57 on- ent }ne Itfc rG. 3n, ::al in- Btf is ng srn 7tt rx. :e. 5tf N- n) PY JR 7D D. U> N. ES SU j > € « VOL. 3a—NO. 16 TWENTY PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1957 TWENTY PAGES PRICE TEN CENTS MUCH INTEREST SHOWN Dr. Malcolm Kemp To Head INewly Formed County Mental Health Assn. An interested gathering, obvi ously eager both to learn and to act, attended the organization meeting of the Moore County Mental Health association, held Monday at Brownson Memorial Presbyterian Church, Southern Pines. Some 75 persons attended, rated “excellent” in view of cold, wet weather and several conflicts. Be fore the close of the evening, about 30 had added their names to the 47 already listed as dues- paid members. Following the open meeting, at which Dr. Charles R. Vernon, of the psychiatric staff at Chapel Hill, was the provocative guest speaker, the membership remain ed for presentation of a slate of officers, who were unanimously elected. These were Dr. Malcolm D. Kemp, Southern Pines and Pine- bluff, president; Rev. F. Eugene Deese, Aberdeen, first vice-presi dent, also , in charge of prograins; Harry FuUenwider, Southern Pines, second vice-president, also in charge of membership; secre tary, Mrs. Edith McLeod, Car thage; treasurer, John F. Hunne- man, Sout’ em Pines; and other members of the board, L. M. John son, Aberdeen; Dr. EmUy S. Tufts, Pinehurst, and Rev.. Martin Cald well, Southern Pines. Dr. R. M. McMillan, temporary chairman of the group during the groundwork-laying period, pre sided until election of a president. Dr. C. K. Ligon of the host church asked an invocation. Dr. Vernon, the guest speaker, whose topic had been announced as “The Commimity’s Responsi bility in Mental Health,” said that instead he would talk on “Chang ing Attitudes”—in the commun ity, and everywhere. He traced attitudes toward mental illness through several eras—the ancient Greeks, with their broadminded ness; the Middle Ages, and their “evil spirits”; a more recent pe riod when mental iUness was looked on as a shame and dis grace; anc^ today, when the en lightened recognize it as “the ill ness of civilization.” The complexities of modem so ciety provide fertile soil for the growth of the frustrations and anxieties which all of us support, and cope with, in some degree, but which in many cause mental and emotional Uls. As to the cause and cure. Dr. Vernon said simply, “I don’t have those answers.” The scientific frontier is pushing forward slow ly, but as is usual with new con- (Continued on page 8) PINEHURST FORUM High Army Official To Discuss MiiEast Problem Next Thursday Lieutenant General Clyde D. Bddleman, Deputy Chief of Staff for Military Operations, will speak at the Pinehurst Forum next Thursday (March 14) on f^lhe. United States and Collec- ttve Security.” Special emphasis wiU " be placed on the current Middle East situation by Gen. Eddle- man, who has been close to the planning during the recent criti cal months. A native of Omage, Texas, Gen. Eddleman is a graduate of West Point and one of the Army’s outstanding planning i^eciahsts. He worked his way ttirough the ranks, but rose rap idly when this coimtry entered World War 2. He served with the Sixth Army during the South Pacific campaigns and was later assigned to occupation forces in Japan. Among his other assignments have been chief of the Plans Di vision of the Army, a member of the Armed Forces Staff College, and commanding officer of the Army War College. He has been decorated with ttie Distinguished Service Medal, the Silver Star, the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star and the ' GEN. EDDLEMAN Philippine Distinguished Service Star. His talk, the seventh in the current series of ^est lecturers and musical artists for the Fo rum, wUl be preceded by the weekly buffet supper in the Country Club dining room, for which advance table reservations are required. WSP OVER TOP IN MOD DRIVE For the second straight year West Southern Pines has contributed double its quota in the annual March of Dimes campaigm . J. C. Hasty, in his second year as drive chairman for the community, said he was "elated" at the response to the drive. West Southern Pines' quota was $100. Total raised, $200.09. Contributions were as fol lows: West Southern Pines school, $50; First Baptist Church, $15; Free Will Bap tist Church, $11.47; Bible Church of God, $2.77; St. James Lutheran Church, $9; Emmanuel Presbyterian Chtirch, $8.20; Refuge Church of God, $13.50; Trin ity A. M E. Zion Church, $48.84; Church of God in Christ, $15.05; coin banks, $16.26; and individual dona tions, $10.20. Suicide Attempt Brings Tragedy ‘ To Farm Family StiU cbnging to life by a thread, John Baptist Comer, 38, lies in a coma in Memorial Hospital, Chapel HiU, following a suicide attempt Saturday night, February 21. Comer, who lived with his wife and family of seven children in a house he rents from R. P. Beasley of Vass, on Route 1 between Sky line and Lakeview, shot himself in his home late Saturday night in a fit of despondency over his inability to get work. The near- fatal shot entered the brain but did not penetrate a vital area, i Medical opinion was that complete I recovery - was unlikely and sur vival itseR uncertain; he remains in critical condition. Reconstruction of the event shows that Comer had been in low spirits for months. A skilled carpenter, he was laid off last Christmas from the job in Greens boro to which he had been com.- muting during the week. He had tried in vain to find work in Floriday in South Carolina, at Ft. Bragg, and locaRy. Said Mrs. Comer: “Everywhere he went, seems like it was the same thing. They’d tell him: The weather’s been so bad we had to quit; come back next week,’ so he’d wait a while longer, and all that time nothing coming in and we ooiddn’t be paying up some of the debts we still owed from the year he tried raising tobacco. But he wouldn’t ever take help. ’The neighbors, they offered it: food and things; they knew we were having it hard, but he wouldn’t take anything.” Saturday night. Comer was out late and “talked wild when he came in.” His wife got up and (Continued on Page 8) Walter Davenport, Famed Journalist, Moves To Sandhills Movies To Film Steeplechase Buys Home In Pinebluff For Semi-Reliremeni Walter Davenport, one of the nation’s top journalists and as sociate editor-colunmist of Col lier’s Magazine until it ceased publication recently, has pur chased a home in Pinebluff where he and Mrs. Davenport will become “semi-retired.” The home, “Cedarcote,” was sold by Cad Benedict, executor of the estate of his mother, Mrs. Mary C. Benedict, who died last September. It was buUt about 40 years ago by Mrs. J. A. Cadwal- lader of Titusville, Pa., Mrs. Ben edict’s mother, and was used by her as a winter home until her death in 1936. The house has been occupied since as the per manent home of Mrs. Benedict. Mrs. Davenport, in ’The Pilot office this week, said that ‘TVIr. Davenport and the furniture” would arrive from Winstead, Conn., their former home, about March 25. “We expect then to make it our full-time home,” she added. Mr. Davenport, who conducted the wonderfuUy humorous “48 States of Mind” column in Col liers, got his start in the maga zine field in 1923 as a co-founder of Liberty Magazine. He has (Continued on page 8) Pilot Will Join News & Observer In Farm Contest The Pilot this week became a co-sponsor with the Raleigh News and Observer of that news paper’s Farm Income Contest, with -162 cash prizes totaling $6,900 to be spread over a 54- coimty area. The Pilot win provide an addi tional $50 in prizes to be awarded farmers who enter the oontest from Moore County. 'The contest, designed to encour age farmers to boost their in comes with new and improved methods of farming, has attracted widespread interest in the area it covers. The News and Observer initiated it when farmers were notified they would face a 20 per cent cut in tobacco acreage allot- mfents this year. The Pilot will follow the con test closely in this county with feature stories and items of news interest about farmers who have entered. . Entry blanks may be secxured from either the Coimty Agent’s office or direct from the Farm Editor of the News 2ind Observer in Raleigh. The 10th annual Stoneybrook Steeplechase, scheduled for the Stoneybrook Stable track March 23, wUl be shot in full color by a crew from Movietone-News, it has been learned here. The film wUI be distributed over the en tire country. According to Chris Wood, Jr., of the United Hunts Racing As sociation, which sanctions the local steeplechase, the scenes wUl culminate a color film dealing with steeplechase racing in this coimtry which has been two years in the making. Preceding the filming of the actual races, the crew wUl shoot scenes of the Moore County Hounds in the field and various phases of training activities at Walsh’s farm. IM Earlier portions of the film, which were made at Belmont Park in New York, show F. D. “Dooley” Adams of Souto- ern Pines win ning the Temple Gwathmey Steeplechase on Mrs. Ogden Phipps’ “Ancestor.” A highlight of the United Hunts at Belmont Park Meeting, the $50,000 added steeplechase was the final vic tory for Adams. Rated by experts as the coimtry’s top steeplechase rider, he retired to enter the Jockey Club’s school for racing officials and eventually serve in this division of thoroughbred racing. Burke Davis, Author And G)lumnist, To Address Historical Association Broilers And Layers Worth $8 Million Yearly To County Chickens are big business in Moore County. Though 1956 statistics are not available, the county had estima ted gross receipts of six to eight mUlion doUars from the poultry industry and ranked third in the state broiler and egg production. 'The gross receipts figures may, however, be misleading. Poultry operators—there are some 1,000 broiler producers in the coimty and an undetermined number of egg producers—were lucky last year if they broke even in a mar ket that fluctuated erratically or, as one producer put it, “not up and down, just down.” To understand the industry with its complex “vertical plan” arrangement, 50-50 tenant-land- owner plan and several others would require a great deal of hard study and months of field work. It is not so difficult, how ever, to understand that Moore County farmers who depend on poultry for a livelihood are afraid something is happening to the lush days during World War 2 when chicken prices were high and so were bank accounts. The industry got Its start in the county just as the war broke out. Some attribute the sudden QUALITY BIRDS is the yardstick of Dave Drexel, who 'operates WhitehaU Poultry Com pany in Southern Pines. Drexel has developed his flock, considered one of , the finest in the state, by using new methods and keeping up with the programs suggested by poultry specialr ists. He is one of the few operators who aUows his flock to go on the “range,” believing it makes for a better egg. growth to the extremely heavy demand that lay ahead; others say it was the climate; still oth ers lay the growth to the fact that Moore County is composed primarily of small farms and producing broilers and eggs does not take much land. They point out, for instance, that it takes two and one-quarter pounds of feed to put a pound of weight on a broiler as against four pounds of feed to put a pound on a hog. In one chicken house a farmer can keep as many as 10,000 broilers: it would take considerably more space than a (Continued on page 17) Burke Davis, authca: and news paperman, wiR be the speaker at the next meeting of the Moore Coimty Historical Association scheduled for eight o’clock Mon day' night, March 11. i The county group will meet in the Southern Pines Library, under the chairmanship of Sheriff Charles J. McDonald, president of the association. The visiting writer, who is from Greensboro, is the author of two outstanding biographies of South ern generals; Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee, the “Grey Fox” of the book of that title which was a best seUer for many months following publication more than a year ago. Davis is also known throughout the state for hife daily column, “Raleigh Notebook,” which ap pears in the Greensboro Daily News,’ for which he’ is ' a staff writer. Covering in trenchant style the doings and deliberations of the i>oliticians in, that capital city, Davis’s running-fire — also termed “sneak attack”—has, it is reported, caused many a legislator to beat a hasty retreat team Inde fensible positions. 'The writer and his ■wife, Evan geline, editor of the Daily News’ Sunday book column, Irve, with Weimar Jones To Address League Of Women Voters Weimar Jones, one of the state’s leading newspapermen, wUl speak on the need for reapportionment of seats in the legislature at the next meeting of the League of Women Voters, tomorrow (Fri day) night at the Civic Club. The time is 8:15. Jones, editor of the Franklin Press, has been in the news him self recently as author of a con troversial minority report to the study of reapportionment. The public is cordially invited to the meeting. I their daughter and son, on the edge of the Guilford battleground, on the far side of Greensboro. Their home is one of the oldest houses in the state and was stand ing at the time of the battle. .CONCERT The Univexsify of North Carolina String Quartet will offer a varied concert in Weaver Auditorium tonight, beginning at 8:30. This is the third in the series of concerts under the ^>ozisocship of the Sandhills Music Associatiem. Tickets ina'7 be purchased at the door for the peorform- Coimcil To Hear Guy Phillips On School Board Plan Coming Here Tuesday Nlghl For Meeting Guy B. Phillips, executi've sec retary of the State School Board Association,- wiU meet with the Southern Pines Town Council Tuesday night to furtheir discuss the various types of school boards cmrently in existence in North Carolina. Council, which has directed much of its attention recently to the method of selection for future school boards, is trying to put a proposed new charter into final shape in time to have it presented to the General Assembly. Unof ficially, they are working towards an April i deadline. Mr. Phillips has already con ferred with the Council through a lengthy letter, which was publish ed in full in last week’s Pilot, in which he outlined the various types of school boards eind their advantages and disadvantages: Council is trying to determine which type board — appointive, elective or a combination of both —would be most suitable for Southern Pines. At present the board is composed of five mem bers, appointed by the Council. The proposed charter would make the board an appointive one with seven members. Other items are on' the agenda for the meeting, which will be held in the library at 8 p.m., though the school board discus sion is expected to take up most of the time. Dame Flora MacLeod Plans Visit To Area; ToXunch With Governor Dame Flora MacLeod of Scot land, who has visited this area many times in the past, will be here again this -we^end as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. Talbot Johnson of Aberdeen. ^ ; Dame MacLeod wiU addre^ the MacLeod clan in Dillon Sat urday and will come here after wards. Nothing is on her sched ule for Sunday, but on Monday she, the Johnsons and BL Clifton Blue of Aberdeen will have din- nCT at the Governor’s mansion in Raleigh. She win also be presented to the General Assembly Monday. DAME FLORA MacLEOD Pilot Takes Trip To Find Out How ^^Welfare^" Helps Children Episcopal Laymen To Hold Statewide Meet Here In ’58 The 1958 con'vention of the Episcopal Lasmien’s Society will be held in Southern Pines, it was decided at the conclusion of the annual meeting in Charlotte this past weekend. The convention will attract about 300 laymen from aU over North Carolina. The invitation to hold the next convention here was extended by a delegation from Emmanuel Church Sunday and was unani mously accepted. This will be the first time that the diocesan-wide convention’has been held in the church here. Attending the meeting Sunday from Southern Pines were R. F, Hoke Pollock, Burton Q. Per- ham, Robert V. Lamb, Larry Lyerly and William Shore. By KATHARINE BOYD Said Dr. EUeh Winston, speak ing to a joint meeting of the Ki- wanis jmd Junior Women’s Clubs at the Mid Pines Club recently: “We of the North Carolina De partment of Public Welfare con- consider that oiir most important service is the work done for chil dren.” Afterwards you asked her; Why most important? ‘T couldn’t honestly say: be cause there are more of these cases,” she said, “and yet, if you studied the welfare case load you might come to that conclusion. The problems involving children come into many more cases than are listed under the classification of Aid To Dependent Children, or ADC, as it’s called.” The State Superintendent of Public Welfare thought a monientt 'TThe real reason,” she said, "why we consider the services for children the most important of any ren dered by our rtate and coun ty departments is because these are essentially services of prevention. If the children can be reached—if you can get hold of them, take them out of bad environments, build them up, help them to better lives, then half the battle is won—more than ha\f. Eventually all welfare problems would be drastical ly reduced.” “You might say such preven tive work for children is good economy, mightn’t you? A way to reduce welfare costs?” She smiled: “You might,” she said. “Of course, it’s true. And you might say a lot of other things, too. . . such as that it’s good fun—or just good, period,” What_ Is Local Picture? What is the Welfare Depart ment of Moore County doing about its services for children? It is doing a lot and wishing that it could do more. In fact there is a good deal of despera tion in the eagerness -with which the department is looking for ward to the return of a former field worker, Mrs. Ola King from her year’s training as chii,^ welfare worker, to resume her position in the comity depart ment in this new capacity. Then, it is believed, the local depart ment 'will be able to give the pre ventive help that can be so ef fective, as well as carry on more ably all the services for childrem The range of services is wide: from ADC, in which, through federal-state-county grants home care is assured in case of the death, absence or incapacity of a parent; foster care when the children must be removed from undesirable en-vironments, and all the work entailed in cooperation with the county Department of Public Health in referrals for mental and physical tests, crip pled children work and so on. You decide it’s about time to take a look-see, and call up Mrs. Walter B. Cole, the superinten dent of the Moore County Public •Welfare Department in Carthage. (Continued on page 18) /•)l ' q