interests. up his mind; Reluctantly, then, the board ac cepted the resignation, and the appointment of a successor was tabled until the next regular meeting. the attraction of tourists, conven tions, and home owners and the furthering of industrial plans for the outlying areas. Much good work has been done along these lines, he said—the ■G,„e» Stev.» h.s »rved the board for two decades as the able representative of “the Hill.” , (Continued on Page 5) Mozart Operetta Will Be Given In English Here “School for Lovers,” English version of a gay Mozart opera, will be presented at the Southern Pines auditorium, under sponsor ship of the BPO Does, next Fri day evening at 8 o’clock. The opera is the project of the N. C. Federation of Music clubs, produced and directed in this state with a brilliant cast of talented young North Carolina singers. It has had outstanding success dur ing the past year in a number of North Carolina cities, as excellent entertainment as well as for its cultural values. It is the major effort of the Federation’s “grass-roots” opeia program, of which A. J. Fletcher, Raleigh attorney, is originator and He feels, he said, that a prime interest must be the safeguarding of the community’s special attrac tiveness and charm. “We can’t af ford to initiate any program which may hurt what we have here,” he declared. “It has taken a long (Continued on Page 5) Democrats In; Counting Ballots Is Tough Job The results of the voting in Southern Pines, Moore county and Noth Carolina Tuesday swept the Democrats into office by de cisive majorities, to no one’s great surprise. The voters also passed all five constitutional amendments. With no burning issues, voting was lethargic and the total ballot was fairly light. In Southern Pines, 683 voted; in the county, 4,970. The local Republican vote varied for the different GOP can didates, but ran generally some- chairman. The aim, he says, is what less than half of that turned two-fold—to present opera every where as an art form designed for the people’s enjoyment, and to give young North Carolina tal ent a chance to soar on operatic wings. The colorful, comic “School for Lovers” delighted a large audi ence at Carthage last spring. It was presented at Sanford Tues day night. Proceeds cvf the performance here will be used by the Does for their civic projects, of which the chief one is sponsorship of the Girl Scout troops. in by the majority party. Registrars had one of the most tedious jobs of their careers as they counted up for a total of 34 candidates for various state and county offices, also the amend ments. Then there were the write-ins for Senator Graham — five in Southern Pines, a few more in the county. Mrs. Grace Kaylor, Southern Pines registrar, said it was a long day. Up at 5 a. m. to open the polls at 6, she stayed busy until the last count was completed— 2:30 a. m., Wednesday.