School Cafeteria
WEST SOUTHERN PINES
Monday — Wieners, mustard
onions, mashed potatoes,'
Hunting Season Opens Monday; Dates
Set For Sandhill Management Area
._t » xj «*^wkVvA-r> 00 frt TartiioTv 5^1.
and onions, mashed potatoes,' The official hunting season for
kraut, bread, butter, milk, cook- deer, raccoon and opossum will
. begin in Moore County Monday,
Tuesday—Limas with ham, Ray Overcash, game protector
cole slaw, beets, bread, butter, said today,
milk, rice pudding, pineapple Squirrels, rabbits, quail an
wild turkeys have a month to go
Wednesday — Meat loaf, but- before they b^me the subject
tered rice, garden peas, bread, of hundreds of weekend hunters
"“iSLC-ttolSn i, „.w Shaping up
bS bSSrii.tfe 15 .0 January
Friday — Vish patties, cubed 1; Raccoon and opossum,
potatoes in onion sauce, steamed 15 to Febraa^ TanuS^v”iV’rab-
cabbage, corn bread, b'^tter, vember 22 to January
milk, fruit j^Uo. b^s, quail and wild turkey. JN_
vember 22 to January 31.
Overcash reminded hunters
that the above dates apply only
to Moore County and do not nec-
THURSDAY. OCTOBER 11. 1956
Child Labor Case
Tried Monday Is
Appealed By Judg
A
An appeal taken by the State, a
rarity in Moore County court pro-
i,u -— rsHty lo MOorc Ceounxy couii pio-
essarily apply to adjoining coun- (.enures, was noted on the Moore
H© SU^^GStcd if there W&S ...-i—>_ TVdr/^vA/^esir
doubt concerning the open
Moore Teachers
Named To High
NCEA Offices
HAYES BOOK SHOP
BOOKS ☆ OFFFICE SUPPUES
SCHOOL SUPPLIES ^ RECORDS
RADIOS ☆ RECORD PLAYERS
HOBBY SHOP ^ TOY DEPARTMENT
GIFTS ☆ MAGAZINES ☆ NEWSPAPERS
CONStDER
THE
X^\\
/ \\\
WAY
"BY THE PUTTIN'^N
of my hands”
In his second letter to Timothy, St. Paul said, 'T
put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of
God, which is in thee by the putting on of my hands.”
(2 Tim. 1:6) *
The Acts of the Apostles (8:14-17) tells of how,
Saints Peter and John were sent to the Samaritans
and "laid their hands on them, and they received the
Holy Ghost.”
Here is the basis for Confirmation by a Bishop —
the laying on of hands — as practiced in the Epis
copal Church. Our Bishops, in Apostolic succession
j (that is, their succession traces back without break
directly to the Apostles) we believe, confer upon us
the strengthening power of the Holy Spirit in the rite
of Confirmation.
An Episcopalian is confirmed by the Bishop after
he has been baptized, possibly in infancy, and after
he has reached an age of understanding.
It is a practice as old as Christ’s church — an act
of faith which has brought new life to millions. It is
worthy of your investigation. Visit the Episcopal
Church near you soon. Learn from the rector more
about confirmation.
The Emmanuel Church
East Massachusetts Avenue
HOLY COMMUNION 8
ttamtt Y service 9:80 CHURCH SCHOOL 10
MORNING PRAYER AND CONFIRMATION 11
ties.
any _
season in other counties, hunters
should^ either see him or obtain
a copy'^ of the hunting and trap
ping regulations from any of a
number of license agents
throughout the county.
He listed the trapping season
as follows:
Mink, muskrat, opossum, otter
and raccoon—^November 15 to
January 13. (It is unlawful,
however, to trap raccoon and ot
ter west of U. S. Highway 1).
There is no open season on beav
er.
Management Area
Hunters were also reminded
today that several sections of the
Sandhills Wildlife Management
area near Hoffman will he open
to hunting this fall.
Lyle Morgan, Wildlife Refuge
assistant, said that all hunting in
the management area would be
on a supervised basis with per
mits sold only on a daily
basis. Hunters must go to
the office at Indian Gap near
Hoffman, purchase permits and
then check out before they leave
the area.
The areas will be open for
deer, quail, rabbits and squirrel,
Morgan said
Opening date has been set as
October 15 through January 1 for
deer, permits $3.50 per day, only
in certain areas. Morgan said
that there will be no hunting of
small game allowed in the so-
called deer area during the^ sea
son for deer. The same areas will
open to small game hunting Jan
uary 2 through January 31. Per
mits then will be $1 per day.
Other areas will open Thanks
giving day and remain open
through January 30 for quail,
rabbits and squirrels. Permits are
$1 per day. '
Morgan reminded hunters tnat
permits must be purchased on
the same day they are to be
used. Hunters must also produce
a regular state or county hnting
license.
All checking in and checking
out will be handled from the of
fice at Indian Gap.
and O. P. Johnson, president of
the NCEA.
Recorder’s Court docket Monday
when Judge J. Vance Rowe order
ed an appeal in a case involving
child labor.
The case involved payment al
legedly due and unpaid to some
children working in tobacco fields
and barns on the farm owned by
a Mr. Lynch between Carthage
and Cameron near Union Church.
Zero Mitchell, Negro tenant
farmer, had been indicted for
fraud by four minors—three of
one family, one of another—^under
a statute protecting children in in
dustry. The statute makes non
payment to minors of money due
for services received a misde
meanor.
On the stand Mitchell contended
that he used the services of three
young Shaws—20, 15, and 13, and
of Freddy Martin, Jr., 16, as part
of a “swap” labor agreement with
their parents. The parents were
present to testify that there was
such an arrangement but that the
four youngsters were not a part of
it, having been approached sep
arately by Mitchell with promises
to pay for their help in getting hig
tobacco in. Total amount of mon-
eny the minors claimed was due
was about $150.
Mr. Lynch, who operates his
farm with tenant labor, said that
such arrangements were among
tenants between whole families,
rather than with individuals, but
admitted he had no knowledge of
any separate agreements such as
the minors claimed.
Defense counsel moved to dis
miss the action on the ground that
the statute under which the in
dictment had been made was ap
plicable to industrial workers
only, while laws applying to agri
cultural workers, both child and
adult, were different and should
Moore County public school
teachers were named to a num
ber of high offices at the annual
district convention of the North
jClaxolina Education Association
in Raleigh last week.
Mrs. Ann Tomlinson of Rob
bins, a fifth grade teacher, was
elected president of the Class
Room Teacher’s Association for
the North Central District of the
NCEA and Mrs. Irie Leonard of
aouthern Pines, who teaches
high school English in Aberdeen,
was named secretary Of the as
sociation.
Miss Martha Pat Archbell of
Southern Pines was elected sec
retary-treasurer of the audio
visual education department of
the North Central District, and
E. H. Poole, a music teacher at
Aberdeen, was named president
of the Music Association for the
North Central District.
There are five divisions of the
NCEA and 29 departments. Each
department and division elected
officers at the annual meeting.
The convention was addressed
by State Superintendent of Pub
lic Instruction Charles F. Carroll,
be construed as such.
Solicitor W. Lamont Brown ar
gued that the statute’s denifition
of work “on raw materials” placed
the tobacco barning in the indus
try category, and the four minors
thus under the protection of the
statute.
The case, which normally would
have been tried in a Justice of the
Peace Court, had been brought in
Recorder’s Court by counsel for
the prosecution for an interpreta
tion of the law.. Sustaining the
motion to dismiss. Judge Rowe en
tered the appeal for the State to
Superior Court “on the matter of
law entirely.”
Gl LBEY'S
VODKA
FIFTHS
PINTS
^ 3.60
VODKA 80 PROOF. DISTILLED FROM 100% GRAIN.
W. & A. GILBEY, LTD., CINCINNATI, OHIO
John Chappell Is
New President Of
School Hi-Y Clnh
John Chappell, senior at
Southern Pines High School, was
elected president of the school’s
Hi-Y club at an organizational
meeting held last week.
He succeeds John Ray, now a
student at the University of
North Carolina.
Other officers are Roger Ver-
hoeff, senior, vice-president; Ray
Daeke, senior, secretary-treasur
er; and George Reams, junior,
chaplain. „ j
W. A. Leonard is faculty ad-
visor.
The club announced for its
first project of the school year
that a bus would be made avail
able to any student at the school
who wished to attend the State
Fair in Raleigh.
INSUIATE!
Are you prepared to greet it with all the protec
tion modern home building methods provide you
with? Keep your home warmer, more comfortable
and with less fuel waste by preparing now!
INS11L4TE AND CUT FUEL COSTS
Fuel Savings are so great they pay for insulation in
TWO SHORT YEARS
FOR RESULTS USE THE PI
LOT’S CLASSIFIED COLUMN.
It’s Time For Fall Planting
—Visit—
A WIDE VARIETY OF BEAUTIFUL PLANTS
EXCEPTIONALLY FINE LOT OF CHRYSANTHEMUMS
Tel. 3145 PINEHURST, N. C. Linden Road
Building Needs
See Us for Johns-Manville Rock Wool Batts, Johns-Man-
ville Asbestos Roofins, Siding and Asphalt Shingles
^ r*T T'or>T7i
[SmWINWlLUAM^
PAIHTS
ROCK LATH
CEMENT
BRIXMENT
PLASTER
BONDEX '
BRUSHES
CUTLERY
FENCING
GLASS
GARDEN TOOLS
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FFEED - SEED
CARPENTER TOOLS
DOORS
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All Sizes
RIFLES - SHOTGUNS - AMMUNITION - SHELLS
Household Supplies — Farm Needs — Rye Grass Seed
Phone 3412
'The Big Supply House of the Sandhills"
PINEHURST, N. C.
PHILLIPS 66 DISTRIBUTOR
AnriLO\incii\g -
PLEASANTS OIL COMPANY
FUEL OIL
u. S. 1 SOUTH
GAS
JIM PLEASANTS
BATTERIES
SOUTHERN PINES
TIRES
MOTOR OIL
TEL. 2-3074