RED CROSS MOBILIZES \ FOR DEFENSE RED CROSS MOBILIZES FOR DEFENSE ii^nt-over Takes Place rhursday Midnight; ITew Service Praised le long-anticipated cutover to iiem Pines’ new $150,000 dial took place at midnight last :^ay, March 1. lis week the ‘‘hugs” were be- eliminated by fast-working rmen and this community was ng last getting a taste of tele- le service, metropolitan style, midweek things were id •th running order; the oom- new equipment appears to in the groove” and admira is heard on all sides, e first non-local call after the ver went to Governor W. Scott, outspoken promoter tproved telephone service for le State. The call to Raleigh placed by John E. Cline, Cen- ilfurolina Telephone Company utive vice-president, before all invited gathering assem- at the district office on New pshire avenue, getting the Executive Man- on the wire, Mr. Cline turn- le call over to Mayor C. N. . Greetings were exchanged the Governor of North Caro- said to the Mayor of South- Pines, “Congratulations on progressive step for your fine iimity. I hope to get down some day soon, and try out new phones for myself.” of Growth yor Page informed His r that it was not only a pro- ive step but a significant of growth, as in 1939 there only 350 telephones here, low there are 1,575. (Continued on Page 5) Glimpses of two sections of the Robert Shaw Chorale, which wiU present a program of unusual entertainment at the Southern Pines auditorium at 8:30 Saturday night. Robert Shaw, termed the fore most young U. S. director, was formerly director of Fred Waring’s radio glee club. The Sandhills Music association is sponsoring the concert and tickets may be secured at the Bamum Realty company or at the door. , - ^ t- j IS IT SPRING? Is if really spring? After three months of shivering. Sandhills residents hardly knew at first what to to make of the warmi bright weather—^but this week the evidence is lavishly at hand. Jonquils, forsythia, spirea and a multitude of other blos soms have burst out in the land. The pear tree in the city park is a snowy wonder, and the peach trees scatter their pink glow across the country side. Breezes are balmy and the gentle sun shines. . It must be spring! 26 Moore Boys rl Golfer, Three Will Be Inducted n Will Play Sunday Benefit By Bud Harvey » a good woman golfer play d male golfer on equal s burning 19th-hole topic )e put to the acid test Sun- fternoon at the Pine Needles club, when Pat O’Sullivan, it North and South women’s >lder, will match strokes ;wo Walker Cup players and ;k professional. special exhibition charity , for the joint benefit of St. 1 of the Pines and Moore y hospitals, will pair the "e. Conn., gal with host pro ice Doser against Dick nan of Pinehurst and Har- ard of the University of Carolina, former national ate champion. Pat and wUl pit their better ball t the two amateurs. O’Sullivan, one of the fam- d Pines Club “stable” of tolfers, will play from the ced women’s tees. Normal- s is not too much of an ad- fe for the average girl link- ut in Pat’s case, it Will just Continued on Page 5) Into Army Today t Horses, Fine Riders Thrill 1,500 t Stony Brook Steeplechase Sunday Twenty-six young men, one more than the actual March quota lor Moore county, were scheduled to be inducted today (Friday) into the U. S. Army. After the 25 notices were sent out one youth voluntarily added himself by signing an induction request, said Mrs. Harry W. Da vis, draft clerk. In the ordinary course of events was not sched uled to be called up for two or three months. “However,” said Mrs. Davis, “he said his employ er had fired him, knowing he had passed his physical and was due to be CEiUed, and he found it im possible to get another job.” She said there had been two or three instances of the sort. She reminded employers of draftable boys that they are not only sup pose to keep the boy in his job until he actually has to go, but to hold it lor him until he gets back. This is not only the decent and pa triotic thing to do—it is also a part of the GI Bill of Rights. Forty-live boys went to Fay etteville Monday for their prein duction tests. Turpentine Co-Op Elects Officers: Stock Will Be Sold The turpentine industry official ly came into being under the name of the Carolina Naval Stores Cooperative, Inc., at a meeting Wednesday night at the Aberdeen High school. The Cooperative elected to set a goal of $50,000 as total invest ment with the immediate aim of $15,000 to construct a still and warehouse in Aberdeen. Common stock will be available at $25 per share and can be ob tained only by timber owners and operators or those leasing timber. Preferred stock at four per cent interest will be sold at the same price. The Cooperative elected James Boyd, Jr., of Southern Pines as its president and Clyde Auman of West End as vice president. Tom Upchurch of Raeford, together with the two officers named will constitute the executive commit tee. Nine directors were elected to serve one ,two and three-year terms. These terms were decided by the directors drawing numbers. Those chosen were James Fulk and R. E. Matthews, Carthage (Continued on Page 5) Red Cross Faces Big Tasks, Speakers Say As Dinner Opens $18,577 Drive Blood Program Cited; Community Chairmen And Quotas Annoimced Vital tasks facing the American Red Cross today, with emphasis on services to our fighting men in Korea, were stressed by Richard N. Hart, Red Cross field director at Fort Bragg, speaking at the Moore County chapter’s campaign dinner held -Wednesday night at Youths Escape Serious Hurts In Head-Ou Collision Church Census Slated Sunday Of those leaving today, John McLaurin Prizer has returned (Continued on page 5) )ite rain in the morning, ;ning clouds and rhill s in the afternoon, some 1,- ople gathered at the Stony track Sxmday afternoon to s a series of thrilling races Third Annual Steeplechase event was sponsored by ttie m Pines Elks club, who e assistance of members of Im Boyd post, VFW, in the i and efficient handling of iwd. Louis Scheipers, of the lub, was chairman of ar- lents. Race manager was T Walsh, owner of the well known trainer and n Square Garden rider, essions were handled by *0 Does for their charity s. A combined unit of the im Pines and Aberdeen bands, directed by J. G. ,e, played between races, est mounted in intensity ting climax in the sixth and last of the regular featured races, “The Broad Hollow,” two mUes over timber. Starland Stables’ Reynoldstown, Lloyd P. Tate up, ran neck and neck for the first mile with E. Mahler’s Gnome, Austin Brown up, then took a commanding lead. In the last quarter Gappy, owned by Carol Paterno, Carlyle Cameron up, swept up dramatically from eight lengths behind the field to win a hairbreadth victory, to the ac companiment of shrieks and cheers from- the crowd. Second was Auld Sod, owned by Mr5. Au drey K. Kennedy, F. Duly Adams up; third, Reynoldstown; then Gnome, followed by Jumping Jack, owned and ridden by Car ter W. Brown. Pink Coal Timber A religious census of the South ern Pines and vicinity will be tak en Sunday afternoon under the joint sponsorship of the five Pro testant chiuches of Southern Pines and Manly. The informa tion sought will be of a general nature, and will include chiuch membership and, in the case of non-church members, denomina tional preference, if any, and lo cal church preference, if any. Children and adults will all be included in the census and fami lies are requested to remain at home, if possible, until a census taker has visited them, which it is anticipated will be early in the afternoon. Most spectacular was the Pink Coat Timber race, for members of the Moore County Hunt. Renown, (Continued on Page 8) About 80 men and women of all the churches wUl take the census, gathering at the First Baptist church at 12:30 for luncheon pre liminary to going out on their block-by-block canvass. They will work in teams of two, with about 15 houses assigned to each team. 'The luncheon wiU be furnished and served by ladies of all the participating churches. The census is being taken in the effort to find suitable church homes for those desiring them, and to provide statistics pn pres ent and potential membership on which the churches may base their activity plans, for the benefit of the community as a whole. The information wUl be made avail able to aU churches whether or not they take part in the census. Participating churches are the First Baptist, Brownson Memorial Presbyterian, Emmanuel Episco pal and Church of Wide Fellow ship (Congregational Christian) in Southern Pines, and the Manly Presbyterian church. This week’s shocking series of automobile accidents was length ened by one Wednesday night, a head-on coUision on US Highway 1 south in which six young peo ple miraculously escaped with their lives. Of four Sandhills teenagers in the northbound vehicle two re mained at patients at Moore County hospital. These were Leon Wylie, Jr., 19, Pinebluff, and Catherine Hussey of Southern Pines, who suffered cuts and bruises with a possible concus sion for Wylie. Arthur Ivey, 17, of Aberdeen, suffered a shoulder injury and Elaine Johnson of Southern Pines was unhurt. All were badly shaken up. Pvt- James Lee Edwards, 25, of Carney, Md., driver of the south bound car, and his passenger. Pvt. David Lee Lemke, were unhurt. The State Highway Patrol report described the two soldiers, who were heading for a Florida fur lough from Andrews AFB as . “in highly intoxicated condition.” (Continued on Page 8) the Southland hotel. The event marked the start of the 1951 fund raising campaign in which a county quota of $18,577 is being sought. Present were campaign chairmen and Red Cross chapter officials, with special guests. From Director Hart, who has had charge of Red Cross ad ministration and activities at Fort Bragg for 10 years, they heard of the all-out manner in which the Red Cross has assumed the re sponsibility of the blood donation program, and the generosity of the response. “During four days when the bloodmobile was at Fort Bragg 1,200 pints of blood were donated, and if we had had the facilities we could have received 2,000 more. It did my heart good to see it,” he said. Within four days after blood is donated through the American Red Cross, it is in Korea ready for administration to save the lives of wounded men. Seven countries of the United Nations have Red Cross workers in Korea, he said. Veteran Speaks (Continued on Page 5) Golf classes for Southern Pines High School students are being started this week 2tt the Southern Pines Country club, with Eddie Dodson, club pro-manager, as teacher. The classes are being held each Tuesday and Thursday from 4 to 5 p. m. Club facili ties and Mr. Dodson's services are being given without charge. A request went out this week for golf dubs, to be given or loaned, for the stu dents to use. Anyone with clubs which they may turn over for this useful purpose is asked to let Mr. Dodson know, or bring themi to the club. A number of sets are needed. James Soles Dies In Collision Of Taxi And Truck Mrs. Griffin Hurt As Car Crashes Mrs. Bessie J. Griffin, Moore County register of deeds, was painfully injured Saturday when her car left the road and hit a tree on the old Vass-Lakeview highway about 1 p. mi Mrs. Griffin is said to have be come ill while driving from Vass to her home at Lakeview, and to have fainted at the wheel. In the subsequent crash she suffered cuts about the face and some bad bruises, and her knee-cap was shattered. Passersby found her-in a semi-conscious condition in the car about 20 minutes or a half hour later. Many Fires In Moore Forests; Warning Issued She was taken to the Moore County hospital, where she re mains as a patient. Mrs. Kather ine Primm, deputy register, has been appointed acting register of deeds during her absence. Mrs. Griffin is .the wife of G. E. Griffin, who has an insur ance business at Vass. She was formerly town clerk of Vass, was elected register of deeds last June after a lively campaign and runoff, and took office in Decem ber. Forest and brush fires averag ing three a day are keeping the county’s fire fighters busy, and Warden E. W. Davis of the N. C. Forest Service this week begged, “Please be careful in your burn ing-off!” In the past two weeks a dozen major fires have devastated many acres of tinder-dry woodland. Re cent showers have helped the sit uation but have not eliminated it, he said. Burning-off without proper equipment or enough workers on hand for protection has been the cause of most of them, the forest warden said. The most destructive, and also the largest, fires occurred last Friday, one on the heels of the other. The first ravaged about 25 acres of closely growing young pines belonging to Durwood Mc Leod, between Southern Pines and Aberdeen. The fire ran from treetop to treetop with lightning speed. Carelessness of two colored workers engaged in burning off was ascribed as the cause and they paid slightly more than $10 suppression costs—a tiny fraction of the actual loss. The largest forest fire of the two-week period covered about 112 acres near the Von Canon lake at West End. The fires have been scattered all over the county, with most of them occurring along the Moore- Hoke line from Cameron to South ern Pines. “If people would only have on hand a shovel, a rake or two and a couple of cans of water, many o fthese fires could be put out at once,” Davis said. “As it is, they get out of control and are soon spreading far and wide.” James Edward Soles, 24, was fatally injured when the taxi in which he was a passenger was in collision about 3 a.m., Sunday with a tractor-trailer headed south on US Highway 1 at the Massa chusetts avenue intersection. This was the first highway fa tality to take place within the Southern Pines city limits in more than six years. The taxi containing six young men entered the intersection go ing east, was struck in the left sire by. the tractor belonging to Griggs Trucking company of Ruby, S. C., and was thrown off the street to the parkway where it crashed against a pole. Soles, who police said had had the rear right-hand seat, was flung from the door. An ambulance was summoned at once, but he died of a fractured skull and other inju ries before reaching the hospital. Injured in the wreck and re maining as a patient at Moore County hospital was William G. Roth, Jr., who was also a passen ger in the taxi. He suffered chest injuries and lacerations but the latest report is that there are not serious. Slightly injured, or unhurt, were the rest of the taxi’s occu pants—James B. Stoots, driver of the vehicle, which was owned by Bill Jackson; Lawrence Neville of Boston, Mass., an employee of Highland Pines Inn; James Larri- more and Frank Smith of South ern Pines. Neville is reported to have been the only paying passenger. The others went along “for the ride” and to discuss with Stoots some arrangements concerning a band of which he is a member. There is a stoplight at the inter section where the crash took place. Both drivers said the light appeared green to them. Chief C. E. Newton reported that investi gation is continuing. He said that Stoots and Leland Eddins, of Ruby, S. C., driver of the tractor- trailer, had both been placed un der arrest on a technical charge (Continued on Page 8) . Basketball Event Second Annual In Local Gym Sixteen teams have been select ed to compete in the Girls’ State Invitational High School Basket ball tournament, to be held for the second year in the Southern Pines gymnasium, starting Monday night and continuing through to finals Saturday. Announcement of the pairings was made by Robert E. Lee, Ab erdeen principal and tournament chairman. The tournament is sponsored by Aberdeen and Southern Pines school officials. The selections were made, as last year, from among teams nominat ed by sports editors of the state dailies, listing teams of their areas on the basis of the past year’s rec ords and past tournament per formance. This year’s tournament is ex pected to prove a crowd-drawing attraction even greater than last year’s, when hosts of local fans joined those of the participants’ home towns to witness thrilling exhibitions of topnotch basketball. Cool Springs of Iredell county, unbeaten in 17 games, has been seeded No. 1 with Lincolnton, last year’s champion, second. Trinity third and Windsor fourth. The 16 teams to compete and their records are Rutherfordton (Continued on Page 5) Auto License Agency Opening Set March 19 The Chamber of Commerce of fice will become a branch agency for the sale of motor vehicle li censes Monday, March 19, it was announced by President Arch F. Coleman this week. H. P. Kirk, field secretary of the Carolina Motor club, will ar rive on that date and remain for several days helping the office staff over their first hurdles in connection with the work. It had been planned to establish the agency as of next Monday morning, March 12, but Mr. Kirk found he was unable to come un til a week later. The Carolina Motor club has jurisdiction over all license sales branches in the state, in cooperation with the main office at Raleigh, which is under the N. C. Department of Motor Vehicles. The Southern Pines office will serve all the Moore-Hpke terri tory covering thousands of ve hicle owners who have hitherto had to obtain their license plates elsewhere. The nearest branches have been those at Sanford, Fay etteville and Rockingham. While a small income will accrue to the office from the sale, the idea is primarily that of service to the community and its environs, said Mr. Coleman. Cameron Elected Rotary President Bjerbert N. Cameron, local au tomobile dealer and oil distribu tor, was elected president of the Southern Pines Rotarjt club at the weekly luncheon meeting held last Friday at the Village Inn. The office of vice president goes by Rotary tradition to the retiring president, E. J. Austin. Secretary- treasurer wil be Russell Lorenson, a reelection. Directors in addition to the of ficers, all of whom will be install ed at the first meeting in July, were named as follows: the Rev. C. V. Covell, E. Nolley Jackson, Dr. Irvin Trincher and June Phil lips. Dr. Trincher, who was recent ly inducted into membership in the club, was in charge of Fri day’s program, of which the main feature was a film on cancer. Modem strides in detection and treatment of the disease, which in many cases is curable if discov- H. N. CAMERON the film. Russell Mills, Moore- Hoke District sanitarian, served ered in time, were revealed in as projectionist for the film"