VOL. 3a—NO. 1 SIXTEEN PAGES • SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1957 SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE 10 CENTS a GOLF CAROUSEL winner^ were presented their prizes at the conclusion of the champion ship roimds Sunday at Pine Needles Country Club^ Town Manager Louis Scheipers, Jr., in center, presents the champions’ trophies to Ben Goodes of Reidsville and Bill McIntyre of Maxton, while runners-up Hubert Scarborough and Grover Dillon, both of Raleigh, look on. Story on Page 7. (Humphrey photo)) LACKING IN EXPERIENCE Blue Knights To Open Cage Season Against Rockingham Tuesday Night With only one player assured ot a starting berth on the boys’ team and three on the girls’ team, the Southern Pines Blue Knights open their 1957-58 court schedule next Tuesday night against Rockingham, stiff AA ■ competition. Everett Cushman, a guard and the only returning letterman on the boys’ squad, nmners-up in the county last season, has nailed down a starting spot. Robert Woodruff or Jimmy Carter will start at the other guard position. Coach W. A. Leonard said, but whichever starts, the other will see plenty of action. Four candidates have been Gymkhana And Pet Show At Carolina Ring This Sunday Seven events have been plan ned for the annu2Q Pet Show and Gymkhana at the Carolina Ring in Pinehurst this Sunday. In the pet show, which is open to anyone in the area, three dif ferent categories will be judged and first, second and third prizes v/ill be awarded in each cate gory. The three are best of show, funniest, and most unusual. In the gymkhana the events will include beginner’s horse manship, intermediate horseman ship, musical stalls, advanced horsemanship (classes A and B) and an egg and spoon race. The events will begin prompt ly at 1:30. battling it out for the forward positions: Bill Seymour, Bobby Watkins, Jimmy Caldwell and Wayne Davenport. Leonard said he would probably play them all to see how they stand up un der competition, along with a number of prospects for center. Jesse Williford has the edge in that department. For the girls, who finished fourth in county competition last season, Leonard has selected Patty Britt, Louise McDonald and Nancy Traylor, all returning seniors, for the starting forward assignments. Three more girls have been doing well in practice, however, and will be used freely in substitutions. They are Diane Taft, Karen McKenzie and Mary Ann Cox. For guards, Leonard will call on Joan Parker, Delores Ma- ready, Janice Holliday, Cather ine Harris and Diane Tolar. Leonard said that plans for the Knights’ first home game of the year, . against Robbins Friday night of next week, are rolling along smoothly. A “tip-off” din ner will be served in the school cafeteria from 5:30 to 7 and fans will have an opportunity to meet the players. Tickets for the af fair are being sold by the play ers and at Tate’s Hardware store. Elsewhere in the county action has already started in some of the schools. Defending cham pions are Carthage’s girls and Aberdesfn’s boys. The season runs to the middle of February, with the Moore County tourna ment scheduled for Carthage Feb ruary 13-22. UNION SERVICES Union Thanksgiving ser vices wUl be held al the Southern Pines Methodist Church tonight (Wednesday) at 8 o'clock. The Rev. Maynard Man- gum. pastor of the Tirsi Baptist Church, wiU preach the sermon with other minis isters taking part in a spe- cially prepared program. The public is invited to par ticipate. Tom'Orrow, most business establishments will be closed for the Thanksgiving holiday. Included are the bank and tbe post office, though mail will be placed in boxes as usual. Clarkton Defeats Aberdeen, 18-13, For 6-Man Title The Aberdeen Red Devils came within two minutes of keeping a perfect season intact last Friday night as they met Clarkton for the State six-man football title. A fumble on the Aberdeen 13 and recovery by Clarkton led to the 18-13 score and dashed all hopes of Aber- aec-n repeating as the State cbampion. Aberdeen took a 6-0 lead in the first quarter and held a 13- 12 lead going into the fourth period. Both teams had scored in the third and Clarkton had tied it at 6-all in the second period. Halfback Ken Sands, 215 pounds, was the star of the con test as he passed for one touch down and scored two for Clark ton. Forum Series Will Open With Lecture On Arctic Project Operation Part Of International Geophysical Year The Pinehurst Forum’s 1957- 58 series of meetings gets under way next Thursday evening when Commander Paul W. Fra zier of the United States Navy will appear before the group as guest speaker at the Pinehurst Country Chib. Time for the sea son’s opener is 8:30 p. m. Commander Frazier will tell of the Navy’s role in the Interna tional Geophysical Year’s Antarc tic program. Preceding the initial Forum meeting wiU be the Country Club’s first weekly buffet supper which wUl be served in the club dining room at 7 o’clock. As al ways, advance reservations will be required. Commander Frazier, bom in Fulton, Missouri, attended Went worth Military Academy in Lex ington, Missouri and the Univer sity of Missouri at Columbia. He entered Naval service in October 1940 and, after graduating from the U. S. Naval Reserve Midship men’s School at Northwestern University, was commisisoned en sign in the Naval Reserve. Through subsequent promotions and his transfer to the regular Navy, he attained the rank of Commander. Following his commissioning at Northwestern, Frazier held posts as communications officer, gun nery officer and executive officer aboard several ships during World War 2 operations and saw much combat action. Later, he served in Korea and was decorated. He was named in spector of ordnance for the Sub- Board of Inspection and Survey, New York. After a year in that assignment, he reported to the Coronado Amphibious Base in California as officer in charge of the Cold Weather School. De tached in February 1953, he later as.sumed command for a two- year perior of the destroyer, the USS Shelton. In March 1955 he was assigned to Task Force 43 (Continued on Page 8) Hunt Season Opens Tomorrow The formal opening of the seas on for the Moore County Hounds wUl be staged tomorrow (Thurs day) morning when the tradi tional Thanksgiving Hunt moves off from Mile-A way Farm at 10 o’clock. The hunt, which will be led by W. O. Moss, MFH, is expected to attract a large field of “hiUtop- pers” following the action in their cars. Route of the pack, according to Mrs. W. O. Moss, first whip and secretary, is about the same as has been followed in recent years. The hunters will cast down the dump pasture, go toward Keat ing’s head, back to Mile-Away poplar pasture, then out to Rocky Head. They will come back through the Atkins property and plan to make the kill in front of Paddock, Junior, and Mile-Away pasture. MFH Moss reports the hounds are in excellent condition for the hunt and said he expects the weather to hold up for one of the best opening day events in the long and colorful histoiy of the “Hounds.” 553 PRE-REGISTERED Sandlin Named New Boy Scout Leader In County; Annual Dinner December 5 Local Chairmen Of TB Seal Sales Are Named By Spencer String Quartet Concert Set Tuesday Beethoven and Haydn quartets are included on the program to be played Tuesday evening of next week, December 3, by the University of Alabama String Quartet at Weaver Auditorium. The concert, second in the series sponsored by the Sandhills Music Association, will begin at 8:30 p. m. Composed of members of the music faculty at the University of Alabama, the quartet is rank ed as one of the nation’s fore most chamber music groups and ha§ played for audiences in 15 states. The members are Emil Raab, first violin; Roland John son, second violin; Henry Bar rett, viola; and Margaret Christy cello. The program on Tuesday will open with Haydn’s Quartet in G major. Op. 76, No. 1, the 'first in a group of six quartets written in the period 1797-1798 and re vealing the maturity of style and direct personal expression char acteristic of Haydn’s chamber music. This will.be followed by four shorter selections—“Londonder ry Air,” arranged by Frank Bridge; “The Mill” by Raff, Bor- Odin’s “Nocturne” and pieces from “Mikrokosmos” by Bartok. Following tHe intermission and concluding the concert, the group will play Beethoven’s Quartet in F major, Op. 135—the last of THE ALABAMA STRING QUARTET I Beethoven’s 16 string quartets, characterized by its compact forms and freedom from non-es sential musical materials. Tickets can be obtained from the Bamum Realty and Insur ance Co. on Broad Street, South ern Pines. Local chairmen for the Christ mas Seal Sale of the Moore County Tuberculosis Association were, announced this week by Peter T. Spencer of Southern Pines who is heading the county- wide sale. Seals are going out in most communities of the county around December 1, Mr. Spencer said, urging that persons who re ceive them send in their contri butions promptly before the I “Christmas rush” begins. The local chairmen are: Aberdeen, Mrs Aubrey John son; Cameron, Mrs. Jack Phil lips; Carthage, Mrs. W. G. Brown; Clayroad Farms, Mrs. W. H. Matthews; Eagle Springs, Miss Ellen Maurice; Eureka, Mrs. ^ • /-.i u Hugh McLeod; Glendon, Mrs. Beamon Poe; HighfaUs, Mrs. Lil lian P. Davis; Jackson Springs, Mrs. W. H. Dickerson. Also: Lakeview, Mrs. Kate Mc- Innis; Manly, Mrs. G. L. Culler; Niagara, Miss Shirley Garner; Parkwood, Mrs. Kenney Poe; Pinebluff, Mrs. Timothy Claary; Pinehurst, Wallace W. O’Neal; Southern Pines, Robert F. Dunn; Vass, Mrp. A. G. Edwards, Jr.; V/est End, Miss Lucile Eifort; Westmoore School, J. C. Philliiis. S. E. Cureton, principal of Academy Heights School near Pinehurst heads the Negro Divi sion of the seal ssQe this year and will name his own neighborhood and community chairmen throughout the county. No chairman has been named for Robbins, as this community has a' United Fund organization. Funds from the seal sale fi nance a program of health edu cation, free x-ray examinations and patient rehabilitation in Moore County. A small portion of the funds go to the state and national tuberculosis associations to help pay for medical research.. More than 550 people have registered for the annual Boy Scout recognition dinner next Thursday, December 5, according to Scout officials. The dinner, which was origi nally planned for the Southern Pines High School cafeteria, will be held at the new National Guard Armory at 6:30. The un- usuaUy large pre-registration caused officials to change the lo cation. The dinner wiU be “pot-luck”, with special organ music and other entertainment. D. A. Blue, Jr., chairman of arrangements, said the armory would accommo date the crowd easily. Joseph Sandlin of Southern Pines, controller of Amerotron Corporation, v/ill be installed as over-all' Moore district Chairman, replacing Dr. J. C. Grier, Jr., of Pinehurst, who will become Dis trict Commissioner. Election ofj Sandlin and other officers for, 1958 was held at a district meet ing last 'Thursday night. Other officers, all of whom win be installed at the dinner meeting, are Dr. C. C. McLean, Fred Chappell, and B. E. Dotson, vice-chairmen, and Cecil Beith, J. D. Ives and Paul Ward, assist ant district commissioners. Chair men of nine operating commit tees will also be installed. They are J. Vance Rowe, Jr., Southern Pines; J. Douglas David, Pine- bluff; Henry Hight, Carthage; David Drexel, Southern Pines, J. B. Perkinson, Southern Pines, E. O. Brogden, Southern Pines, Dr. W. E. Alexander, Robbins; W. M. Clark, Southern Pines; and Jack Morgan, Vass. W. D. Campbell of Southern Pines and New York City, inter national representative of the Boy Scout program in this coun try, will be the featured speaker. Also appearing on the program will be W. A. Dodson of Atlanta, regional scout executive. Blue said today that anyone wishing to attend the dinner con tact him immediately ■ so that plans can be made to accommo date them Sandlin, the chairman, is a graduate of William and Mary College in Virginia. He is sec retary and teaches a class at the Church of Wide Fellowship and member of the Sandhills Ki- JOSEPH SANDLIN Annual Banquet Of Chamber To Be At Hollywood Dec. 10 Speaker Has Not Been Selected; Tickets On Sale The annual Chamber of Com merce banquet and meeting will be held December 10 at the Hol lywood Hotel, it was announced today by Joseph Scott, chairman. No speaker has been selected as yet, Scott said, but several outstanding people are under consideration. Tickets for the event, which will cost $3.50 each, are in charge of Mrs, Joe Steed, who is being as sisted in the sales by Mrs. George Thompson. Mrs. Karl Bridges will handle decorations for the event. The Chamber also announced this week that Christmas deco rations will be put up Monday under the chairmanship of Miss Kitty Wiley. Featured this year will be wreaths of green, utilizing the old lights. Other new material will be purchased and installed along the main , business thoroughfares and, tentatively, on^ the approaches to town from the new parkway. Assisting Miss Wiley are Mr. and Mrs. Karl Bridges, Mr. and Mrs. George McCormac and Al ton Clark. DR. vJ. C. GRIER W. D, CAMPBELL Special Term of Criminal Court In Carthage Winds Up Most Of Docket Completion of four long and complicated trials late last week marked the end of a two week term of criminal court in Moore County and, according to one court attendant, the calendar is in “excellent condition” for fu ture terms. Two Jackson Hamlet men— one of whom, a witness revealed, had threatened the lives of him self and other witnesses should they testify for the State—re ceived heavy sentences for the bru^ beating of a white farmer, Hubert Mxcfaael, who lives be- final week, reduced his sentence from 12 to eight months on the roads. Both had been found guilty of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. Wright, how ever, had been charged only with assault with a deadly weapon, a misdemeanor, and was sentenced accordingly. The beating described on the witness stand took place last De cember 7 at Jackson Hamlet and. testimony indicated, caused Michael to be hospitalized for 1 several weeks. Michael testified tween Aberdeen and Pinehurst j the assault was “unprovoked” Fletcher Freeman, sentenced to j and he had been going about his five years in State prison, gave business when the two beat him immediate notice of appeal up. through his attorney. William Wright, the other defendant, changed bis mind about an ap peal and Judge W. H. S. 3ur- gwyn, who presided during the The weapons used, according to Robert Michael, 12-year old son of Hubert, were pop bottles and a knife. The lad also said (Continued on Page I) Patrolman Killer Will Be Tried In Rockingham Court A temporory delay has cropped up in the return of Frank Edward Wetzel to North Carolina where he will be tried, probably in Rockingham, for the slaying of two State Highway patrolmen. State officials said in Raleigh they were at a loss to explain the snag, which developed when Fed eral authorities in Los Angeles said a removal hearing for Wetzel would have to wait on settlement of extradition. A removal hearing for Wetzel, a 36-year old escapee from a New fork state mental institution, had been scheduled for yester day in Los Angeles. It was call ed off when a Federal spokesman said extradition between North Carolina and California would have to be settled first. Until then, the spokesman said, Wetzel will remain in the Los Angeles County jail. He has been charged with the November 5 slayings of Highway Patrolmen Wister Lee Reece and J. T. Brown. Both officers were shot down after they had stop ped a speeding car. The shootings occurred about 60 miles apart within an hour’s time. He was captured last week in Bakers- ville, California, after a nation wide manhunt was conducted by state, local and federal law agen cies. He is expected to be tried in Richmond (bounty Superior Court next January for the murder of Reece, which occurred near El- lerbe. Solicitor M. G. Boyette of Carthage, who wiU prosecute the case, has said that no definite time has been set for the trial but the next term of criminal court in Rockingham is January 6. A factor in the decision to try Wetzel first for the Reece slay ing was the fact that Robert Terry of Norman was a witness to that (Continued on Page 8} 1' i. FRAmC WETZEL iMMl mmmm