9 4 it- # VOL, 38—NO. 24 TWENTY PAGES REGISTERED AS DEMOCRATS SOUTHERN PINES, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1958 TWENTY PAGES PRICE 10 CENTS Two Republican Candidates Found Ineligible For Primary Election Moore County Republicans,^ who had three primary races scheduled May 31, learned this week that two candidates have been declared ineligible and the primary races were cut to one. Mrs. Annie Foster of Jackson Hamlet, who was opposing James Harrington of Pinehurst for a seat on the Board of Education, was found to be a registered Democrat as was Mrs. S. D. Fobes of South ern Pines, who was opposing Ar thur Garner of Robbins for the Clerk of Court. Robert S. Ewing of Southern Pines, county GOP chairman, af ter being informed that the two names would be removed from the ballots, said: “There was, of course, no inten tion on our part to circumvent the law in any respect. We knew it (the law) but understood that Mrs. Fobes was not registered, a fact which we only found not to be so after she went down to register last Saturday. “While our eleciotn laws are complicated, I must say that we are fortunate in Moore County in always having good,, clean elec tions. And I know of no more honest and upstanding public of ficials than the members of the Elections Board. It is the Repub lican Party’s desire to cooperate with them in every respect and we regret this occurrence.” Withdrawing of the two names left the Republicans with only the primary race between D. L. Ritter of West End and A. B. Sally of Pinehurst for County Commis sioner from the Fifth District. Mrs. Foster, the first Negro in more than half a century to run for county office in this county, denied to a newspaper reporter this week that slie had ever been registered as a Democrat. She had earlier said she was a “lifelong Republican.” Her name is on the registration books in Aberdeen as a Demo crat, however, according to Mrs. Charles Dunn, the registrar there. Mrs. Foster, it was also learned, has.also voted in the past few pri mary elections. Mrs. Fobes, in a letter to the Elections Board, said she was ex tremely sorry for the mistake and that it had been unintentional. She said she was intending to reg- i ister as a Republican as soon as the registration books opened this year, and subsequently did, but discovered that she was in the wrong because it is a rule that a person must not be registered in one party and file for office in an other. “I am sorry for causing embar rassment to the many friends who have asked me to run,” she said. “I hope they understand this was an honest mistake.” Democrats Reelect Thomas Precinct Chairman Here Four out of five members were reelected, with one replacement, at the Southern Pines Democrat ic precinct committee meeting held Saturday afternoon at the library. Returned to membership were Joe C. Thomas, Mrs. Hilda E. Ruggles, Curtis Everette and Mrs. Valerie Nicholson. The new member elected was Howard Fry, replacing Paul C. Butler. Meeting later, the committee reelected the same officers to serve during the coming bienni um: Joe C. Thomas, chairman; Mrs. Hilda E. Ruggles, vice- chairman, and Mrs. Valerie Nich olson, secretary. Only a scant dozen attended the precinct committee meeting, which was characterized by peace and harmony. W. Lamont Brown, chairman of the Moore County Democratic executive committee and a member of thei precinct, urged attendance at the county convention to be held at the courthouse at 3 p. m. next Saturday, and at the state con vention to be held at Raleigh (Continued on Page 5) Red Cross Plans Annual Election Chapter Officers The Moore County Chapter, American Red Cross, will hold its annual meeting for election of officers tomorrow (Friday) at 7:45 p. m. in the fellowship hall of the Church of Wide Fellow ship. Everybne is welcome to at tend. An interesting program has been planned, ’according to an nouncement by the executive secretary, Mrs. Audrey K. Ken nedy. There will be singing by the Southern Pines High School Glee Club, a skit by Junior Red Cross members of the eighth grade of the Cameron school, in addition to reports of all activi ties during the year. The new officers will be in stalled by Father Francis Smith. The Rev. Carl WaUace will give the invocation and the closing, prayer will be by the Rev. W. S. Golden of Carthage. BOOSTERS CLUB check for $570 was turned over to A. C. Dawson, superintendent of Southern Pines schools, this week by Chan Page, president of the club. The check represented the largest amount the club has ever raised for supplementing the athletic program at the high school. (Emerson Humphrey photo) TO SUPPLEMENT ATHLETIC PROGRAM Boosters Club Turns Over Largest Check In History To High School Sale of Maternal Welfare Tags On Saturday Planned For County Towns This coming weekend, with its recognition of Mother’s Day on Sunday, brings to Moore people the opportunity to give to this celebration a practical signifi cance, On Saturday the little green ,and white tags of the Moore County Maternal Welfare Committee will be on sale in all towns of the county. The point of the appeal cannot be missed for proceeds of the drive go to the support of a free bed for needy mothers at Moore Memorial Hospital. Funds raised by means of this annual appeal are the only source of support for a work that ranks high in Moore County and State health annals. It started as a pioneer venture in 1935, the com mittee including women from all sections of the county, organized and started the first prenatal clinics then held by the County Department of Public Health. Added to this effort at that time was the training of some fifteen to twenty midwives then carry ing on this old-time profession. Now, long past the pioneer stage, the committee’s work is largely confined to support of the free bed at Moore Memorial HospitaL This bed, located in the Elizabeth Woltz Currie Materni ty ward, established by the com mittee in memory of the founder, has taken care of sixteen mothers during the past year and there are several more scheduled for the coming months. Cost of a de livery and entire care of mother and baby is a flat $50. On Saturday the volunteers manning the sales of tags will be on their mettle to attain and, if possible, surpass goals of the past years. With Mrs. J. Talbot John son of Aberdeen and Mrs. James Boyd in charge as co-chairmen of the coimty committee, the drive itself will be in the hands of individual chairmen. In South ern Pines Mrs. I4 T. Avery will be in charge of volunteers who will be located at tables by the bank and post office. Aberdeen’s drive will be headed by Mrs. Johnson herself with the help of Mrs. G. J. Studdert and Mrs. D. P. Troutman. In Pinehurst, Mrs. A. P. Thompson will be in charge with Mrs. Bill McKenzie, Mrs. Harris D. Blake and Mrs. H. B. Alexan der to help her. There is also a letter campaign in progress. Pinebluffs drive will be car ried on by the entire committee of the Thrift Shop as well as oth er volunteers from among the many in Pinebluff who support this cause. Mrs. Warren Ferguson and Mrs. Jack Phillips will be in charge of the drive, for Cameron. The Woman’s Club of Vass, with Mrs. C. R. Pope as special chairman, will handle Tag sales there. Carthage looks back to two years ago a6 the high point in tag sales success. That year, the (Continued on Page 8) SoftbaR League May Get Eight Teams This Year Softball in Southern Pines this summer will be played in the ■"slow pitch” manner, a type that is fast catching on in niany sec tions of the state. The decision t6 play that type was made at a meeting Tuesday night in the Town Hall attended by 21 representatives from vari ous organizations that plan to field a team in the summer league. Irie Leonard, who directs the summer recfeation program here, said that the" turn out could mean that the league will have eight teams this year as opposed to the previous high of six. Deadline for submitting rosters of teams was set Jxme 5. The same rule applies as has in the past: a team may have no less than 15 players nor more than 18. Registration fee for any team is $15. “Slow pitch” playing, the dele gates thought, would serve to speed up the game and give more people a chance to play. In that method, it was pointed out, 10 (Continued on Page 8) Young Musicians Concert Saturday WiU End Season The Sandhills Music Associa tion will present 16 young musi cians in concert Saturday night in the Pinehurst School Audito rium. The program is the last in the current series. Dr. William F. Hollister will serve as master of ceremonies for the program which gets under way at 8:15. The students appearing and their teachers are as follows: James Mallow, Southern Pines, Mrs. C. C. McDonald; Betsy Grier, Pinehurst, Miss Julia George; Kitty MacDonald, Cam eron, Mrs. 'Warren G. Ferguson; Sue Langfield, West End, Mrs. L. R. Sugg; Fairley Cameron, "Vass- Lakeview, Mrs. H. D. Mclnnis; Mary Elizabeth Chappell, South ern Pines, Mrs. C. R. Mills; Molly Dotson, Carthage, Mrs. M. G. Dal- rymple; Gloria (iruce, Aberdeen, Mrs. Richard C. Self, Jr.; Paula Cook, Farm Life, Mrs. C. L. Hen sley; Susie Bridgers, Aberdeen, Mrs. Sara W. Hodgkins; Rosie Chandler, Southern Pines, Miss Mary Josephine Davis; Jackie Sue Beck, Robbins, Mrs. William F. Hancock; Linda McGee, Car thage, Mrs. H. G. Poole; Sylvia Cooper, Aberdeen, Mrs. C. H. Storey; Suzanne MiUer, Southern Pines, Mrs. Theodore Webb; and Graham Farrell, Aberdeen, Mrs. Nell H. Jones. 4- The Blue Knights Boosters Club, reporting their most suc cessful year to date, turned ove/ to Southern Pines High School a check for $570 Monday night to be used as a supplement to the school athletic program. Chan Page, outgoing president of the organization, made the presentation to A. . C. Dawson, school superintendent. The check represented proceeds from adver tising in the football programs and the sale of the programs themselves. The club, holding its annual meeting at the Southern Pines Country Club, elected Harry Chatfield president to succeed Page. Other new officers are R. M. Cushman, vice president, and Margaret Hobbs, secretary- treasurer. Members of the Board of Di rectors are William Caton, Dawn Leland, Charles Rowe, Tom Mor gan and Irie Leonard, head foot ball and baseball coach at the school. Robert Ewing was named chairman of the club’s publicity committee. About 40 members of the club enjoyed a hamburger supper prior to the formal meeting. Hospital Board Asks County For Increased Funds Losing Thousands Yearly Taking Care Of Indigent Citing rising costs as the princi pal reason, four officials of Moore Memorial Hospital went before the Board of County Commission ers this week and reported that the hospital was going in the hole “many thousands of dollars” each year by providing care for pa tients who live in the county and are unable to pay their medical biUs. Those same people, the officials said, are an obligation of the county, not the hospital, and the county should hasten to make ad equate provision for financing their future medical care. Appearing Monday before the commissioners, who are now hear ing budget requests for the com ing fiscal year, were John F. Tay lor of Pinehurst, president of the hospital’s board of directors; Den ison K. Bullens of Southern Pines, chairman of its finance commit tee; Paul Dana, of Pinehurst, hos pital treasurer; and Thomas How erton of Southern Pines, admin istrator. One of the group, Bullens, told the commissioners at the outset of the meeting that people in this county “are getting one of the biggest and best bargains in the country today—$78,000 worth of medical attention for an outlay of only $17,000.” He was referring to the amount the county pays the hospital for (Continued on page 5) Mrs. Bell Is Golf Article Subject Four New Bids On Lace Plant Asked By Mozur To Be Opened In Durham Next Wednesday Four invited bids will be open ed in the Durham offices of John Latimer, architect for the propos ed Southern Laces, Inc., plant near herq^next Wednesday. Robert Ewing, president of the Southern Pines Development Corporation, said that some re visions had been made in origi nal plans and it was hoped that the new bids will be lower than the one recently made by Guest and Sons of Greensboro, one that was subsequently turned down by Charles Mozur, president of Southern Laces. Ewing said that the bid open ing would allow ample time for completion of the plant, provi ding a decision is made to con struct it, prior to the November 7 deadline set by the North Caro lina Business Development Cor poration, which would hold a first mortgage on the building. Guest will be one of the bidders next week as will J. A. Jones Construction Company of Char lotte, a firm that was slightly higher than Guest in the original bidding. The other two bidders’ company names were not reveal ed. Ewing said the local group was, of course, “very hopeful that the new bids will come in nearer the approximate $350,000 we had originally planned on. We look at the prospects for the building getting underway as ‘extremely hopeful’ at this time.” HAROLD COLLINS Collins To Head Drive For Scouts Harold A. Collins of Southern Pines has been named chairman of the 1958 Boy Scout fund rais ing campaign in the county, ac cording to an announcement made this week by Joseph Sandlin, chairman of the district executive committee. The drive will be held this fall, CoUins said, but many arrange ments are already being made. Telephone Co. Making Case For Rate Boost Today Officials of the United Tele phone Company of the Carolinas, Inc., continued their testimony before the State Utilities Commis sion today in efforts to secure a rate increase that would cost United’s customers about $214,000 per year. The hearings began in Raleigh" Tuesday. 'Vern E. Larson, vice president, treasurer and general manager of the company, testified that be cause of higher operating costs the company’s net income has dropped since 1955 although its gross revenues have increased during the same period. United, which has headquarters in Southern Pines, had earnings totaling $159,200 in 1955, but they dropped to $136,200 in 1957, and unless the rate increase is granted will drop to about $134,800 this year, Larson said. The company, he told the com mission, has spent large sums im proving its facilities so that the value of its plant in North Caro lina has increased by $1,283,403 since 1954. But, he added, the company’s investment per tele phone in service has increased from $156 at the end of 1954 to $214 at the end of 1957. Testifying yesterday was Rob ert Strouse, the company’s audi tor. The company, in addition to serving . Southern Pines, also serves Angier, Bonlee, Carthage, Fuquay-'Varina, GibsonviUe, Gold- ston, Kemersville, Marshville, Norwood, Siler City, Pinehurst and 'Vass. To Appear In Future Issue Of Sports Illustrated Mrs. Warren Bell, known pro fessionally in golf circles as Peg gy Kirk Bell, wiU be the subject of a “Tips From the Top” article in a future issue of Sports Illus trated magazine. The articles us ually feature golf professionals on different aspects of the game. Herbert Warren Wind, pictured at left with Mrs. BeU, was here last week at the Pine Needles Country Club gathering informa tion for the story. He is one of the nation’s foremost golf writers, considered by many as tops in the field at present. He regularly conducts the “Tips” column for Sports Illustrated. Author of numerous books about golf (including one about Ben Hogan), Mr. Wind himself is a golfer and got in a few round? on his Sandhills visit. He didn’t promise when the article would appear but did say that this area remains one of the best golfing spots in the world. Final Meeting Of PTA Slated Monday, May 12 Final meeting of the school year for the Southern Pines Par ent-Teacher Association will fea ture election of officers for the 1958-’59 term and an entertain ment program by the Blue Knights Choir. Tile meeting is scheduled for 8 p.m., Monday, May 12, in Weaver Auditorium. Mrs. I. A. Woodell, president, said that reports will be made by Treasurer Bob Leland and by oth er officers and committee heads. There will be a socied hour, with refreshments, in the school cafeteria after the meeting. Mrs. Woodell urges attendance by aU PTA members, as well as friends of the organization and others interested in hearing the concert by the Choir. The Choir, composed of about 45 high school and junior high school boys and girls, will be di rected by Roger Gibbs in a pro gram of sacred, secular and nov elty songs. It wiU be the choir’s last public performance of the school year, except for participa tion in graduation ceremonies. | Damage To Trees Here Said Caused By Winter Freeze Freezing weather has been giv en tentatively as the reason that several magnolia and dogwood trees in this area have died in re cent weeks. H. J. Green, pest control forest er with the North Carolina De partment of Conservation and De velopment, visited Southern Pines this week at the request of Town Manager Louis Scheipers and ex amined a number of trees which appeared to be either dead or dy ing. He said that an off-hand opinion was that severe weather in this area during the winter had caused the condition. It was first noticed about three or four weeks ago, Scheipers said, that several trees were dying. He asked Fred Claridge, state fores ter, to make an examination as to the possibility of a blight or some other reason for the condition. Green took samples this week and carried them back to Raleigh. He said he would know in three or four weeks whether a blight had indeed hit the area, but said before departing that he doubted it. AT OPEN MEETING TUESDAY New Parking Limits Evoke Variety Of Complaints By Town Merchants BANK CLOSED The Citizens Bank and Trust Company will be closed Saturday, May 10, for Confederate Memorial Day. About 60 people, most of them downtown merchants and profes sional people, turned out for an open meeting in Weaver Audito rium Tuesday night to discuss the town’s new one hour parking or dinance. Judging from the comments made, few, if any, were in accord with the Town CJouncil on the new law which was put into ef fect just a few days ago restrict ing parking in the main business area to one hour. Previously, motorists could park a maximum of two hours. Observations at the meeting, which was fairly well attended despite rainy weather, ranged aU the way from one merchant’s statement that the ordinance would serve to run local business to nearby towns to another to the effect that out-of-town cus tomers would frown on shopping here “once they knew they would get a ticket if they parked over time.” One man, a Broad Street in surance salesman, stated flatly that the town had no parking problem at all and that all re strictions should be discontinued. The meeting was an outgrowth of a flurry of activity on the part of a number of merchants who, during the comparatively short length of time the ordi nance has been in effect, have be come dissatisfied with it. Criti cism has been harsh and petitions have been passed up and down Broad Street. Reports circulated at the meeting indicated a large number of people had signed the petitions which, it has been learned, call for a return in many areas to the two-hour parking limit formerly in effect. On hand to explain the back ground of the ordinance and to help interpret it was Town Man ager Louis Scheipers, Mayor Pro Tern Robert Ewing, and Council man James Hobbs. Another Councilman, J. B. Tollison was also in the auiiience but did not (Continued on page 8)