VOL. 37—NO. 44 TWENTY PAGES SOUTHERN PINES. N. C.. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. 1956 TWENTY PAGES PRICE TEN CENTS ~K ' ♦ A *-4 DRIVE STARTS SOON Speaker Cites Big Growth In Boy Scout Program, Urges Cooperation RELAXING BETWEEN TAKES, Sara Seegar and Richard Trask, stars of a forthcoming “Big Story” television program that was filmed par tially in Southern Pines Saturday, get a few tips on how a scene should be acted from Stuart Rosenberg, director of the show. Mrs. Valerie Nicholson, free lance reporter who was involved LOCAL PEOPLE IN REAL-LIFE ROLES f in the real-life story on which the television show is based, and Clegg Maye, who was also involved, are sitting on the back of the bench listening to Rosenberg. Scene of the shooting was on the northeast corner of Broad StA and Penn. Ave. (Pilot photo) ‘Big Story’ Television Show Filmed Here Saturday; Legal Difficulties Cleared; Will Be Shown October 12 Courtroom Also * Used As Scenes For Production There was one remark that a number of people in Southern Pines and Carthage kept repeat ing Saturday: Making a televi sion show is very hard work. Television camera crews and a directing staff from New York, here to film action and back ground shots for a forth'ftoming “Big Story” show that involves free lance reported Valerie Nich olson of Southern Pines, shot footage most of the day, taking time out from a very busy sched ule only for a quick bite of lunch. Stuart Rosenberg, young Nev/ Yorker who is directing the show, said the filming here was “just ordinary, not much to it, although I do think you people down here are a bit better at picking up this game than most people we’ve had experience with.” The show, which will be enti tled “Nightmare,” has one dis tinction that is a rarity in tele vision: most of the “walk-on” parts, and other bit parts that do not require any dialogue, are be ing played by the actual persons involved in the action. As most readers now know, the show revolves around events leading up to a trial, and the ac tual trial itself, held in Carthage last May in which Mrs. Nichol son was the principal state wit ness in a case in which a former practicing psychologist of South ern Pines was apcused of crimi nal libel. The filming started in the courtroom in Carthage early Sat urday morning when workmen set up gihnt floodlights and sta tioned the cameras at strategic points. Sara Seegar, who plays the part of Mrs. Nicholson in the show, was filmed in several scenes Of the courtroom part of the drama. She took the witness stand and went through the mo tions of testifying. Voice for the scenes jvill be dubbed in the show later in New York. In another courtroom scene a crowd, madeup of people who were anxious to “be on TV so my friends can see me,” as one boy put it, was shot several times to PTA TO MEET The Southern Pines Parent- Teacher Association holds its first meeting of the fall to night (Thursday) at 8 o'clock in Weaver-auditorium. There will be no formal program. Supt. A. C. Dawson will in troduce the new teachers, and after a brief talk about the school, open house' will be held in the home rooms, to give parents an opportunity to visit their children's rooms and become belter acquainted with their teachers. Later, the crowd will come together for a social hour. show emotion on their face. Ros enberg expresses complete satis faction in the reality of the scene. Playing their actual parts in the show were P. H. Wilson, who was prosecuting attorney in the trial of last May, Judge J. Vance Rowe and Solicitor W. Ldmont Brown. Also on hand to be in cluded were Sheriff C. J. Mc Donald, Clerk of Superior Court Carlton Kennedy and Southern Pines police chief C. E. Newton. No voice equipment was used m the courtroom scenes but later, when the crew moved to Southern Pines for several se quences. the sound equipment was used. Director Rosenberg was silently complimented a number of times for his gentle ness in handling the principals in the extreme heat of the day, particularly in one scene that re quired numerous shootings to achieve the reality he desired. Ken»y Holliday and Tommy Clark, two 12-year olds, were filmed as they met Mrs. Seegar on the street. Both fluffed their lines once but came through the second time. Richard Trask, 17, who has ap peared in a wide assortment of roles both on television and the stage, played the part of Clegg Maye, a Gibsonville tednager. Rosenberg said the cost of the production would run “some where between 35 and 40 thous and dollars, not very much when you consider the costs of some half-hour productions.” He pointed out that the sav- (Continued on Page 5) Mrs. Nicholson Agrees Not To Press Civil Suit “The Big Story” production based on experiences of Mrs. Val erie Nicholson, plaintiff in the trial in which Vincent J. Daly, former practicing psychologist' was convicted of criminal libel, has been postponed from the scheduled date of September 28 to October 12, it was learned to day. . Change in the date of produc tion was made, it was stated, to allow general counsel for the American Tobacco Company, which sponsors the NBC-TV pro gram, to perfect arrangements de signed to safeguard the legal rights of all concerned. The postponement action was taken following the receipt, by the producers, of protests from Daly, Miss Edwina Hallman, Mrs. Martha Dixon Underwood, and Brown and Manner, law firm of -Albemarle, threatening injunction if the show was not withdrawn. Meantime telegrams from indi viduals and organizations in Southern Pines and environs had been sent to Paul Hahn, American Tobacco Company president, pro testing any thought of cancella tion^ of the show based on the ' (Continued on Page 6) No Outside Fire Servi(5e Till Fee Paid, Town Warns Homeowners who live outside the corporate limits of Southern Pines were reminded today that they would not receive fire ser vice unless they had paid the fire service charges, which were due September 15. Louis Scheipers, Jr., town clerk, said that it was the practice of the town to answer all calls to homeowners who had paid the charge, which is figured on the basis of 25 cents per $100 coimty valuation. He said that any residents who still desired the service, but who had not paid the charge, could obtain it by going to the munici pal offices and paying. Roy Armstrong, director of ad missions at the University of North Carolina, told members of the Special Gifts committee of the forthcoming Boy Scout drive last Thursday night that scouting was on the upswing throughout the country and that there was a “ter rific need” for expansion of the program. Mr. Armstrong, who has work ed with the Scout program for many years, said that the budget increase for 1957 in Occoneechee Council, which serves Moore County, is up eight per cent over 1956, although the increase in the “boy crop” is up more than 15 per cent. Total budget requirements ^or the 12-county area this year is $159,000, he said. The budget in 1947, just 10 years ago, was only $37,000, which Arm strong used as an illustration of the great expansion of scouting in the area. Armstrong also pointed out that the council had organized 115 new | units in 1955, a record which he I said was equalled by only three other councils in the entire coun try. The meeting, which was held at the Southern Pines Country Club, was an informative session on plans being made to finance the scout program in the county dur ing the next year. William Burroughs of Pinehurst is the chairman for the county- v/ide drive, which wiU be held Oc tober 2 “from dawn to dust.” James Pleasants of Southern Pines is chairman of the special gifts committee, which will seek to reach 15 per cent of the pros pects for contributions on or be fore October 2. Committee members were re minded at the meeting that the success of the drive was of vital importance. “In 1952, the membership of the Occoneechee Council was 7,000,” Frank Yandell pointed out. “In 1956 the total number of scouts had increased to 12,500.” (Continued on Page 5) County’s First Polio Case The nine-month old daughter alytic. The girl, he said, had not of an upper Moore County farm- j been given the Salk vapcine be er is the first reported case >her age. She was re- . . X, X X,. ,ported in good condition, of polio in the county this year, \ • j j x x, x x, Paul Butler, county chairman of ^e reminded parents that the the National Foundation for in-’ vaccination program is still going fantile Paralysis, said this morn- cautioned them against jng. The girl, Phyllis Diana Garner, on and cautioned them getting lax now that hot weather is turning. “September and Oc- , , ^ -r-r , tober are very bad months for daughter^ ]\^. polio and every parent who has Garner of Route 2, Carthage was ^ot had his child vaccinated admitted to Memorial Hospital at ^t once,” Butler Chapel Hill Monday, where it was conf^ed she had contract- county nurses are now making ed the disease. rounds of the schools in the Butler said he had learned the county administering the vaccine case was not diagnosed as par- to all children who will take it. EARLY SUNDAY MORNING Hot Water Tank Explodes, Leaving 5-Room Residence In Destruction A five-room farm house in the | the blast shook the countryside Democrats To Hold 10 Pre-Election Rallies First Will Be Held Saturday At Pinebluf f extreme western end of Moore County was partially demolished early Sunday morning when a 40- gallon hot water tank exploded, tore through the kitchen ceiling and left the roof in total wreck age. The occupants of the house, Mr. and Mrs. Dolan Hall and their I two-year old son, were not at home when the tank exploded. I An examination of the ruins showed that a part of the heavy metal tank was found in a field about 200 feet away. A comer piece of the house was found about 300 feet away, and wreck age from furniture was scattered in a r&dius of 50 to 75 feet in all directions. Hall, who is maintenance man at Samarcand Manor near Eagle Springs, had lived in the house 'only two days before the early I morning blast. He and his family were away on a weekend visit to his mother’s home in Star when Promotion Funds Being Sought From Business Interests An effort to match a proposed $2,000 advertising budget, set up by the Southern Pines Town Council last spring, has produced an “almost 50 per cent” success, it was announced this morning by George Pottle, chairman of the fund raising committee. Pottle said the funds so far re ceived came from hotel and motel interests but that a concentrated effort would be made in the next few days to see local business and professional people to raise the remaining funds needed. Deadline set by Council was October 1. If, by that time; pri vate interests succeed in raising $2,000, Council will allocate a like amount for advertising the town and its various facilities in select ed outlets. Pottle said that if each business in town gave a minimum of $20, the matching funds could easily be raised. He reminded people that an advertising program is desperately needed and caUed on them for their assistance and co operation in making the drive a success. Hoyt Thornburg, Candor post office clerk, said he was awakened by the explosion about 1 a.m. His home is almost a mile away. “I have seen wreckage as the result of explosions, but never have I seen such utter destruc- (Continued on Page 5) Blue Knights To Meet Laurel Hill Tomorrow Night The Southern Pines Blue Knights, so far dominating their opponents with lop-sided scores, will play their first district con ference game tomorrow night at Memorial Field when they meet the Laurel Hill Red Raiders. The team, already informed that there is a possibility of a few Duke University coaches sitting on the sidelines, is expected to show its best side as they lay their perfect mark on the line. Laurel HiU, defeated by Mt. Gilead in its season opener, de feated Ellerbe last week and is vastly improved, according to Southern Pines Coach Irie Leon ard. Leonard said that several mem bers of his team had been plagued with minor injuries during the past week and might miss action. Charles Watkins, regular wing- back is out and :^bby Watkins, who has been showing great promise, has a wrenched back and might not be available for the game. Don Walter came down with a charley-horse earlier in the week (Continued on page 5) Young Democrats To Hold Annual Meeting Sept. 28 Henry Hall Wilson, president of the North Carolina Young Demo cratic Clubs, wiU. be principal speaker at the annual meeting of the Moore County YDC Friday, September 28, it was announced- today by Robert N. Page, III, of Aberdeen, county president. Hall, who is a prominent state legislator and an attorney from Monroe, will be only one of sev eral speakers at the meeting, scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. Page said that candidates for president and other state-wide of fices have been invited to attend. The meeting will be held in the courthouse in Carthage and all members and prospective mem bers are urged to*be present. Adlai: **Doing Fine’* So Say The Old Pros By KATHARINE BOYD “Hi! You just back from Wash ington? See Adlai? How’s he do ing?” That’s the greeting, and the in quiry follows so fast you let courtesy go and juirvp right in. “Well, I heard him at Hsirris- burg in the campaign opener speech and I heard him a couple of days later at Fairfax, Virginia, and then I went to the press con ference, his first big one, at the Sheraton Hotel on Monday; he looked fine and he sounded fine to me; but: ‘how’s he doing?’ Who knows?” And that’s it; Who knows?. Who can tell? But some of the wise birds who are following him so closely, the reporters from the big papers and the acute cam paigners, mutter that they be lieve he’s doing just fine. They say there’s been a dis tinct lift both to Adlai and to the atmosphere that surrounds him during the last two weeks. They attribute it to different things; some say it was the Maine elec tion of a Democratic governor and one representative, maybe two, that started it; some say that it started earlier, in fact right after the Republican con vention with its rigidly rigged platform and candidates, and the hand of the stage-manager heavy on the reins; some believe that the Suez crisis has made a good many folks think again about the gyrations of the Republican sec retary of state; it has made them nervous and inclined to take more seriously the Democratic candidate’s criticisms of the Ad ministration’s handling of for eign policy. However, whatever the reason given by the one you talk to, the opinions exgpressed at '10SE9I . . . HUNTING FOR JOE SMITH NOW the three cairpaign gatherings last week were distinctly favor able to the Democratic cause. “The Democratic tide is ris ing!” said the candidate, and folks in general echoed his words. At Harrisburg, the affair seem ed more like a convention than a rally; the crowd was so big and so noisy, the arena so enormous . . . the food so scarce. It was supposed to be a dinner, but not many saw hide nor hair of the country ham and so on that had been used as bait for the crowd. A good many wise ones ate first; the others found only a glutinous chocolate jelly-roll affair squatting balefuUy on the paper plates, as cold and as solid and as heavy as a paper weight. (Continued on page 20) Ten rallies, designed to whip up enthusiasm among Moore County Democrats in preparation for the general elections Novem ber 6, have been scheduled by the county Democratic Executive Committee, it was announced fol lowing a meeting last week. Speakers for all the rallies have not been announced as yet, according to W. Lamont Brown, chairman of the Executive Com mittee, but three have accepted: L. Y. “Stag” Ballentine, A. Paul Kitchin and John Lang. Brown said that all members of the Executive Committee as well as the various county candi dates for election and present county officials would attend the rallies. The first rally will be held Sat urday at 7:30 p.m. at Pinebluff Lake with Brown and two former chairmen of the county’s Demo cratic Executive Committee — Judge W. A. Leland McKeithen of Pinehurst, and M. G. Boyette of Carthage, district solicitor — as speakers. “The real purpose of this rally,” Brown said, “is to set the stage for the other ones that will be held between then and election day. We plan to lay the plan down— tell those present that it is abso lutely necessary to get out a big Democratic vote this fall.” Brown further commented that if “we can persuade all the regis tered Democrats in this county to vote, and vote the straight Demo cratic ticket, we will win in No vember. I and the other mem bers of the Executive Committee feel that the precinct leaders and workers will do that.” Terry Sanford of Fayetteville, former state senator and a promi nent Democrat in state circles, will be principal speaker at a fund raising dinner at the Carthage Ho tel in Carthage Monday night at 7 o’clock. T. Roy Phillips of Carthage, din ner chairman, said a big program had been planned and urged a big turnout. Tickets will be $5 each with all proceeds above the actual cost of the meal going into the Moore County Democratic campaign fund. The rest of the schedule will be as follows: September 29—-at Robbins School for Spies, Spencerville and Robbins, at 7:30 p. m., L. Y. Ballentine, N. C. Corhmissioner of Agriculture, speaker. October 9—Vass-Lakeview at Vass Community House, 7:30 p. m. John Lang, secretary to Con gressman C. B. Deane; of the 8th North Carolina Congressional District, speaker. October 12—Carthage-Eureka at Coiurthouse, 7:30 p. m. (Continued on Page 5) Aberdeen Baptists Will Occupy New Church Sept. 30 The cornerstone of the new First Baptist Church in Aberdeen will be formally laid at services Sunday, September 30, it has been announced. The new church, which is almost completed, is located on U. S. Highway 1 just north of the main business area of Aber deen. The Rev. Eugene Deese, pastor, will preach the inaugural ser vice at the regular 11 o’clock worship service, followed by the laying of the cornerstone conduQt- ed by Dr. M. A. Huggins, execu tive secretary of the Baptist State Convention. Members of the church will spread an elaborate dinner im mediately following the corner stone ceremonies, and will have an opportunity to inspect the entire building between 2:00 and 4:30 p. m. Other services of the day in clude Sunday School at 9:45, meeting of the Training Union at 6:30, and Evening Worship at 7:30, at which the Rev. Zeb A. Caudle, former pastor, will preach, preach.