4* SHOP AND SAVE! SPRING VALUE DAYS, MAY 19-21 SHOP AND SAVE! SPRING VALUE DAYS, MAY 19-21 COUNCIL STUDIES BUDGET — Pictured while going over the proposed 1955-56 -budget, which they later adopted, at town haU last Thursday night, members of the newly elected council seem thoroughly absorbed as the docu ment was explained item by item by City Man ager Tom E. Cunningham. Around the table. Council Approves Budget Calling For Continuation of $1.75 Tax Rate Here left to right, are: Town Clerk Louis Scheipers, Jr., Mr. Cunningham, Councilman L. T. Clark, Mayor Voit Gilmore, Councilman W. E. Blue, Councilman H. H. Pethick (in right background) and Councilman T. T. Morse. Town Attorney W. Lament Brown sits leaning forward in the front row of audience seats in left foreground. (Pilot Staff Photo) Meeting for their first regular ♦ session at town hall Thursday $250 for purchase or construction night of last week, the newly elected town council adopted a budget for the 1955-56 fiscal year, with one minor change, as pre sented by City Manager Tom E. Cunningham. The budget requires a tax rate of $1.75 per $100 of property val uation—the same rate as that in effect during the past fiscal year. While the council met Thursday last week, the members formally approved the second Tuesday night of each month as the time of their regular meetings in the future. It required adoption of two or dinances to make the budget offi cial—an ordinance covering the budget itself and a tax-levying ordinance. Texts of these two or dinances appear elsewhere in to day’s Pilot. Only change made in the bud get, as presented by Cunningham, was the addition in the Buildings, Parks and Grounds Department of W. O. Moss Buys Old Fire Truck W. Ozelle Moss, of Mileaway Farms, Manly, has bought the town pumper truck for $1^000, the price set by the town for this piece of old equipment. Mr. Moss plans to have the truck fixed up for use fighting forest fires and patrolling the area out Manly way, he said, while promising full cooperation with the town fire department when ever called on. “Just let me know^” Mr. Moss told Fireman Frank Kaylor, “whenever my truck is needed and I’ll see that it gets to the fire.” Recorders Court Will Convene On Saturday Because cf a term' of Superior Court to open at Carthage Mon day, a session of Moore County Recorders Court will be held Sat urday morning. Next following session of Recorders Court will be held Monday, June 6, after the two intervening one-week terms of Superior Court for trial of criminal and civil cases. of additional benches to be placed at suitable places as resting places for pedestrians. The addition was suggested by Mayor Voit Gilmore and was approved by other mem bers of the council. Notable features of the budget include: Appropriation of around $4,000 more in the Police Department to add one new officer to the present six-man force, making possible a redUctidh Ifi police shifts from 62 to 54 hours per man per week. Appropriation of $1,500 in the Department of Building and Safe ty Inspection for an automobile, to be used by Bill Wilson who is building, plmnbing and electrical inspector. Appropriation of $13,000 in the Sewerage Department, to con tinue the sewer extension pro gram in West Southern Pines. Appropriation of $7,500 in the fire department for purchase of an additional truck. License Granted The council granted a beer sales license to J. A. Ferguson, to bs used at a new establishment in the former O’Callaghan building on Connecticut Ave. Mr. Ferguson was present with his attorney, W. (Continued on page 5) Officers Will Be Chosen At Final Meeting Of PTA Officers for the coming year will be elected and installed at the final meeting, for this school year, of the Southern Pines Parent- Teacher Association, to be held in Weaver Auditorium Wednesday of next week at 8 p.m. The meeting was advanced to Wednesday from its usual Thurs day date, because of conflicts with other events scheduled for Thurs day. A nominating committee will present nominations for chair man, two vice-chairmen, secre tary and treasurer. Members of the nominating committee are Mrs. R. F. Hoke Pollock, Mrs. Charles Cole and Dr. R. M. Mc Millan who is retiring as the or ganization’s first president. Armed Forces Day Display By Guard Set For Saturday Plans for local National Guard participation in the nationwide Armed Forces Day program were announced this week, by Captain William J. Wilson, local unit com mander. The Moore County Guard unit, Company D of the 130th Tank Battalion, will set up a display of equipment Saturday, May 21, in the parking lot next to the Colo nial Furniture Co., on S. W. Broad Street. The display, which will be opened about noon Saturday, will feature a 90 mm. gun medium tank, obtained through the cour tesy of the 44th Tank Battalion of Fort Bragg. The local company has not yet received its own tanks, and tank training has been con ducted with the help of units of the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg. In addition to the big tank, the display will show small arms, communications equipment and information on the organization and training activities of the coun ty unit. Guardsmen will be on duty throughout the afternoon to ex plain the various items of equip ment, and to answer questions about the National Guard. Other Events Armed Forces Day at Fort Bragg and Pope Air Force Base will be observed Sunday, to per mit greater attendance during an all-day program. (See detailed story elsewhere in today’s Pilot). The USAF Air Ground Opera tions School here will have a spe cial display in one of the hangars at Pope Air Force Base, but no local observance is planned by the school. Miss Martha Jane Brooks, 18- year-old senior at Cameron High School, has been selected to re ceive the nurse’s training scholar ship given annually by the Sand hill Veterans Association, it was announced this week by Watson Scott of Southern Pines, SVA chairman. The winner, who will get an expense-paid three-year training course at the North Carolina nurs ing school of her choice, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Z. V. Brooks of Cameron, Route 2. She has four brothers and one sister. Mr. Brooks is a farmer and part- time carpenter. As an alternate choice of win ner the selection board named Miss Faye Wallace, senior at Elise High School, Robbins. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Wallace of Carthage, Route 1. The only condition on which SVA scholarships are given is that the winner return to Moore Coun ty to practice her profession for at least one year immediately after her graduation from nursing school. There were five applicants for the scholarship this year — the ninth year in which one and sometimes two such scholarships have been awarded, all of them financed by contributions of the 1 MARTHA JANE BROOKS public in an annual drive con ducted by the Association. Mem bers of the selection board were Dr. C. R. Monroe of Moore Coun ty Hospital; Miss Margaret Moser, superintendent of nurses at the hospital; T. Roy Philhps of Car thage, representing the county board of education; and Garland McPherson of Southern Pines, chairman of the Moore Red Cross chapter. Considered in picking a scholar- (Continued on Page 8) 571 Eligible To Vote On School Tax Tuesday A total of 517 persons can vote^ in a special school tax ejection, > With polls open from 6:30 a.m. to ' 6:30 p.m. at the fire station, on Tuesday. The issue is whether the South ern Pines school board of trustees be authorized to increase the spe cial school supplement tax from 48 cents to 50 cents per $100 of property valuation. Only those persons living in the Southern Pines school district who registered in a recent new regis tration period are eligible to vote. Error Corrected in the General Assembly, would give the’ Southern Pines board of trustees the authority to increase this tax rate to 60 cents. 2 Manslaughter Cases Listed On Superior Calendar Local Lions Club William A. Benson Elected President Winner of S. Pines - Robbins Game To Face Carthage In Tournament Finals Rain and light trouble at Memo rial Field have mixed up the an nounced schedule of the Moore County High School baseball tournament—but with the lights now fixed and prospect of good weather, it appears that the finals of the tournament, which are ten tatively set for Saturday night, will see some good baseball here. The local Blue Knights, playing in a semi-finals contest Thursday night against Robbins, had an out side chance To win and face Car thage in the finals. Carthage gained its berth in the finals by edging out Aberdeen, 6-4, in a contest under lights here Wednesday night. Aberdeen reached the semi-finals by topping West End. Robbins beat High- falls, 9-3, to gain the semi-finals. Southern Pines reached the semi-finals by defeating Vass- Lakeview, 6-3, Tuesday afternoon in a game that had been rained out last Friday night and which was called in the first inning Mon day night when transformer trou ble cut off 36 lights. The lights were repaired in time to play on the field Wednesday night. Any Other Teams Want In League? Managers of four teams in a proposed town softball league for summer play met Monday night and made tentative! plans for the coming season—but other teams are invited to join the league. The- managers at Monday’s meeting represented the Carolina Power and Light Co., the Air- Ground Operations School, the Lions Club and the Catholic Lay men’s Association. Representatives of other teams interested in joining the league are asked to call Town Recreation Director Irie Leonard at 2-6551 (high school) or City Manager Tom' E. Cunningham at town hall, 2-2462. Another meeting of man agers will be held some time next week. A one-week term of Superior Court for trial of criminal cases is scheduled to open at Carthage Monday, with Judge Allen H. Gwyn presiding. The term will be followed by trial of civil cases the following week, also with Judge Gwyn on the bench. Heading the cases of interest on a calendar that runs Monday through Thursday are two involv ing the death of persons in auto mobile accidents which took place last October. Calendared for Tuesday are the cases of Edward N. Williams, Pinehurst Negro who was 25 years old last October and is charged with, careless and reck less driving, resulting in death; and Howard Claude Sheffield, who was 29 at the time of the ac cident and is charged with man slaughter and driving an automo bile witlhout operator’s license. Beth accidents which resulted in death of a passenger in each car, were one-car mishaps in which the automobiles ran off the road. Killed in the car driven by Wil liams was Howard G. Small, also 25 at that time, a Negro who lived with his four-year-old child at the home of his mother, Mrs. Anna Small of West Southern Pines. The accident occurred about a mile and a half out of Southern Pines on the “old road” to Pine hurst, near Watson’s Lake. Fatality in the Sheffield acci dent was Eugene D. Melton, 59, unmarried sawmill worker. The location was near Red Branch (Continued on page 18) William A. Benson president, heads a new slate of officers elect ed last Friday evening by the Southern Pines Lions Club. The officers will be installed as the club begins its new year July 1. Others elected are: Willis B. Rush, re-elected secretary; W. O. Spence, treasurer; Donald F. Traylor, first vice-president; Charles S. Patch, Jr,, second vice- president; S. B. Richardson, third vice-president; Ronell Thompson, “lion tamer;” Joseph Marley, “tail twister;” Howard Smith, assistant “tail twister;” the Rev. Robert L. Bame, chaplain. New directors are Henry Clayton, Charles P. Cole, the Rev. R. L. Bame and Broadus Caudle. The officers and directors were (Continued on Page 8) Court Of Honor Set For Monday A Boy Scout Court of Honor for Moore District troops will be held' Monday evening at West End, ac cording to Lawrence Johnson, of Aberdeen, advancement chairman. The court,' featuring awarding of merit badges and rank advance ments, will be held at the West End Presbyterian Church, instead of the high school auditorium as originally planned, beginning at 7:30 p.m. The program will consist of color slides of the National Scout Ranch at Philmont, N. Mex. All Scouts and their parents and friends, are invited. The Pilot incorrectly stated last week that a bill concerning the special school tax rate, introduced Presbyterians Will Dedicate Two Buildings Twenty years of organization and effort by members of Brown- son Memorial Presbyterizm Church will be climaxed Sunday in morning and afternoon services of dedication for the church sanc tuary and educational building, at the corner of May Street and In diana Avenue. The church was organized in 1936 with 90 charter members. It now has a membership of nearly dOO and its sanctuary and educa tional building are among the fin est religious structures in this area. The church is named for the late Rev. Marcus Acheson Brownson, D.D., pastor emeritus of the Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, Pa., who was a lead ing organizer of the new church here, two years before his death in 1938. Dinner On Grounds Dinner on the grounds will be served between the morning and afternoon services Sunday. Dedication of the sanctuary had been delayed through the years, pending not only continu ing work on the sanctuary itself but construction of an education al building. The latter was fin ished last year. The ceremonies Sunday, therefore, mark the joint dedication of the two buildings which together constitute a com plete church plant, with extensive facilities provided for the many organizations and activities of the members. Dedication of the sanctuary will take place at the 11 a.m. service. Returning to Southern Pines for the occasion will be the Rev. Er nest L. Barber who was pastor of the church from its organization until 1942. The origin of the church is traced to vesper serv ices conducted by the Rev. Mr. Barber at the Civic Club, in 1931 when he was pastor of Bethesda Presbyterian Church, Aberdeen. The former local pastor, who is expected here with his wife Sun day, is now executive secretary of GranviUe Presbytery, with headquarters at Raleigh. During (Continued on page 20) The proposed bill will only en able the people of the school dis trict to vote such an increase in the tax rate, if and when it may appear advisable and necessary. This bill was introduced by Rep. H. Clifton Blue at the request of the board of trustees as a part of its planning for school needs dur ing the next several years. It does not concern Or affect the present proposal' to increase this tax to the present legal maximum of 50 cents, which will be voted on,.in the election Tuesday. D, E, Bailey Retires From Two Long-Standing Posts $742 COLLECTED A total of $742 was contributed in the Southern Pines collection for the annual fund drive of the Moore County unit of the Ameri can Cancer Society, Mrs. J. S. Milliken, chairman, reported this week. Local quota was $600. The chairman thanked all who had contributed, noting that it is im possible for her to make personal acknowledgement of each gift. Dempsey Ernest Bailey—who is known to more law-abiding and non-law-abiding citizens of this area than almost any other man in Southern Pines—^has retired. Not many men have the distinc tion of retiring from two jobs at once, by either of which they are widely known, but that’s what has happened with Mr. Bailey. He had been ticket clerk and telegraph operator at the Sea board Air Line railroad station longer than most residents here can remember (since 1918, to be exact) and as a justice of the peace he had held court and per formed his other duties night and day for the past 23 years. Both jobs are history now. Travellers in and out of Southern Pines will miss his alert and busi ness-like countenance at the tick et window in the station. It may be that transgressors Of the law will miss, in another way, the stern judge of the town hall po lice court who yet always had a fatherly lecture for a kid in trouble and showed mercy when he thought it would serve the cause of justice. Born in Vass 65 years ago last ^Spring Value Days\ Offering Prizes Galore Launching their second annual Spring Value Days, participating local merchants featured many reduced prices and special items as the sales event opened Thurs day, to run through Saturday. The trade promotion is spon sored by the Chamber of Com merce, with Mark King, Jr., and Mrs. Jean Edson on the commit tee in charge. Participating members of the Chamber of Commerce have at their places Of business coupons which adult shoppers can sign and deposit in a box from which a drawing will be made and a prize awarded at each store late Satur day afternoon. Shoppers may deposit coupons in as many of the boxes as they choose, throughout the business section The coupon of each store’s win ner will be sent to the C. of C. of fice in the Southland Hotel where another drawing will be conduct ed at 10:30 a.m. Monday. Mr. King asks that all mer chants send winning coupons to the C. of C. office not later than 10 a.m. that day. Winner of the grand prize can choose $25 worth of merchandise from any of the participating stores—and the choice need not be confined to one store. So that there will be no undue delay ifl a winner’s picking out the ^ merchandise desired, the grand prize winner will be given a letter from the Chamber of Commerce, to be presented at each establishment at which merchan dise is chosen. When the winner’s selections have been made, each store will send this merchandise to the Chamber of Commerce of fice where the winner will pick it all up at one time when the $25 limit has been reached. The winner, of course, can take the $25 worth of merchandise at a single store, if he or she so de sires. Appropriation For Alston House Gets MR. BAILEY ... at desk in his home December, Mr. Bailey is the son the late Dempsey J. Bailey of who died when his son was (Continued on page 20) an By ‘First Hurdle’ Word has been received from Representative H. CJifton Blue, in Raleigh, that the first hurdle has been passed in the move to ob tain, from the state, funds for the restoration, repair and mainte nance of the Philip Alston House in Deep River township. On Monday night, according to Mr. Blue, the House passed a bill for such preservatiO'n of historic sites in which the special sum of $5,000 was designated for Moore County’s “House in the Horse shoe” project of the Moore Coun ty Historical Association. Commenting on the fact, Mr. Blue said: ‘T do not know what fate this bill will meet in the Senate, but I am encouraged over its prospects of passage.” This bill, for the preservation of historic sites, was the measure under consideration when a dele gation with Mi’S. Ernest Ives, president of the local historical association at its head, appeared before the legislature earlier this spring to speak on behalf of the proposal. It has had the concerted support, since then, of Moore County Stenator Hawley Poole, as well as of Representative Blue