SLOW DOWN AND LIVE! HELP STOP HIGHWAY DEATHS ^OWDOWN JJD LIVE! HELP S’OP HIGHWAY DEHmS V !!■> Attendance Up As Schools Here Start New Year Increase of Pupils Listed At All Four Schools In District Attendance was up in all public schools of the Southern Pines dis trict as children trooped to classes Wednesday. Amos C. Dawson, superintend ent, said that an increase of 46 pupils was registered in the East Southern Pines schools, as com pared to last year, while an in crease of 73 was reported from the Negro schools in West South ern Pines. Here is a comparison of first- day registration figures in all schools of the district; 1955 1954 East Southern Pines Elementary 549 522 High School 165 146 West Southern Pines Elementary 299 244 High School 117 99 Total registration in both schools comes to 1,130 on the opening day. Principal J. W. Moore of West Southern Pines estimated that more than 100 students at both (Continued on Page 8) SIXTEEN PAGES $50 Option Money Paid, But No Buyer Definite On Kenwood Deal PRICE TBt CENTS Young Democrats Set Annual Meet On September 16 Moore County Young Demo crats will hold their annual meet ing in the courthouse at Carthage Friday night of next week, Sep tember 16, Voit Gilmore, Moore YDC president, announced this week. The meeting is set for 8 p.m. Edwin GiU, treasurer, of the State of North Carolina* will be the principal speaker. Officers ( will be elected and delegates se lected for the State YDC conven tion in Durham September 29 - October 1. Business at the meet ing will include committee re ports from Miss Bess McCaskill, Paul Butler and Hubert McCas kill. An informal dutch-treat dinner honoring Mr. Gill will be given by the YDC executive committee at 6:30 p.m., preceding the meet ing. Those wishing to attend should notify Mr. Gilmore at Southern Pines. To District Rally, A delegation of Moore County Yoimg Democrats is planning to attend the 8th District YDC rally at North Wilkesboro Saturday, Mr. Gilmore said. The .district rally has been held in Southern Pines several times in past years. Negro Couple Offer House For 120,000 Southern Pines YDC Sets Monday Meeting A meeting of the Southern Pines Young Democratic Club has been called by President Paul Butler for 7:30 p.m. Monday in the council chamber at town haU. Officers will be elected. All mem bers and interested Democrats are invited to attend. A home in the Kenwood sub division, just outside the South ern Pines city limits, was offered for sale this week at $20,000, after it was bought by a Negro couple for a reported $12,000 August 22 and residents of the white neigh borhood in which it is located protested the sale. W. D. Sabiston, Carthage attor ney who represented Mrs. Louise Way Spence, seller of the house, and also is representing in subse quent negotiations the Negro buy ers, Mr. and Mrs. Martin L. White, said that an option offering the home for sale at $20,000, subject to the mortgage on it, had been signed by the Whites. Robert N. Page III, of Aberdeen, attorney for Henry L. Graves, owner of the Kenwood subdivision, paid the option money. The option ex pires September 15, Mr. Sabiston said. Mr. Graves said today that, be cause his attorney has paid the $50 option money, it does not mean that he is going to buy the property. “The option is made as an op tion in trust to whoever wants to buy the house,” he said. “It is open to whoever sees fit to take advantage of it. “My attorney paid the option money because I want to give an advantage to the folks in Ken wood. If enough of them want to go along in buying the house, our company will put up our share. I thought it was simply worth $50 to go along with anything that' might materialize to help the peo ple in Kenwood.” Mr. Graves said, however, that there are not yet any definite plans for group participation in buying the house and that he has not heard from any Kenwood res idents on the matter. ■:! ' B. Frank Yandell To Replace Wilson In Scouting Post Officials Praise Bolh Exeputives For Their Records B. Frank Yandell is expected to arrive in Southern Pines next week to become district Scout ex ecutive for the Moore County Dis trict of the Occoneechee Boy Scout Council. He replaces Jim Wilson who has been Scout executive in Moore County since 1952 and will go to Durham next month to become executive for the Durham district. Now attending a national Boy Scout training school in Ann Ar bor, Mich., Mr. Wilson is due to return to Southern Pines Sunday. Appointment to the Durham posi tion is considered a promotion for him. Appointment of Mr. Yandell to the Moore County Scouting post was announced this week by E. N. Brower, Occoneechee Council president, and S. P. Gaskin, Coun cil executive. Mr. Yandell will come here from the Pee Dee Area Council, with headquarters in Florence, S. C. He will live in Southern Pines. The new Moore executive is a member of the Lions Club and the Presbyterian Church of Sumter, S. C. He is 29 years old, is mar ried and is the father of a young daughter. His arrival .here was tentatively set for Thursday of next week. In .making the announcement, Mr. Gaskin stated, “The Occonee chee Council is fortunate to secure (Continued on Page 8) AWAIT OUTCOME—Martin L. White, 68, and his wife, Mrs. Esther Ferguson White, 58, are pictured at the home of friends in West Southern Pines as they awaited outcome of their offer to sell their home in the Kenwood section for $20,000. Residents of the white neighborhood protested sale to the retiredi Negro cou ple. Above is the house in the controversy, standing vacant pending current negotiations under an option that expires Sep tember 15. The Whites’ furniture arrived Wednesday from Ja maica, Long Island, N. Y., but was reportedly put in storage. (Photos by V. Nicholson) Information about the sale, was made public last week, I arousing immediate protests from Kenwood residents and becoming! a matter of keen interest through- Thomas C. Darst III Killed In Auto Wreck While Driving To California This community was shocked and saddened Wednesday night when the news came that Pvt. Thomas C. Darfit HI, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Darst, Jr., s,af Morganton Road, had been killed in an automobile accident near Las Vegas, Nev. According to scanty information reaching his father here from a Las Vegas funeral home, the young soldier’s car collided ■ with a truck, rolled 84 feet and burst into flames. Young Darst was be lieved to have been instantly kill ed. He had left here during the '•'.weekend to drive to California for a new Army assignment, mak ing a leisurely trip to “see the sights’* along the way. His mother has been spending the summer in Europe with Mrs, Robinson Cook of Pinehurst. The father was faced with the prob lem of reaching her abroad and giving her the tragic news. He found her in Venice, where it was ^ ■’? a. m. and she was awakened for the call. She made plans to come home immediately and is expect ed to arrive by air at New York Friday morning, to fly then to Raleigh-Durham airport. Funeral plans are undecided, pending Mrs. Darst’s arrival. The Army is handling all details of the transfer of the body to South ern Pines by train. Darst was the grandson of the late Episcopal Bishop Thomas C. Darst of Wilmington. He was the oldest of five sons of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Darst, Jr. He had been in the Army two years, stationed at Fort Bragg and spending fre quent weekends at home. He had been transferred to the Army Lan guage School at Monterey, Cal., and was on his way there when the accident occurred. The Dars^s lived in Greensboro and in Pinehurst for a number of years. In 1953 they moved to Southern Pines, where Mr. Darst heads the firm of Thomas C. Darst & Co., investments and se curities. out the community. Mrs. Spence was not available for comment today and was re ported out of town. She has taken an apartment in Southern Pines after vacating the house. Shortly after the sale was made known, she was qqoted as saying that she had given Mr. Graves an opportunity to buy the house be fore she sold to the Whites and that her decision to sell followed a number of controversies with Mr. Graves in relation to alleged disagreements concerning insur ance on the house—which his firm holds—and other matters. He said this week that he had been in formed by Mr. Sabiston, shortly before the sale, that Mrs. Spence would sell to a Negro family un less he bought the house back, but that the offer was vague and that (Continued on Page 8) Council To Meet Tuesday Night; Study Recreation The town council will meet at town hall at 8 p.m. Tuesday for its regular monthly session. In an informal meeting Tuesday night of this week, the council met with the Recreation Advisory Committee to consider recom mendations of the committee for swimming pools and recreation centers in East and West South ern Pines. After hearing a presentation by Tom E. Cunningham, city man ager, of town needs that would call for bond issues, and the legal limitation of bonds that could be issued by the town, committee members retired to discuss their thoughts on the matter and then reported to the council that they would like to have more time to study the proposal in the light of facts brought out Tuesday night. Speaking for the committee was the chairman, the Rev, C. K. Li- gon. According to the information presented by the city manager, the amount of bonds under con sideration for various town needs, including recreation, exceeds con siderably the legal limitation on what the town can issue (eight per cent of the town’s net debt, (Continued on Page 8) Ground To Be Broken ForNewChiirchSunday " Bishop Peile To Take Part In Ceremoay Groundbreaking service for the First Methodist Church if South ern Pines will be held Sinday at 3 p. m. on the new church site on Midland Road. Bishop W. W. Peele, retired Bishop of the Methodist Church now living in Laurinburg, will speak and lead the ground-break ing pledge and prayer. , Others to take part in the serv ice include: the Rev. O. L. Hath away, district superintendent of the Fayetteville District of the Methodist Church; the Rev. T. A. Collins, of Raleigh, executive sec retary, Conference Board of Mis sions; Earl Hubbard, chairman of the official board of the local church; Frank Roberts, chairman of the board -of trustees; Paul VanCamp, chairman of the build ing com^ttee; Mrs. J. S. Hiatt, Jr., president of the Woman’s So ciety of Christian Service; and Capt. Henry Jones, Church School superintendent. The Rev. Robert L. Bame, pastor of the church, will give the call to worship and will preside during the service. The Rev. T. A. CoUins will preach during the morning wor ship at 11 a. m. Sunday. The quarterly conference for the church will be held Sunday- after the morning service with the Rev. O. L. Hathaway con ducting the business session. This service will be at the Civic Club where the church has been hold ing its regular services. The church site is northeast of iVhdland Road (double road to Pinehurst) not far beyond the be ginning of Midland Road at the north end of Broad Street. The new building—designed by T. T. Hayes and Associate, local archi tects—will overlook Mifllarvd Road from the rising ground on the curve as the road turns west toward Pinehurst. THE REV. A. L. THOMPSON Moore Native To Conduct Services At Vass Church The Rev. Arthur L. Thompson, pastor of Grace Street Methodist Church in Wilmington, will be guest minister at a series of re vival services at the Methodist Church in Vass, starting Sunday night and. continuing at 7:30 o’clock each evening through Fri day, September 16, according to announcement by the pastor, the Rev. Walter. C. Smith. Mr. Thompson has selected the following subjects for his ser mons: Sunday, “What’s Right With the World?”; Monday, “Waiting On God”; Tuesday, “The Gospel and What To Do With It”; Wed nesday, “Paying Our Vows”; Thursday, “A Personal Question of Jesus”; and Friday, "Christ Our Saviour.” Emery Matthews of Sanford will be in charge of the music. Mr. Thompson, a native of Moore County, is the son of E. B. Thompson of Cameron, Route 1, and the late Mrs. Thompson. He (Continued on Page 8) Church Group To Spousor Musical The Fellowship Forum of the .Church of Wide Fellowship an nounced today that arrangements have be4n completed for the pre sentation of a big musical variety show called “Holiday Ahoy”. The show will be staged at Weaver Auditorium on the nights of Sep tember 26 and 27. On hand to direct the show, will be Miss Nyla Ann Jester. She directed the local shows entitled “Shooting Stars” in 1952 and “On Stage America” in 1953, both also sponsored by the Fellowship Fo rum. “We need chorus girls, business men, children and specialty acts,” said Miss Carolyn Hoskins, secre tary of the Fellowship Forum. She asks that interested persons call her at 2-7475. HUMPHREY BREAKS NOSE IN DUMMY PRACTICE Blue Knights To Open 1955 Football Season Friday Night A big crowd is expected for the opening of the high schcol foot ball season when the Southern Pines Blue Knights take on Max- ton High at Memorial Field Fri day night. Kickoff time is 8 p. m. Head Coach Irie Leonard said this week that he is expecting Maxton to give the Blue Knights “a very tough battle.” Last year a scoreless tie with Maxton was the only blemish on the undefeat ed record of the Southern Pines High School State six-man foot ball champions. Probable starting lineup was announced by Coach Leonard as: Tony Parker, center; John Ray, left end; Bill Marley, right end; Bobby Cline, quarterback; James Humphrey, wingback and John ny Watkins and Billy Cox, tail- I backs. I Lynn Van Benschoten and Ken neth Creech are expected to start in the defensive lineup, Leonard said. Nose Broken Humphrey was the victim of (Continued on page 8) 107 Preseut For Opeuiug Day At Catholic School St. Anthony’s Catholic school .opened tdday in its brand-new, piodern school building with 107 .children present and a dozen picre enrolled who could not come the first day. Following an opening-day mass at the church celebrated by Fath er Peter M. Derlges, rector, regu lar schoolday, hours were observ ed—8:45 a. m. to 3 p. m., with a lunch hour at noon. Kindergart- ners attend only until noon. While most of the pupils are ^rom Southern Pines, others come from Pinehurst, Pinebluff, Aber deen, Candor and Carthage. .About 10 per cent are non-Cath- olics. I Sister Catherine Bernard, who is the Sister Superior of the school and convent, teaches the seventh and eighth grades; Sister Agatha, fifth and §ixth; Sister Helen .Philip, third and fourth; Sister .Agnes Mary, first and second; and Mrs. Emil R. Kelly of Pinehurst, kindergarten. NEW BLEACHERS—These two new sets of bleachers, each accommodating 110 persons, bring the total seating capacity at Memorial Field to 550. Weather-resistant treated planks form the seats. The welded steel frames include hand^ rails at sides and guard rail at the back. In this photo, volunteer workers are putting fin ishing touches on the installation. Each set of bleachers cost $415. One was paid for from do nations at summer softball games, the other from proceeds of football programs published by the Blue Knights Club, an organization of adults , who are interested in high school ath letics. (Pilot Photo) Groups Plan Kids’ Day Celebration The Sandhills Kiwanis Club and the USAF Air-Ground Oper ations School here are working up a thrilling program for National Kids’ Day, to be staged for school children of Moore county on Sat urday, September 24. Boys and girls, eight years and up, from schools which have annually par ticipated in the event since it was started as a project of Kiwanis International several years ago, will be guests of the club and the Air Ground School. Plans call for gathering at the Southern Pines School auditori um, movies, lunch, then a visit to Pope AFB for afr maneuvers and demonstrations by the ‘Air Force. The program will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Transportation will be provided through arrange ments with schools, Kiwanians and USAFAGOS. Over 600 chil dren enjoyed last year’.s -Kids’ .Hay.