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GIVE BLOOD
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th Air Force
«rves Birthday
h Parade, Came
»Bc Is Invited
Big Doings At
e Field Saturday
a full treatment of, parade,
3S, band concert, open
football game and mass in-
' ceremonies, the Ninth
rcc will celebrate its ninth
reary Saturday at Pope Air
oase, Fort Bragg,
re an assembled civilian
from neighboring commun-
e Ninth headquarters and
d units will parade before
en, E. J. Timberlake, com-
tg general, and key staff
In a mass recruiting
ny, Capt. Floyd E. Wil-
JSAF recruiting officer for
(Tetteville area, will sweeir
Force enlistees,
the parade the Ninth Air
and, under the direction of
t Officer Robert Dunn, will
a concert. Military and
assic selections will com-
.e 45-minute program,
public is also invited to a
game, when the Pope Air
!ase Pythons will meet Di-
hrtillery in a Fort Bragg
game. *
1-airman talent show from
' Air Force base will pre
review in the Pope Base
tonight (Friday) to launch
hration.
minute documentary radio
ARMISTICE DAY
The county courthouse and
all federal offices will be
closed Monday, November 12,
in observance of Armistice
day, which actually falls on
Sunday.
The Citizens Bank and Trust
company of Southern Pines
and other banks will also be
closed.
At the Southern Pines post
office, it was learned there
will be no city mail delivery
Monday. General delivery,
parcel post and stamp win
dows will be open from 8 to
10 a. m. only. Box mail will
be put up and outgoing mail
will be worked as usual.
Bloodtnobilc Coming Mondoy^ | Royal Netherlands
300 Pints Sought for Korea jofficers Visiting
Air-Ground School
Judge Phillips
Is Candidate For
Supreme Court
“If that blood hadn’t been there,
I \youldn’t be here,” many a Ko
rean casualty can say today con
cerning the value of Red Cross
blood.
Daily capacity of the Bloodmqbile
is about 375 pints.
Citizens are requested to phone
the Red Cross chapter office, the
Elks club or private numbers
In Southern Pines, the Red^'®®'^^ or 2-8911 to make appoints
Cross Bloodmobile is scheduled to ruent for an hour to suit their
pay a collection visit Monday, it | convenience. The Aberdeen Jay-
will be at the Southern Pines cees are soliciting donors in their
gymnasium from 11 to 4:30 n. m.
Judge F. Donald Phillips
Rockingham, resident judge of the
13th judicial district, this week
made formal announcement of his
candidacy for associate judge of
the Gcate Supreme Court.
Judge Phillips has been resi
dent judge of the 13th district,
composed of. the counties of Rich
mond, Stanly, Union, Moore, An
son and Scotland, since 1935, ex
cept for a period of service in
1946-47 as one Of the'judges of
The BPO Elks and Does of
Southern Pines Lodge 1692 are
sponsoring this return visit, and
have been soliciting donors for
the past week, with a minimum
goal of 300 pints. By midweek ap
proximately half of the necessary
donors had been recruited, it Was
learned from John F. Buchholz,
chairman of the Blood Bank pro
gram. However, reminded Mr.
Buchholz, that leaves plenty of
time for more donors “and we
don’t want to waste a minute
of 1 of the Bloodmobile’s visit here.”
area.
The Red Cross office here will
be open from 1 to 6 p. m. Sunday
to receive calls and make appoint
ments.
One Mllion Pints
Louis Scheipers is Elks Club
chairman for the program, which
is part of a nationwide drive of
the BPO Elks to secure one mil
lion pints of blood for Korea.
The Blcodmobile comes from
the Charlotte blood donation cen-
Taking Course
On Invitation of
Secretary Finletter
Four top-ranking officers of the
Royal Netherlands Air Force are
spending this week at the UBAF
Air-Ground Operations school.
Highland Pines Inn.
ihey are Col. Julianus L. Ze-
gers, whose rank in Holland is the
equivalent of a general officer
here; Lieut. • Col. Willem den
Toom, Lieut. Col. Albert B. Wolf
and Maj. Willem Bakker.
They are making a tour of U.
S. Air Force installations by spe-
Beer, Wine ^‘Dry Up”
In Moore Satnrday;
City Election Tnesday
Few Clues On Blue-Law Enforcement;
Police Officers See Difficulties Ahead
Red Cross Will
Elect Tonight
At Mid Pines
The Moore County chapter of
, . . the American Red Cross will hold
the international mihtary tribunal its annual membership meeting
at Nuernberg.
From 1923 to 1935, he was sol
icitor of the 13th district, a posi
tion now held by M. G. Boyette
ramatizing the Ninth’s col-1 of Carthage.
Lstory, will be broadcast | He had to resign from the dis-
le parade in the Fayette-Itrict bench in order to become a
tening area,
landers of the Ninth Air
ead hke a galaxy of Air
tars.
judge of the war criminals trials
at Nuemburg. An interim judge
tonight (Friday) at 8 o’clock at
the Mid Pines club. Officers will
be elected for 1952, and a special
address will be heard by Maj.
Willard Young, of the staff of
USAFAGOS at Highland Pines
Inn.
The 1952 slate of nominees is
headed by the nam.e of L. L.
Ke a gaiaxy oi Air ^as appointed. On his return to -If TZ ‘ T •
Chief-of-Staff (Tpn- hi.. ^ i. • , ,, Hallman, of Aberdeen, for chair
v-uiei oi oidii >.xen- thjg country he was reappointed — . .
yt S. Vandenberg led the district judge by Governor Gregg
rom August 1944 to July cherry, and was reelected to this
commanding generals
eluded Maj. Gen. W. R.
mger, who was succeeded
;ral Timberlake on the lat-
cent return from Korea;
n. Willis H. Hale, Maj.
ul L. Williams (rtd). Brig.
:tor H. Strahm ,and Lieut,
wis H. Brereton (rtd), who
Ninth’s first commanding
idly expanding tactical air
e Ninth has had a colorful
that has stretched its ca-
lund a 3000-mile crescent
jypt and the Mediterra-
England, France and into
y-
post in 1950 for an 8-year term.
It is not indicated that he plans
to resign from his present office
in seeking election to the Su
preme Court, and his announce
ment that he means to conduct no
campaign would indicate that he
will not.
His announcement follows:
“I shall be a candidate in the
Democratic primary in the spring
of 1952 for the nomination of my
party as associate justice of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina
tor the unexpired term of Chief
Justice Devin, who recently re
signed as associate justice to ac-
It shared in'the defeat appomtment as successor
ter, accompanied by a trained |cial invitation of Secretary of the
technical staff. Volunteer help Air Force Thomas A.' Finletter,
will be provided locally by the
man. The name of A. L. Burney of
Southern Pines will be presented
for fund raising chairman, for the
annual campaign which will be
held as usual during the month
of March. The Red Cross takes
part in no federated drives.
Major Young will speak on Red
Cross cooperation with, and serv
ices to, the armed forces from a
background of years of war ex
perience. During his 10 years of
Army service, before being sent
to his present assignment, he
served with the 24th Infantry
Regiment, 25th division, during
World War 2, also the 187th Regi
mental Airborne Combat team. In
addition to service in the Euro
pean theatre, he went through
some of the heaviest fighting in
Africa and the winning of I Chief Justice Stacy. .,
iterranean for the Allies I “I'his high office should not be'Korea. He was a recipient of Red
• • - - — 1-1—j during both cam-
lelped to lead the allied sought by a personal campaign,
moss the English Channel but should be left entirely to the
)ugh France to the gates voice of the people. I will accept
hineland. such a verdict at the hands of the
jnding bomber operation: electorate of the people of North
inth Air Force in the Mid-' Carolina. I have never held pub-1 Silver Star, the Bronze Star, the
came on August 1, 1943,1 lie office except by vote of theiETO ribbon with four battle stars
'o groups of heavy bomb- j people and I am now asking the and the Korean ribbon with three
ed the Ploesti oil ref in-' people of our great state to give battle stars.
Cross blood
paigns.
He participated in combat
jumps into Normandy, Germany
and North Korea, and wears the
BPO Does. Refreshments wiU be
served each donor after blood is
given.
Supplies of blood to the battle-
front and to military hospitals re
ceiving Korean wounded have
been pitifully inadequate lately,
and the greht upsurge of need
during and after the battle for
Heartbreak Ridge strained them
to the utmost. Bloodmobiles oper
ating out of Red Cross centers all
over the country are working
their hardest to replenish the sup
plies, and see that no servicemen
needing whole blood must go
without. Often it means the dif
ference between life and death.
No Substitute
V/hile one pint of blood, the gift
of one donor, can frequently save
a life, sometimes when operations
are required one man will need
many pints of whole blood to get
him on the road to recovery. There
is no substitute for this blood,
which must come from living
collected by the Bloodmo
biles, sealed in vacuum bottles
and transported by airplane with
in a few hours or days to the
areas of need.
The Red Cross is the sole col
lection agency for whole blood
for the armed forces, by designa
tion of the Department of De
fense.
Sparks Child Is
Accident Victim
At Fort Lee, Va.
and are spending a longer time
here than at most other stops on
tneir route in order to take the
iJSAFAGOS indoctrination course
of one week, along with more
than 100 U; S. Army and Air Force
ofiicers from all over the country
They arrived at KnoUwood aii-[
port by special plane, last Sunday, I
and will leave today (Friday)
shortly after noon. Colonel Zegers|
is a Rotarian and had expressed
the desire to keep up his atten-
hance by a visit to the Southern
Pines club this week. A special in-1
vitation was issued him and his
fellow officers by the club to join
them for their luncheon meeting |
toaay, but at last report the tight-1
ness of their schedule may pre
clude their acceptance.
The Netherlanders have ex
pressed themselves as pleased
with everything they have found
in this country, and are especially
happy over the hospitality of their
reception.
They have been especially sel
ected to gather information which
will aid in the buyding of Queen
Juliana’s Air Force, now making
great strides since it was reduc
Tuesday, November 13, is election day in Southern Pines,
when the voters of this municipality will decide whether or
not to restore legal sales of beer and|or wine, which are due
to end in Moore county Saturday.
Voting will take place from 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. at the fire
station. There are 940 registered voters on the municipal
Iwoks, according to Mrs. Frank H. Kaylor, registrar, who said
that only about 30 of these had been added on the three regis
tration days just past.
Toniorrow (Saturday)) is Challenge day, when the right of
any citizen to be on the books may be questioned.
, The ballots to be used Tuesday will provide for separate
voting on_beer and wine. A voter may vote for beer and
against wine, or vice versa. He may also vqte for both, or
against both, according to his independent views.
Moore county will “dry up” in
CHAIRMAN
NELSON HYDE, editor of the
Pinehurst Outlook, will head the
1951 Christmas seal sale of the
Moore County Tuberculosis assoc-
ed almost to zero point during the istion, it was announced this
occupation of World War 2.
Cub Scouts Will
Be Reorganized;
Parents Invited
tal fuel source for the jme this opportunity of greater
jp in Romania. The at-'public service,
vn through 2,600 miles of I “In placing my name be-
skies, was dming in its fore the people I will not make a
and in its ‘ execution. | personal campaign. To do so are eligible, and invited, to attend
rcraft were also first over I would tend to make less dignified I the meeting. Coffee and cookies
All members of the Moore
County Red Cross chapter—and
this includes all who have given
$1 or more during the past year-
ontmued'on page 8)
the high office to which'I aspire.”
lina Daco Starts Construction of
lodern Dwellings At Country Club
action started this week;architecture, it was learned this
pdem, ranch-type dwell-[week from Lloyd Dahmen, presi-
fental purposes on a tract Carolina Daco corpor-
90 feet at Country Club
d ■ Morganton road, for-
rt of the Southern Pines
dub property.
will be served.
State Alumni Will
Meet At Carthage
Dr. Ralph E, Fadum, head of the
Department of Civil Engineering
at State college, Raleigh, will be
the principal speaker at the an
nual meeting of the Moore Coun-
ation,
Mr. Dahmen is also president of
the Franklin-Daystrom corpora
tion of New York City, a holding
ad was purchased from p^es^^n severa”l®stlS'^LlSL1^^ College club'Wednesday
'club bv tL^ CaroUna ^ was the builder, and _ ^re approximately 100
.SiomwWch is pSngl- the owner of Lakeside Terrace,
wellings for rental pur-1 suburb several miles out
J tract lies directly along Olean, N. Y., frmgmgapic-
ig drive which enters the I!”®®?!!® i®he m the foothills of
jjds l^he Alleghanies.
I ' , ^ , Mr. Dahmen was founder in
coinpleted, these homes ^930 of the Daystrom corporation,
e 20 modern dwelling ^hich he was joined by Mr.
^ under rental by Caro- ^rown in 1934. By 1945 Daystrom
had become the world’s largest
The Mayfair, a 12-unit
- house at May street producer of chrome furniture,
Hampshire avenue, was I then finding a ready acceptance
st week. Two twoi-bed-1 gg modern architecture and home
galows on land adjoin.,fyonishings forged ahead in the
partment house, of sim-j-Hoited States and other countries,
truction, are nearing rphe Daystrom corporation, own-
iing and operating plants near
)untry Club dwellings Maxton, N. C. and at Friendship
iree-bedroom homes, of and Olean, N. Y., was sold in 1945
instruction, each differ- and jg now listed under that name
ined but of harmonious, ' (Continued on Page 5)
■Wayman Ray Sparks, two-year-
old son of Cpl. and Mrs. Wayne T.
Sparks of Fort Lee, Va., was fatal
ly injured Sunday afternoon in an
automobile accident at Fort Lee.
The little boy opened the door
of the car his mother was driving,
and fell to the highway, accord
ing to a report received here. He
was rushed to the Fort Lee sta
tion hospital, where it was found
that his skull was fractured. He
died within two hours of the ac
cident.
Mrs. Sparks is the former Hazel
Galyean of Aberdeen, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Galyean of the
Roseland community.
Funeral services were held
Wednesday afternoon at the Main
Post chapel at Fort Bragg, follow
ed by burial in the post cemetery.
Surviving are the parents, mater
nal grandparents, one brother and
two sisters.
WOUNDED
state College men in Moore coun
ty, and all are urged to attend the
meeting and hear Dr. Fadum, ac
cording to T. C. Auman, West End,
who is in charge of arrangements.
It will be a dinner meeting start
ing at 7 p. m.
Dr. Fadum is a native of Pitts
burgh, who won his B. S. and
Civil Engineering degrees in 1935
at the University of Illinois, his
M. S. degree at Harvard in 1937
and his Doctor of Science degree
also at Harvard, in 1941.
He taught soil mechanics and
structures and civil engineering
at Harvard from 1935 to 1943, and
was a profe'ssor at Purdue uni
versity, teaching soil mechanics,
from 1943 until he came to the
State College staff in 1949.
CpL Stancer Lee Pankey.
19, of West Southern Pines,
has been severely wounded
in the fighting in Korea, ac
cording to word received by
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Stancer Pankey. ^
Corporal Pankey is in a
military hospital in Jap^
and is to be removed to the
States as soon as 'he is able to
be transported. He has three
bullet wounds in the stomach,
and his lungs are punctured
in two places.
He is a 1950 graduate of
West Southern Pines High
where he starred in basket
ball and played end on the
football teeun. He entered the
Army last. March and was
transferred to Korea only two
months ago. after a 30-day
leave at home.
All parents of Cub-age boys are
invited to attend a meeting to be
held next Wednesday evening,
November 14, at 8 o’clock at the
Southern Pines Country club, for
the purpose of reorganizing the
Cub Scout program in Southern
Pines.
week by W. C. Scoggin of Rob
bins, president of the association.
With a quota of $7,200, the sale
will open late this month and last
until Christmas. It is part of the
45th annual fund-raising cam
paign of the National Tubercu
losis association. Proceeds will go
to further the work of the county.
State and National associations.
Pinehurst Lions
Minstrel Revue
Has Cast of 50
'The program, inactive during
the summer months, is to be re
organized from the ground up
within the framework of the two
packs which were so active last
year—Pack 73, sponsored by
Brownson Memorial Presbyterian
church, and Pack 75, sponsored by
the Southern Pines Elks club.
The meeting will be in charge
of Russell Mills, cubmaster of
Pack 73, and Don Madigan, new
cubmaster of Pack 75. Walter S.
Topping, cubmaster of Pack 75
last year, will assist Colonel Mad
igan this year.
In announcing the meeting, they
emphasized that for a boy to be
come a Cub Scout, his parents
must first attend the meeting for
briefing on the program and on
the parents’ role in it—an impor
tant one.
Parents of all boys eight, nine
and 10 years of age—those who
were Cub Scouts last year and
those who will be entering the
program for the first time—are
asked to attend the meeting, the
cubmasters said. Dens are to be
set up to cover all sections of
town, and den mothers will be
chosen. Last year’s den mothers,
whether or not they are continu
ing as such this year, are especial
ly requested to be present.
Cub Scouting has been active
and successful in Southern Pines
for the past four years. However,
reorganization is necessary after
each summer recess, as some boys
leave the program, others come in
and parents and Cubbers need in
structions before work can begin.
For the welfare of America’s
disabled veterans and for the wid
ows and orphans of the nation’s
honored dead, buy a VFW Buddy
Poppy for Armistice Day.
The Pinehurst Lions club will
present its' second annual Min
strel Revue Wednesday and
Thursday nights, November 14
and 15 at the Carolina theatre in
Pinehurst All seats will be re
served. Tickets are being sold by
members of the club, and in
Southern Pines at the Sandhill
Drug store.
A cast of 50 with more than 100
new and colorful costumes will
assure an even more elaborate
production than the show that
sold out last year.
In addition to the singing
chorus and specialties, this year’s
production will present several
spectacular dancing numbers by
the sixteen Minstrelettes, whose
dances were staged and directed
by Robert Speller, Jr., of South
ern Pinesj
The cast includes the follow
ing; from Pinehurst, Jimmy Gil
bert, interlocutor; Endmen Tom
Black, Bill Herschell, Jimmy
Hobbs, Jimmy Lane and the Mc-
Caskill Twins, Hubert and Frank,
all of whom were in last year’s
successful revue; and the fol
lowing chorusmem and chorus-
women, many of whom also do
specialties: Keith Wedlock, Frank
Bost, Bob Dodds, Gordon Cam
eron, Bob Chriscoe, Henson Ma
ples, Ed Swaringen, Bill Maness,
Paul Wilson, Myrtrice McCaskill,
Reba Lane, Margaret Hobbs,
Frances Maples, Dora Wedlock,
Idelle Hamor, Evelyn Cameron,
)lary Lou Dodds, Neva McCas
kill, Jimmy McCaskill, Charles
Swaringen, Tommy Shepherd,
Julia McCaskill, Carolyn Smith,
Pat Black, Patti Hobbs, Gail Hob
son, Anne Hamor, Betty Jean
Boggs, Linda Whitesell, Mary
(Continued on Page 5)
I regard to legal sales of beer and
wine at close of business Satur
day night. No sales will be legal
in any retail outlet after 11:45
p. m.
This weekend H. H. Grimm of
Carthage, district ABC inspector,
will pick up all the permits, even
hose in the two towns which
will hold votes of their own with
in 10 days. If the votes restore the
egal sales, permits will be
.oromptly returned. Southern
Pines will vote Tuesday; Pine
hurst the foRowing Tuesday, No
vember 20.
Then What?
After the county “goes dry”—
then what? Nobody seems to
know, except that selling the stuff
will be a crime. There’ll be no law
against buying it—and law'yers
md law enforcement officers
alike profess themselves in the
dark regarding possession and
transportation.
H. F. Seawell, Jr., Carthage at
torney who has been prominent
in leadership of “dry” forces in
the past, admitted last week that
the law books shed little light on
the question. No limitation, it ap
pears, has been authoritatively
set. “As far as the law is concern
ed, it seems anyone can possess or
transport any amount of beer or
wine as long as,it isn’t for sale,”
he reported as a result of his
search.
"Pretty Tough"
Other lawyers expressed them
selves as similarly in the dark,
and law enforcement officers said,
“We have no instructions.” They
plan to enforce the law as best
they can, they declared, but “it’s
going to be pretty tough.” Some
were even more emphatic. They
said it would be impossible.
H. P. Kelly, of Carthage, jus-
(Continued on Page 5)
Boros Takes Lead
In North-South
Invitation Open
Julius Boros, pro at the Mid
Pines, took the lead Wednesday
in the opening round of the North
and South Invitation Open, which
this week follows the Ryder Cup
matches on the championship
courses at Pinehurst.
The 31.year-old pro, former
Connecticut amateur star, shaved
two strokes from par on each nine
for a brilliant 34-34-68. This put
hina in the lead of an all-star field
which included many of the Ry
der Cup players of both the U. S.
and British teams.
Only five other players in the
field of 110 in the $7,500 event
broke par.
The North and South Invitation
Open has benefited by the Ry
der Cup matches in that most of
the top players of the nation ar
ranged their schedule so as to be
in Pinehurst at this time. No oth
er major tournament could com
pete. Besides the Ryder Cup play
ers, most of whom stayed on, stars
of both the professional and ama
teur fields accepted invitations to
play. Only 20 places were left
open to be won by qualifying
rounds held Monday and Tuesday.
Crowds attending the North and
South a»e reported well on the
way toward rivaling those of the
Ryder Cup event.