Give To the Annual Easter Seal Drive Now Under Way “’UiqfiFaHk RoHriN^ /tOI^ndon March Is Red Cross Month Increase Your Contribution SOUTHERN PINES, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1958 ^ EIGHT TEAMS TO ENTER m State Class A Basketball Tourney To Get Under Way Here Wednesday North Carol’na’s top eight class ipions and make the pairings. “A” high school basketball teams) Four of the teams will begin battling for the state cham- pionsliip in the Southern Pines high school gymnasium next Wednesday night. Finals in the tournament, first ever to be held here, are scheduled for Saturday night, March 15. Irie Leonard, principal of the high school and tournament man ager, said today that the seating capacity of the gymnasium, nor mally about 975, will be increased to 1200 for the fovu’-day event, ex pected to draw capacity crowds each night. The entries,* which will repre sent every section of the state, will not ^ known until pairings are made in Chapel Hill Sunday. District tournaments, now under way in eight towns around the state, will conclude Saturday night and officials of the North Carolina High School Athletic As sociation will meet in Chapel Hill Sunday to declare district cham- Antique Show Is Planned By Moore Historical Society An “Antique Show” will be presented March 18, 19 and 20 at the Southern Pines Armory as Jjt one of the most ambitious projects ever conducted by the Moore County Historical association. It wiU provide a richly varied treat for antique lovers, as well as opportunity for leading antique dealers of the area to show and sell their wares. The Armory will be divided in to separate display spaces, one for each dealer. About half the spaces have already been taken, ^ by some of the most prominent ^ dealers of North and South Caro lina, and it is anticipated that others from Virginia and even farther away will take part. They are expected to display some of their most unusual and attractive pieces, forming a show of rare interest for all lovers of the beau tiful. Admission tickets wiU be sold to the general public, the proceeds' to be used for projects of the association. The show will be open from 4 to 9 p.m., Tuesday, March 18, the opening day, and from 10 a.m. i to 9 p.m. March I9 and 20. Re freshments will be sold. Mrs. L. M. Johnson of Aber deen and Mrs. W. F. Hollister of Southern Pines are co-chairmen of the committee in charge, assist ed by Mrs. Tom C. Darst, Mrs. Ernest JL. Ives and Miss Allie Mc- Intosh oi Southern Pines, and Mrs. Livingston Biddle of Pine- hurst. come from the Eastern part of the state; four from the Western. Aber deen, champion in this county, and runner-up Robbins are cur rently playing in the district tour nament in Red Springs with win ners from 12 other southeastern counties. ' Mebane High School is defend ing state champion and has a good chance to repeat, Leonard said. The small school, rated as having one of the best teams in the state, is playing in the district playoffs at Greensboro this week. The Southern Pines Chamber of Commerce has volunteered as sistance in sponsorship of the tournament here, Leonard said, and has been assigned the task of helping with housing, eating fa cilities, and setting up a hospital ity room for visiting coaches, offi cials and members of the press. The room will be in charge of Mrs. Graham Culbreth and Mrs. Joe Marley and will be located, in the bandroom just to the rear of the gymnasium. C. A. McLaughlin and “Buster” Patch, Chamber of Commerce co- ch .irmen, have been closely co ordinating the Chamber’s activi ties and reported today that ad vance preparations indicated the tournament would be successful. Parking for the hundreds of cars that are expected will be under the direction of Joe Woodall, Moore District Executive of the Boy Scouts, members of various troops, the school’s Hi-Y Club, Southern Pines policemen and members of the State Highway Patrol. Spectators have been requested to park behind the elementary school. Prices for the games will be fifty cents each night for students and one dollar for adults. Mem bers of the Chamber of Com merce are helping with the sale of tickets. Among the entertainment fea tures already scheduled is ap pearances each night at half times and between games by the major ettes and the band of the local high school. Two games will be played each night, the first beginning at 7:30 and the second at 9 p.m. On the night of the finals, Saturday, two games will also be held, the SIXTEEN PAGES championship finals taking the 9 p.m. time slot. CAMELLIA EXHIBIT An exhibit of dozens of varie ties of camellias is on display at the Town Library through Satur day. The exhibit was furnished by Harry Vail, one of the out standing growers in this section. Mrs. Eugene Stevens is (assisting with the arrangements. Soldier Killed In Little River Area This Morning Counly's First Traffic Fatiility Since Year Began A 22-year-old soldier stationed at Fort Bragg was killed shortly after 1 o’clock this morning (Thursday) when the car in which he was riding crashed into a bridge abutment on Lobelia Road in Little River Township, The victim, identified by the State Highway Patrol as Morris William Bising of Ludlow, Ky, was apparently drowned after being thrown into the shallow waters of Cranes Creek. It was the first traffic fatality in Moore County this year. State Highway Patrolman Ed ward Shomaker, who investiga ted, said that Bdsing and hjs brother, Ronald, who is stationed at Pope Air Force Base, appar ently ran off the road on a shoul der and then slammed into the abutment, throwing Morris Bis ing out into the creek. A passing motorist, identified only as a Mr. Morris of Jackson ville, N. C., was the first to reach the scene. He told Shomaker he came upon the car s.tanding in the middle of the road. On inves tigation, he related, he discover ed the younger brother still in side the badly damaged automo bile mumbling about his brother. He was assisted out of the car by Mr. Morris and together they started a search for fhe older brother, who was foimd already dead in the creek. Ronald is at St. Joseph’s Hos pital where his condition is re garded as serious. He has been unconscious most of the time since being removed there and has been unable to provide in formation as to the cause of the accident. PRICE 10 CENTS Hundreds Attend Funeral Services Sunday For Judge Leland McKeithen N. C. Symphony To Present Concert Here On March 18 Cornelia Otis Skinner Will Appear At Next Program of Pinehurst Forum Cornelia Otis Skinner is an ac tress—one of the few, aside from Ethel Barrymore—who has car- '' !! = ^•’ried a family stardom into her own generation. Daughter of Otis Skinner, a truly distinguished star of yesteryear, she not only has perpetuated, her father’s name but also has kept it in lights as two-thirds of her own name. Growing up in a star’s home. Miss Skinner was more or less predestined for the stage. But it I was not until she had progressed! through Baldwin School and well ’ into Bryn Mawr that. she began I to shape her education expressly for an acting career. With paren tal consent she went to Paris and at the Comedie Francaise learned ■ found further roles in “White classical acting by working with Collars,” “In His Arms,” “In The Dehelly and Jean Havre. Lee- Next Room,” “The Wild West tures at the Sorbonne and the cotts” and “Will Shakespeare.” study of modern acting in Jac- From her close-hand observation ^-^ques Copeau’s Theatre due Vieux of the rewards which acting had j Colombier further prepared her brought her illustrious father, for an invasion of the theatre. Miss Skinner decided that sec-’ and she returned to America for ondary roles gave an ambitious the footlight baptism'. girl scant artistic or monetary Her father, just then preparing satisfaction. Enciiraged by the to appear in the leading role of approval of her friends she bold- Ibanez s "Blood and Sand,” led ly decided to present herself pro- her across the threshold of the fessionally in a few solo charac- professional theatre by giving ter sketches of her own author- ^ a small part in his company, ship. They had an immediate When that engagement ended she popularity, and so took her on ^ined a shoal of other eager the first of many tours of Amer- young girls determined to be ica, the latest of which brings actresses. The quest was arduous her to Pinehurst on Thursday but on her own Miss Skinner (Continued on page 8) CORNELIA OTIS SKINNER The Little Symphony of the North Carolina Symphony Socie ty, Benjamin Swalin, conductor, will appear in Southern Pines on Tuesday, March 18, at the Weaver Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. The con cert is sponsored by the Sandhills Music Association as the fourth program on its 1957-58 series. The Little Symphony is an in tegral part of the North Carolina Symphony touring season, this year playing 68 concerts to adults and children in 32 communities. Tickets are available at the Bar- num Realty Co., Southern Pines, and at the box office. The emphasis in the 25-man Little Symphony is on delicacy, refinement, and clarity. Much of the music of the 17th and 18th centuries is very adaptable to the Little Symphony and can perhaps be performed by it better than by a larger orchestra. To compensate for lack of vol ume, the Little Symphony plays music specially suited to it. Solo instruments play a prominent part. Musicians are chosen with care to emphasize the quality of the orchestra. Fred Sahlmann To Play Fred Sahlmann, pianist, will appear with the North Carolina Little Symphony in its concert here. Mr. Sahlmann will play Mo zart’s Concerto for Piano and Or chestra in E flat major. The Little- Symphony will be heard in Gretry’s Suite from the opera “Cephalus and Procris”; Haydn’s Symphony No. 102 in B flat major; Kennan’s Night Soli loquy, with flute solo by Gretel “^hanley; and Kabalevsky’s suite, “The Comedians.” A native of Charleston, S. C., Mr. Sahlmann holds degrees from Elon College aifd Columbia Uni versity. He was recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship to study pi ano at the Academy of Music, Vienna, Austria, in 1955-56. Mr. Sahlmann is now a resident of Burlington, where he is a mem ber of the facultv of Elon College. The E flat Concerto, which Mo- art wrote in 1777 to celebrate his twenty-first birthday, is a musi cal masterpiece infrequently per formed. Hundreds of people overflowed the Pinehurst Community Chapel Sunday afternoon to pay last re spects to Superior Court Judge W. A. Leland McKeithen, 45, who died last Thursday night at Duke Hospital following a valiant 10- day battle for life. Unable to find seats inside, many of the mourners, who had come from hundreds of mile§ away, stood outside on the church steps and in a nearby grove and listened to the funeral services over an amplifier. The Rev. R. L. Prince, pastor of the church, and Dr. Adam Weir Craig of the Village Chapel, conducted the services. Judge McKeithen had entered Moore Memorial Hospital Febru ary 17 for a minor surgical proce dure. ■ An unrelated and unfor- seeable acute condition developed. On Saturday of the same week he was rushed to Duke Hospital in critical condition. It was later determined that death was inevi table though accompanying phy sicians tried desperately to save his life. He died shortly before 10 p.m. last Thursday night. Except for a “clean-up” term at Carthage over which he presided: last year, he held regular court in Moore County only twice. These were the last two terms, the crim inal term of last November, and the civil term January 20. The January 27 civil term at Greens boro was his last. Following Scriptural readings at the funeral service, the Rev. Mr. Prince, a former college mate of Judge McKeithen at Davidson, said, “As his pcLstor during the past 16 years, I came to kimw and appreciate the beauty and lasting v^ue of his life.” Characterizing him by his “brilliant mind, capa bility and unselfishness,” the Rev. Mr. Prince recounted his faithful membership and leadership in the church. “He never turned down a chance to serve, even to the point W. A. LELAND McKEITHEN of changing plans and coming home to attend a meeting of the Session, of which he was an hon ored member.” “Though tolerant and appreci ative of all groups,” he continued, “Judge McKeithen treasured the logical and even austere doctrine of his people.” Members of the Moore County Bar Association served as honor ary pallbearers. Burial took place in Old Bethesda in the family plot. Tributes/from leading citizens all over the state had earlier been delivered to members of the fam ily. Most characterized Judge McKeithen as a possessor of skillful knowledge of the law, an impartial administrator of justice, and one who commanded a gen eral understanding of human fail ures and tempered his decisions in that light. He was appointed a special judge of the North Carolina su perior court by Governor Um- stead in February 1964, and was reappointed by Governor Hodges (Continued on Page 8) Pledges For Lace Plant Coming In; 25% Is Collected Officials' Hope For Remainder By End of Next Week Memorial Scholarship Is Planned A spontaneous desire on thei The committee being part of many of his admirers formed to facilitate the project throughout the State of North includes some 20 prominent cit- Clarolina has resulted in the estab lishment of an annual scholarship award in the memory of the late Judge W. A. Leland McKeithen. The scholarship will be awarded at Davidson College where Judge McKeithen graduated with dis tinguished honors in 1933. At a meeting at the Pinehurst Country Club of several of the Judge’s friends with Grier Martin, Treasurer of Davidson College, to determine the conditions of the scholarship, the contributions already received were allocated to an endowment out of which izens of the Sandhills communi ty under the chairmanship of Dr. Adam Weir Craig. The Rev. Ros- coe Prince of Pinehurst has been named the local treasurer of the Endowment fund, and the con tributions ,of all who would par ticipate may be sent either to the Rev. Mr. Prince, or directly to Davidson College at Davidson. All such contributions should be made to Davidson College and designated for the Leland Mc Keithen Scholarship, The first steps are being taken to acquaint Judge McKeithen’s the scholarship will be awarded | wide, circle of admirers with the to candidates on the basis of I project and a hearty response is merit and need. • anticipated. RETIRING MARCH 31 Lt Gen. Gavin, Army’s Expert On Missile Program, Will Mbve Here A Gavin, the with an exceptional grasp of the Amy s former Chief of Research responsibilities related to Allied and Development, will move to j operations. Southern Pines temporarily after his retirement March 31. Gen. Gavin and his family, it has been learned, will occupy the Frank Roberts home on Valley Road for April and May. He ex pects to place his children in the “His success in solving intri cate problems with utmost diplo macy materially promoted our common defense. For 14 months, beginning in December 1952, Gen. Gavin commanded the U. S. Seventh Corps in Germany. In ^uthern Pines school during 1953 Gen. Gavin returned to the ■’hat period. His plans beyond Department of the Army staff, at time have not been learned, serving first as the assistant chief Gen. Gavin will be honpred: of staff, G-3, then as deputy chief March 31 at Fort Bragg with a|of staff for plans and research farewell parade and the award- and, finally, as chief of research ing of the Distinguished Service Medal, the Department of the Army announced this week. The 82nd Airborne Division of which he was a former commander, will march in review. Part of the citation which he will be presented I reads as fol lows: “From April, 1949, to June, 1951, as the senior Army member of the Weapons System Evalua tion Group, Gen. Gavin’s broad background and combat experi ence contributed substantially to studies involving the develop ment and use of small-yield atomic weapons. At the personjpl request of the Cbmimander-in- Chief, Allied Forces in Southern Europe, Gen. Gavin was assign ed as his chief of staff from July 1951-December 1952. In this posi tion he displayed outstanding abilities as a military organizer and development. “During his tenure on the Army staff, he furthered the de velopment of new organizational concepts, advanced weapons sys tems, advanced means of mobili ty for both air and ground ve hides, and in the exploitation of new research. Particularly note worthy were his efforts in the field of missiles which contribu te greatly to the succesful or biting of the first American sat ellite, Explorer.” SEVEN REGISTER Mrs. Grace Kaylor. town registrar, said today that only seven people had added their names to the registration books for eligibility to par ticipate in the forthcoming $100,000 To'wn Hall bond election. On the first day, she said, there were only two voters who added their names: five more came in last Friday. The election is scheduled for March 15 and calls for the issuance of $100,000 in bonds to complete the Town HaU now uxider construction ^ S. E. Broad Street. Hobbs Named To Town Council At Thursday Meeting James D. Hobbs, who operates insurance agencies in both South ern Pines and Pinehurst, was named to fill the unexpired term of the late Gen. Pearson Menoher on the Southern Pines Town Council last Thursday night. Hobbs, past president of the Sandhill Kiwanis Gas Explosion In Manly Causes $2,500 Damag es Damage estimated at $2,500 was caused late yesterday afternoon at Roy Dutton’s combination gro cery store-filling station in Manly when a gasoline pump exploded. Southern Pines firemen re sponded to the call cuid put out the fire in a short time but the front of the building as well as the gas tank and a tractor were destroyed. Firemen also answered a call Tuesday night about 11 o’clock on W. New Hampshire Avenue where the home of Joe Terry was j burning badly. It was so far gone when they got there, however, that it was considered a total loss. Fire Chief Harold Fowler is hospitalized this rnbming with a possible skull fracture, caused when a hose burst under heavy pressure last night. Firemen were cleaning the equipment when the hose burst, knocking Fowler to the pavement. His con dition is not considered serious but physicians are keeping him in bed for a few days as a pre cautionary measure, About 25 per cent of the pledges made toward construction of a $350,000 lace'plant here had been collected this morning, according to officials of the Southern Pines Development Corporation. Robert S. Ewing, the corpora tion president, said that as of noon today $42,600 had been turn ed in to the Citizens B^mk and Trust Company, trustees, repre senting pledges from 38 people. Following a whirlwind campaign here before Christmas almost 200 people pledged $180,000 toward construction of the plant. “We are gratified with the re sponse to date,” Ewipg said, “but would remind those who made pledges again that the quicker they’re in the bank, the quicker we get a building and more em ployment for our people. We realize that the funds are being requested earlier than we had originally anticipated, but we are unable to alle'viate that fact. “Actually, subscribers are get ting a far better deal now than had been proposed earlier and for that reason members of the com mittee are hopeful that those who did subscribe and perhaps many who did not will join the list.” Last week the committee re ceived a letter from Charles Mo- ' zur, president of the company which will operate the proposed plant, and was elated at its con tents. (It is reprinted in full be low). Ewing said that the committee would start soliciting the pledges next week. In the meantime, however, he said that pledges should be turned into the Citizens Bank as soon as possible so that officials could begin plans for let ting contracts for construction of the building. Here is the text of the letter from Mr. Mozur: “I was pleased to learn, upon my return to the States, of the sulsstantial progress which had been made in our joint efforts to locate our plant in Sbuthem Pines. “Specifically, I was happy to learn that agreement had been reached for the financing of the building, and that plans and spe cifications had been substantially completed so that we -will be in a position to receive bids from con tractors within the next two weeks. But most important of all, I was pleased with the enthusias tic reception with which the en tire project has been received by the citizens of Southern Pines. The project which is now be ing launch^ through our mutual efforts has not been undertaken lightly by either of us. You, on your part, have been most care ful in your investigation of us and we are pleased that after > thorough investigation by your lawyers, bankers, business peo ple, and others comprising your Committee, your Committee felt that it could in good conscience recommend us as a worthy addi tion to your community. “We, on our part, investigated (Continued on page 8) WEEKLY REPORT Politics Pick Up As Four Of Incumbent Commissioners File Still a little hedging in the po-1 had intentions of declining to litical field this week but at least run again, something that many five people have definitely filed people thought when Chairman fpr office and a score of others Gordon Cameron of Pinehurst have moved a bit beyond the said he wouldn’t stand for re- mere rumor stage. Bi'ceest item: four of the five incumbent Countyv Commisioners election. Last year, it will be remember ed, the entire board filed at the t_ V • * B VXAC CXltllC IJUCU.U XiXeU at tile body to Election same time: this year it was the nominated by Robert Ewing and: Board Chairman Sam Riddle elected unanimously. He is the second replacement on the Coun cil since its election last spring. Councilman Ewing was appoint ed in the fall to fill the seat va cated by T. T. Morse. Isame with the exception, of course, of Chairman Cameron. Presumably, they’ll be running on their previous program. Here tofore they haven’t waged vigor- Monday afternoon and announc ed their intentions of trying to hold onto their seats for another two year term. The four were^.^^^ no Jim Pleasants of Southern Pines ’ ous campaigns for the very sim- TP ' 1 j. ji » (there s strong rumors here&houts, pi© reRson thev’ve had nn nrtm Ewing was elected Mayor Pro that he’ll get a lot of competition' petition This mlr howeverTu Tem, . po.«.OA wluch h.d b«„ thta Jota Curte .( C»-jL a Se and Highfalls, Toni Monroe probably have opposition before of Robbins, and L. R. Reynolds filing deadline April 18. filled by Gen. Menoher, No oilier business was conduct ed at the short meeting, held in the office of Town Louis Scheipers, Jr. of the upper end of the county. Manager) Monroe and Reynolds, incidental- 'ly, deny rumors that they ever Currie will be facing E. Bi. Cook, Monroe will have to cam- (Continued on Page 8)