■i Fooling with Fate Are those who are fooling with the moon . . . perhaps. An enter-, taining number of reasons why are contained on the editorial page (page 2) today. Time and Weather Are the big enemies in the frozen Antarctic. What the men there do during the long winter night is told in another of a series on page 8. VOL, Episcopal Laymen ^Holding Statewide Meet Here Sunday Not^ Publisher Is Main Speaker; 100 Are Expected The 24th annual convention of the Laymen’s Association of the Diocese of North Carolina will be held Simday at Emmanuel Epis copal church, Southern Pines. A highlight of the session will be an address by William R. McCul- ley of Rye, N. Y., president of the publishing firm of Thomas Nelson and Sons and an outstand ing layman of the Diocese of New York. This is the first state- l|. wide Episcopal Laymen’s meet- ^ing ever held here. ■ Registration will open at 9:30 a. m. and a continental breakfast will be served for early regis trants. Corporate communion services will be held at 11 a. m., with the Rt. Rev. Richard H. Baker of Raleigh, Bishop (ikiadjutor of the Diocese, as celebrant, assisted by ^the Rev. Meirtin Caldwell, rector of the host church. Following the celebration of Holy Communion, there will be an address of welcome by Gener al Lehmann W. Miller, president of the Men of Emmanuel Church. Diocesan officers will present their reports. Luncheon at the parish house at 1 p. m. wUl be followed by a t; business session featuring the address by Mr. McCulley, pre sentation of committee reports and election of ^officers. Presi ding wiU be Herbert G. Bailey, Jr., of Greensboro, Association president. William R. McCulley, presi dent of the ’Thomas Nelson and Sons publishing firm' since 1950, supervised the publication of the PRICE 10 CENTS COMMUNITY CHAIRMEN for the annual Easter Seal Sale Drive have been appointed d|id will begin conducting their drives next week. Pictured above, the chairmen are, top row, left to right, Mrs. Roy Williams, Eagle Springs; Mrs. Dorothy Dutton, Niagara; Mrs. Alton Matthews, Lake view; Mrs. Larry Simmons, Aberdeen; Mrs. A. G. Edwards, Jr., Vass, and Mrs. Wilbur Cur rie, Carthage. Bottom row, same order, Mrs. J. D. Mangum, Pinebluff; Mrs. K. C. Blake, Jack- son Springs; C. E. Powers, HighfaUs; William Johnson, Southern Pines; and Melvin Wicker, Pinehurst. PINEHURST WOMAN IS CHAIRMAN ^Revised Standard Version of the '^Holy Bible, called the most im portant Biblical milestone in three and a half centuries. He al so headed up a program of sev eral advertising agencies by which this great work became and has remained, for five con secutive years, the world’s fastest selling book. During preparation of the work l^by 36 outstanding scholars, he '‘learned several ancient languages in order to be sure that the new translation into modem terms re mained true to the spirit of the old. He was also greatly responsible for the publication of the Con cordance to the Revised Standard Version immediately following the publication of the Bible it- ^self, and more recently of the Re 'vised Standard Version of the Apocrypha, all of these books be ing considered not only outstand ing events in the publishing world, but most important in the spread of Christianity and of Bib lical knowledge throughout the world. The regular morning service for parishioners will be held at 9:30, Mr. Caldwell said, and '^Bishop Baker will conduct a ser vice of confirmation at that time. Community Leaders For Easter Seal Drive To Begin Campaign Thursday The 1958 Easter Seal Sale be-t gins in this county next Thurs day, according to Mrs. EYank R. Gramelsbach of Pinehurst, chair man of the Moore County chap ter of the National Society for Crippled Children, which bene fits from; the drive. Community .chairmen were named by Mrs. Gramelsbach and will begin conducting their drives within the next few days. Serv ing in those capacities are: Southern Pines, William S. Johnson; Pinehurst, Melvin picker; Aberdeen, the Junior Women’s Club, Mrs. Larry Sim mons, president; Carthage, Mrs. Wilbur Currie; Vass, Mrs. A. G. Edwards, Jr., Jackson Springs, Mrs. K. C. Blake; Cameron, Miss Vera McLean; Eagle Springs and Samarcand, Mrs. Roy. Williams; Niagara, Mrs. Dorothy Dutton; HighfaUs, C. E. Powers; Lake- view, Mrs. Alton Matthews; and Pinebluff, Mrs. J. D. Mangum'. Serving with Mrs. Gramelsbach in the county chapter are Mrs. Graham Culbreth of Southern Pines, treasurer; Mrs. Baird, Aberdeen, secretary; David Drexel, Southern Pines, publicity director; and Dr. Emily Tufts, Pinehurst, medical advis or. •Special advisors are Roger Gibbs, Mrs. Bertha Allen and Miss Mary Logan, Southern Pines. The service committee is composed of Mrs. Gramelsbach, Mrs. Culbreth, Dr. Tufts, Mrs. Wilbur Currie of Carthage, and Mrs. W. E. Alexander of Robbins. T eachers-Parents To Play Annual Game Monday The annual parents and teach ers basketball game at Southern Pines High School wiU be held Monday night in the school gym nasium at 7:30. Proceeds wiU be used for the junior-senior banquet later this year. More than 50 players have been signed up for the colorful game, according to Miss Billie Williams of the school faculty. Entertain ment will be furnished by the band and the majorettes with spe cial numbers. Those who have been signed to date include: Parents (men) Harry Chat- field, Norris Hodgkins, Jr., Lewis McNeil, Davis Worsham, Joel Stutts, Jack Deberry, Bob A5ams, William Wilson, Jack Barron, Robert Dunn, Jimmy Hobbs, Fred Teeter and Gary Henry. Parents (women)—Mrs. May- belle Britt, Mrs. Lennox Forsyth, Mrs. Bob Adams, Mrs. George Florence ^ohle, Mrs. Voit Gilmore, Mrs. Robert McMillan, Mrs. Jimmy Hobbs, Mrs. Ray McDonald, Mrs. C. T. Worth, Mrs. Joseph Hiatt, Mrs. Isaac Woodell, Mrs. Ray mond Cameron, Mrs. M. G. Mc Rae, Mrs. Davis Worsham, Mrs. Norris Hodgkins, Jr., Mrs. Etta Cain, MrS. Joe Woodall, and Mrs. Jean Lowestuter. Faculty (men)—^Roger Gibbs, Don Moore, Ralph Foushee, Irie Leonard, W. A. Leonard, A. C. Dawson, George Short, Hugh Bowman, Ernie Boros and Dave (Continued on Page 8) 'HOLDING HIS OWN' superior Court Judge W. A. Leland McKeilhen of Pinehurst, who has been crit ically ill at Duke Hospital for the past several days, was reported at press time today "to still be holding his own." He underwent an opera tion for a kidney ailment Monday of last week at Moore Memorial Hospital and complications set in Mon after. He was removed to Duke Hospital over the weekend where his condi tion was reported to be somewhat better. Blue Knights To Meet Aberdeen And Sanford This Year GARDEN TOUR "Will there be a garden tour this spring?" That is a question which has been going the rounds, and the answer, announced this week, is "Yes." The Southern Pines Gar den Club, which sponsors this popular springtime event, has decided to hold it this year, as usual, and an nounces Wednesday after Easter, April 9, as the date. Houses and gardens in both Southern Pines and Pinehurst will be shown. Working with the presi dent, Mrs. L. T. Avery, as a Homes and Gardens Tour Committee are Mrs. Ben F. Kraffert. Jr., as chairman, Mrs. John C. Ostrom, Mrs. R. E. Rhodes, Mrs. James S. Milliken, Mrs. Marion Braw- ley, and Mrs. R. M. McMU- lan. Homes to be included on the tour will be announced soon. Stoneybrook Event This Year Will Benefit Hospitals The 11th annual Stoneybrook Steeplechase, scheduled for March 22, will be run this year for the benefit of the ladies auxiliaries of Moore Memorial and St. Joseph’s Hospitals, according to Carlyle Campbell, secretary of the Stoney brook Steeplechase Association. This is the first time that such an arrangement has been made, he pointed out. ^' To date a good many owners have indicated they would enter horses and- (he field is growing rapidly. Last year’s top entry. Dancing Beacon, winner of the Sandhills Cup two years running, will not be entered however, Campbell said. Bad weather conditions recent ly have prevented many horses in the North from securing adequate training and it is doubtful if the number of entries from that area will be as large as in the past. One encouraging note, however, is that even the worst of the weath er experienced here failed to stop training sessions and the local field is expected to be larger than in past seasons. The Blue Knights will play a 10-game schedule in the Cape Fear Class A Conference next fall, it was announced this week by Irie Leonard, head coach. Opening game is September 5 against Hope Mills on the local field. There are no open dates on the schedule, which is divided equally between home and away games. Leonard said that two teams had been added this year: Aber deen, newest member of the Cape Fear Conference and natural rival for Southern Pines" and Sanford, a Class AA school The Knights will meet each of the other six teams in the cc ference. One change noted this year is that Chadbourn, Elizabethtown and Shallotte, members of the conference last year, had drop ped out. The schools said that the great distances that were involv ed in meeting conference oppon ents was the reason^ It is expect ed that they will band into an other conference, composed most ly of Eastern North Carolina Class A schools, either this sum mer or next year. Addition of Sanford to the Blue Knight schedule i^ the cul- Mobre County farm income of several months’ hard was up an estimated $1,856,000 in f’y Leonard. “Sanford and Despite Weather, Weed Cuts, Gross Farm Income Is Up Aberdeen will, of course, be our big games,” he said, “and I ex- 1957 over the previous year, ac cording to Fleet Allen, county ^ farm agent. The estimated gross that Sanford will develop income last year, he said, was' ^ crowd puller. They’re $16,730,000. much larger school and will The increase was encouraging, ■ Probably field one of their better farm leaders reported, because of year.” a $1,378,000 reduction in the cash! (Continued on page 8) income from sale of tobacco. Commenting on the reason for the reduction, Allen said that a vari ety of reasons had entered the pianist, will present a varied picture, including a poop season; concert tonight at the Pinehurst forum artist Fred Sahlmann, talented young Country^ Club as the sixth in the Pinehurst Forum’s current series. The program begins at 8:45 and the club’s weatherwise, and a cut in allot ments of 1,576 acres. “The peach crop was better than in 1956, however,” he said, | will be preceded by “and the production of broilers weekly buffet supper, and laying hens was up consider- ably.” Also added to the gross income of farmers for this year was pay- The first half of the program will include “Fantasia in D Minor” by Mozart, and Chopin’s "“Sonata in B Flat Minor.” Fol- ments through the Soil Bank and] lowing intermission Sahlmann the ACP of $165,187 more than! will play “Gaspard De La Nuit” the previous year. The amount,:by Ravel, Debussy’s “Clair De Allen noted, if added to the to- Lune,” and “The Night Winds” tal farm sales would give an in- by Griffes, concluding with Con- creased gross income of $2,021,- cert Arabesques on Themes of 340 in 1957 over 195f “By the Beautiful Blue Danube ” Two Party System Needed In State, GOP Leader Says Flays Democrats For Telling "Big Lie" To PubUc Good government in North Car olina is not possible without an active two-party system, Moore County Republicans were told here at a Lincoln Day . dinner Tuesday night. William E. Cobb, minority lead er in the State Senate in the past session, told about 150 assembled party faithfuls that “one party states produce only sorry govern ment. We have no axe to grind except good government.” And with that he urged a full slate for every county and state office at every election. Cobb, wanted by many Republi cans as their next State leader, said that recent boasts by Demo crats that North C2uoliHa is a well-run state is a “big lie.” He criticized Democrats for falling down on reapportioqment plans, for putting out Democratic publi city with State funds, and for putting out false publicity that North Carolina has a “fine system of public education.” Along that line, Cobb said, 43 per cent of the State’s population has less than five years of school ing, “giving us the lead in the na tion in illiteracy.” He also said the State had the highest rate of any Southeastern state in high way casualties despite claims to the contrary. The speaker, warming to his task, also sailed into tobacco com panies, which, he said, were heavy contributors to the Democratic campaign funds, and to health and welfare agencies, which he said provided less than half the aid to North Carolina families as the na tional average. Robert S. Ewing, county Re publican leader, also spoke at the dinner and said the GOP was ‘morally right on every issue.” He said of the Little Rock school integration case: “The blame rests on the Supreme Court which is Democrat packed. What would Adlai Stevenson have done? I’ll tell you. He’d have sent troops in there two to three weeks before President Eisenhow er did.” He also criticized the procedure of selecting a County Schopl Board, telling the group that they had been “disenfranchised.” Both parties file names for the Board, he said; the slates go to the Legislature, listing the party affiliation of those named, and the Legislature appoints the Board. Such a system always assures a Democratic Board, he pointed out, whether the people in the county wanted such a group or not. Also appearing on the program was Mrs. Katherine McColl of Southern Pines, a candidate for the state GOP vice chairmanship, and Donald Kennedy of Southern Pines, who served as master of ceremonies. The meeting was held in the National Guard Armory here. New Goiincilman Mi^ht Be Appointed Tonij^ht Council To Meet, ONLY 2 REGISTER If new regisiralion is any indication, the upcoming $100,000 bond election for funds to complete the new Town H^lll has little interest. Last Saturday, the first day for new registrants to get their names on the qual ified list, Mrs. Grace Kaylor. the registrar, reported only two new , names had been added. Registration is over tomor row (Friday) at 5 p. m., she reminded the public, and anyone not properly register ed by that time will not be allowed to vote in the elec tion March. 15. Challenge day, incidental ly, is Saturday. E. Carolina Grad Is Administrative Assistant For Town J. R. “Tink” Bowen, a recent graduate of East Carolina College, has been appointed tax collector, purchasing agent and finance of ficer of the Town of Southern Pines, it was announced today by Louis Scheipers, Jr., town man ager. Bowen is assuming duties that were formerly held by Gary Head, who resigned earlier this month to accept a position as town manager of Carolina Beach. Bowen is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bowen of Robbins. He attended high schools in Southern Pines, Robbins and Asheboro, and graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in business ad ministration from East Carolina College this winter. He has already assumed his du ties here and Scheipers said he was happy to have him on his staff. “Mr. Bowen is well known here,” he said, “and has all the necessary qualifications to more than adequately conduct the du-1 ties he has been assigned to.” Name Successor To Gen. Menoher Mayor Walter Blue has called a special meeting of the Town Council tonight (Thursday) to ap point a new member of the Coun cil to fill the unexpired term of the late Gen. Pearson Menoher. At the same time, the Council will elect a Mayor Pro-tem, an of fice Gen. Menoher filled at the time of his death. There has been little specula tion as to who would be selected for the office though several names have been discussed in pri vate conversations and among Councilmen themselves. Whoever gets the appointment will serve until a new Council is elected in the Spring of next year. ' This is the second “time during its administration the present Council has had to appoint a new member to its ranks. Last "fall T. T. Morse, the only Negro ever to serve on the Town governing body, resigned and Robert S. Ewing, who had been an unsuc cessful candidate in the elections which put the present Council in office, was appointed. The meeting tonight will be held in the town office beginning at 7 o’clock. No other items of ' major concern are expected to be brought to the Council’s attention. PTA Planning Variety Show For March 10 A large number of el^entary and high school students are pre paring to take part in a variety show to be sponsored by the East Southern Pines Parent- Teacher Association Monday night, March 10. The show will be given in Weaver Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. R. L. Chandler, Jr., PTA program chairman, said this week that one of the most interesting events on the evening’s program will be a fashion show in which high school students will take part, featuring clothes of 25 or more years ago. She asked any one having such clothes which could be loaned for the show to notify Mrs. W. T. Huntley, Jr. Mrs. Huntley heads the plan ning for the entire show. Mrs. Charles Cole of the school facul ty is in charge of participation by the elementary grades. Don Moore is working with the junior high school poup and Miss Haz el Askew is in charge of the hi^h school’s part in the production. (Continued on Page 8) PLANTS PURLOINED Of all things! Someone has been stectling plants destined for the beauti fication of the new US 1 Parkway and officials are pretty sore about it. The ones that have been reported missing were taken ' from their temporary rest ing place; it weis only be- 'cause of the weather that they had not been planted. In case the culprit..—or cul prits—-read this, they are re minded that ofiiicers have been instructed to keep a sharp lookout in the future. Golf Team Being Organized At High School For Spring Formation of a, golf team in the Southern Pines High School —the first such team in a decade or more—has been completed and details of a spring schedule are currently being worked out. To be coached by Don Moore, a member of the school’s faculty, the team will be composed of at least six boys and probably more. Already six schools have indica ted an interest and at least one, Badin, has confirmed a match. It is expected that a schedule of 10 to 15 games will be arrang ed. Teams contacted include Ra leigh, Durham, Goldsboro, San ford, Fayetteville, and others. Mainstay on the team will probably be George Reams, a senior who usually sho.ots 75 or under. He was entered in tour naments in ’ Greensboro and Charlotte this past summer and 'acquitted himself well. He was also a mem,ber of the team that won the championship .consola tion prize in the annual Jaycee sponsored Golf Carousel here. Others expected out are Jack Carter and Jerry Healy, seniors, Charley Rose, freshman, and two brothers, Glenn and John Mar cum, who moved here from Ken tucky several weeks ago. WEEKLY REPORT County^s Political Line-Up Remains Virtually Unchanged "ins and Political “outs” lay low this week, ap parently waiting for the other to make the first jump in filing for the primary elections in May. Only one man, an “in,” has said since last Thursday that he would definitely seek office and he hasn’t officially filed yet. He’s Carleton Kennedy, who has held the Clerk of Court’s job for six years and, according to some as tute observers, has a good ch4nce of holding it for six more if he wants it. We had an announcement from Mrs. Audrey McCaskill ]a,st week, too late for publication, an nouncing her intentions of run ning for the Register of Deeds office, assuring a race for the position now held by Mrs. Bessie Griffin. The other already an nounced candidate is Fred Flin- chum, Carthage merchant and prominent in the town’s affairs. Mrs. McCaskill, wife of Clin ton McCaskill, is already in the Register’s office serving as a dep uty, a fact that probably gives her a slight edge on Flinchum. political _ Also to her advantage is the fact ’that Miss Bess McCaskill, who served in the office for close to 30 years, is her sister-in-law. Assurance of a race for the Register’s office might make the campaign and subsequent elec tion a little more exciting to those who enjoy that type of thing. 'Two other offices are al most sure to be fought over: the sheriff’s job and representation on the Board of County Commis sioners. No new candidates have an nounced for sheriff but talk has it that Herman Grimm and A. F. Dees will be the men to beat. CJrimm has been looking the field over end his friends report he has found much favorable re action to his candidacy, particu larly in the southern end of the county. But Dees, now serving as chief deputy and rated high in popularity in this area, would be difficult to 'defeat, those same people say, if he decides defin itely to make the race. For the County Commissioner’s (Continued on page 8) civic