VOL. 39—NO. 41 SIXTEEN PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1959 SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE: 10 CENTS Thomasson Heads ^ Bowlers; League Play Will Begin Other Officers Of New Group Elected; Leagues Organized Completing its organization, the new Sandhill Bowling Asso ciation has elected W. S. Thom asson of Southern Pines as its first president and has named other officers and directors. Meanwhile organization of bowling leagues here and in oth er towns of the area is going ahead and league play is expect ed to open Tuesday at the OK 4^ Bowl on S. W. Broad St. Officers elected to serve with Thomasson are William Sanders, vice-president; Jack Barron, sec retary; and Bill Lee, treasurer, all of Southern Pines. The di' rectors are Billy VonCanon of West End and James Johnson, Southern Pines. The president expects to appoint other directors who will provide representation 0 for the various participating com munities. Membership in the Association is confined to men but plans call for formation of a ladies’ associa tion, following the formation of a Women’s International Bowl ing Congress. The men’s group is designed to secure sanctions for league play under rules and regulations of 0 the American Bowling Congress. However, among the newly formed leagues which will soon begin play at the OK Bowl are a Carthage Ladies League, one formed by the BPO Does here and another mixed league of couples. Men’s leagues already formed include: Businessmen’s Leagues No. 1 and No. 2; Pacific Mills, ^ Raeford; and Amerotron. Several church leagues, of both men and women, are being formed here. Entry of church leagues may be made with Col. G. H. Garde, manager of the OK Bowl. It was emphasized that mem bership in the Sandhill Bowling Association is not required to en ter league play. However, men bowlers in this area are invited « to join the association which in cludes members from various leagues. The first league expected to start play Tuesday is Business men’s League No. 1. Teams in this league include Thomasson Furniture Co., Scott Insurance Agency, Five O’clock Club, Col onial Stores, Sandhill Furniture Co., VonCanon Furniture Co. of West End, Karagheusian of Aber- r deen. Southern Pines Lions Club, Denton Realty Co. and Little’s Gulf Service. Practice matches and some league play have been conducted during the past week. EAGLE SCOUT—Jack Dowless, 14, of Ab erdeen, center, receives from his mother, Mrs. Jack Dowless, the high-ranking Eagle Scout pin, in a ceremony at the morning service of Page Memorial Methodist Church, Aberdeen, on Sunday. Others in the photo, left to right, are J. G. Farrell, district Explorer Scout com missioner; Jesse Wilson, advisor for Explorer Post 808, Aberdeen; and Jack’s father. (Photo by Humphrey) HIGH PRICES PAID ON TOBACCO MARTS Opening day average prices of better than $60 per 100 pounds were listed on the Aberdeen and Carthage to bacco markets Monday. Warehousemen described the opening as the best in years. Both poundage and money paid ouKset a record on the Aberdeen market, said 1. A. Barnes, sales supervisor. Average price paid at the three Aberdeen warehouses was $62.68. At Carthage the average at the McConnell warehouse was $63.86 and at the New Victory $60.81. The three Aberdeen ware houses—Planters, New Aber deen and Hardee's—sold 342.- 266 pounds of leaf. At Car thage, the two warehouses sold 241,406 pounds. Game At Raeford Friday To Open Football Season Of Blue Knights Two Democratic Groups To Meet On September 11 Mrs. John L. Frye, president of the Moore County Young Demo cratic Club has announced that the annual meeting of the organ ization for the election of officers for the coming year will be held Friday night, September 11 in the courthouse at Carthage at 7:30 p. m. ' Mrs. Frye who is now conclu ding her third term as president of the Moore County YDC has announced that she will not be a candidate for reelection. So far no one has announced for the County YDC presidency to succeed Mrs. Frye although the names of E. O. Brogden Jr. of Southern Pines and Carthage and DeWitt Purvis of Deep River have been mentioned as possi bilities. _ W. Lamont Brown of Southern Pines chairman of the Moore County Democratic Executive Committee, has called a meeting of that organization the same night at 7 p. m., in the county commissioners’ room in the courthouse 30 minutes prior to the meeting of the YDC. Opening Bids On Savings & Loan Building Today- Bids on constructing the pro posed building of the Southern Pines Savings and Loan Associa tion were to be opened at 2:30 p. m. today (Thursday) in the of fice of the architect, Thomas T. Hayes, Jr., and Associates. ’The Pilot’s news deadline pre vents publication of the success ful bidders in today’s paper. Separate bids, also to be open ed today, were taken on banking equipment and fixtures for the building. Planning to bid on the general contract were W. L. Jewell and Son and L. P. Cox Co., both of Sanford; Dickerson, Inc., of Mon roe; A. G. Carter, Jr., of White- ville; McDevitt and Street Co. of Charlotte; and Consolidated Con struction Co., Inc., of Lumberton. Ther.3 was a possibility that a bid would also be entered by T. E. j Saunders of Troy. The new building will be on the southeast comer of S. E. Broad St. and New York Ave. The Southern Pines High School Blue Knights will open their 1959 football season against Raeford at the Raeford field Fij- day night. The squad will work out under lights at Memorial Field here to night (Thursday) in their final pre-game session. James E. Walser, the Knights’ new coach, said he has a good first team, but few experienced reserves. “We’re going into this game cold,’’ he said. “We don’t know about Raeford and they don’t know about us. We’ll run from the T, while Icist year the single wing was used by Southern Pines. We’ll be playing a triple-A ball club.” The Blue Knights lost their best back last week when a slight concussion in a practice session put Robert Woodruff out of ac tion for the rest of the season. The expected starters Friday night are: Jimmy Carter, quarter back; Kenny Reid, left half; Melva Hall, right half; Richard Lockey, fuUback. Ted Ward, right end; W. C. Morgan, left end; Joe Garzik, right tackle; Jack McDonald, left tackle; Chuck Ward, right guard; Dick Thomasson, left guard; Bill Seymour, center. Five boys on this line-up were starters last year: Carter, Lock ey, Ward, McDonald and Sey mour. Reserves include: George Lit tle, Paul Chavez, Harold Willi ford, Johnny Bristow, Francis Dwight and Louis Honeycutt. There are only 22 boys on the ^quad. Cuslimaii Urges Support Teams A barbecue supper staged by the Blue Knights Boosters Club at the Country Club Wednesd^ night was attended by 165 per sons. Members of the football squad were introduced by Coach James Walser, cheer leaders performed. Schools Supt. Luther Adams spoke briefly and R. M. Cushman, president of the club, welcomed persons present and urged sup port of the Blue Knights athletic Hedrick Named To Sales Post Here Ted Taws, president of Fletcher Southern in Southern Pines, an nounces the appointment of L. Gordon Hedrick of White Sul phur Springs, W. Va., to a posi tion in sales and management in the firm which manufacturers narrow fabric looms. Prior to his association with Fletcher, Hedrick was connected with the Russell Manufacturing Company in Middletown, Conn., and Burlington Ribbon Mills in White Sulphur Springs. He has been connected with the narrow fabrics industry for the past 13 years. Labor Day To Be Observed; Traffic Danger Stressed Schools, Stores To Close; Board Will Meet On Tuesday Most public buildings, stores and offices will be closed for the Labor Day holiday on Mon day. -Town administrative offices, the schools, the public librar3' and the Citizens Bank and Trust Company will be closed. The post office will follow its usual holiday schedule: no home delivery of mail and windows closed all day, but mail will be processed in the post office and distributed to boxes. In Carthage, offices in the Moore County courthouse will be closed and the regular meeting of the county commissioners, set for Monday, will be held Tues day Cpl. J. A. McColman, who heads the State Highway Patrol in Moore County, said that pa trolmen will conduct round-the- clock “saturation” traffic patrol ling over the long weekend, in an effort to prevent nighway ac cidents. He urged the public *to exercise all possible caution in weekend driving. At Aberdeen, the Jaycees will dramatize weekend traffic haz ards by setting up a road bloclc at the No. 1 highway traffic light corner where they will pass out safety pamphlets, along with soft drinks and coffee, to passing motorists. The Jaycees will be on duty there Friday and Monday nights from 7 p. m. to midnight or later —the times of expected heaviest traffic concentration. Hearing Sel Tuesday About Deer Hunting The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission announces that a public hearing will be held at the High School in Hoffman at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, September 8, for the purpose of discussing p.-o- posed special himts for deer of either sex in certain sections of teams during the coming school j Richmond, Scotland and Moore year. I counties. Youths Severely ' Hurt In Single Car Wreck Here Two teen-age students from Miami, Fla., were seriously in jured in a spectacular one-car traffic accident on the No. 1 high way parkway early Monday morning. Exact cause of the accident re mained a mystery this week, as the driver. Matt P. Meehan, 17, was so badly injured that he still could not be questioned by police up to yesterday. The other occu pant of the car, Albert M. Reese, 18, told officers that he was asleep on the back seat of the 1957 two-door Chevrolet sedan and did not know what happen ed. According to the police investi gation, the automobile, north- boimd on No. 1, left the road on the parkway curve between Pennsylvania Ave and Midland Road and travelled 465 feet on the strip between the two high way lanes, apparently overturn- (Continued on page 8) Hodges Planning Major Address On Education At Friday Event Here Dr. A. C. Dawson COOKIE ARTIST. BEAUTY QUEEN. BEATNIK BUSINESSMAN W. P. Lane New Carthage Chief W. P. (Red) Lane went on duty Friday as Carthage’s chief of ipolice. He succeeds WUliam (Buck) Baldwin who died sudden ly of a heart attack about a month ago. Mr. Lane, a native of Dillon, S. C., comes to Carthage from Statesville where he was a mem ber of the police department for six and a half years. He had previously been chief of police at St. Pauls, for two different terms totalling about three years. The chief’s wife and a married daughter live in Statesville. Mrs. Lane is expected to come to Car thage to live after housing has been located. At present, the new chief is living at the Carthage HoteL Other members of the Carth age force are John W. McDonald, night officer; and Paul T. Lamm. Former Local Young People Make Colorful News Young people who formerly lived in Southern Pines made colorful news in North Carolina, South Carolina and Washington, D. C., during the past week. At Charlotte, Salli Atkinson, 14-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Atkinson, formerly of Southern Pines, was recog nized, along with others, for her extraordinary artistry in building a fairy-tale-house entirely of cookies. The project, sponsored by a cookie company, resulted in a structure some 15 feet high con taining cookies worth $340. Miss Atkinson is a talented art. stu dent. At Myrtle Beach, S. C., Diane Taff, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Taff, moved from Southern Pines about two years ago, after several years of resi dence here, was crowned “Miss Carolinas Press Photographer” during a meeting of press photog raphers from the two Carolinas. Since leaving Southern Pines, she has won other beauty contests including the “Miss Myrtle Beach” title. Perhaps the most colorful of the news makers is Bill Walker, ,24, of Washington, D. C., who was described in a Charlotte Ob server feature on Sunday as “well on his way to becoming the nation’s number one beatnik businessman.” Bill, who was bom in Southern Pin,9S and has lived here at vari ous times, as well as at Charlotte, is the son of Bob Walker, veteran of Navy service and former box er, who left Southern Pines a few years ago, after operating an interior decorating service and a tropical fish and bird shop here. Bill’s mother is the former Anne Atkins of Southern Pines. The business was located in the building on the old No. 1 high way, north, now occupiel by the Tew sheet metal shop. Bill Walker’s place of business was listed as “an increasingly fa mous beards-and-poetry java shop.” The establishment, where coffee is 50 cents a cup and $1 a cup on weekends, is known as “Coffee ’n Confusion.” The Observer story said that Bob Walker has arrived in Wash ington to help manage his son’s enterprise. Both father and son are sport ing beatnik beards, tlie story re lates. A beatnik is defined by Bill Walker as a guy who believes in individual thought and ex pression. Bill is the author of a 32-page collection of poems en titled, “Aww, Hell.” Some 20,000 copies of the volume are on sale at 50 cents each. At Coffee ’n Confusion, “a dimly lit basement bistro with modern art and scraps of for eign newspapers hlong the walls,” poetry readings begin about 11 p. m. “while volunteer musicians pick up rhythms on the drums.” Young Walker has appeared on television and radio, been inter viewed by several national maga zines and newspapers and has re corded an album of poetry read ings and jazz. The business was opened in April of this year. BANQUET TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE Tickets for the banquet honoiinng Dr. A. C. Dawson, at the school cafeteria Friday at 6:30 p. m., are still obtain able from Norris Hodgkins, Jr., at the Citizens Baidc and Trust Company or from John nie A. Hall a! the Hall and Carter Optical Co. on N. E. Broad St. Mr. Hodgkins is also re ceiving donations to the fund for the purchase of a gift for Dr. and Mrs. Dawson. The gift will be presented at the 6 p. m. program in Weaver Auditorium. following a speech by Gov. Luther H. Hodges. Attendance Up As Local School System Reopens An orderly and efficient open ing of Southern Pines schools on Wednesday was reported by Supt. Luther A. Adams. Second-day attendance figures for the local schools showed at tendance up in all units, as com pared to last year. Total attendance today in East Southern Pines was 844 and in West Southern Pines 474. The East Southern Pines ele mentary school showed'the larg est increase in attendance—634 this year as compared to 5&0 last year. Opening day went smoothly in both the East and West Southern Pines schools, he said, listing as the only handicap the necessity;, for two of the three East ^outfl^ ern Pines sixth grades to meet at Brownson Memorial Presby terian Church, because of a short age of classroom space. . Classroom furniture for the two groups, about 60 students, is expected to arrive here Wed nesday of next week. Meantime, the two classes are holding ses sions with temporary furniture obtained from various sources. The schools will be closed Mon day for Labor Day. Operation of a full schedule, with cafeterias open in both East and West Sou thern Pines, began today. (Thurs day). County Schools Opening-day enrollment report ed by Moore County schools was down some 400 from last year, but Supt. Robert E. Lee said he expected the figure would be ad justed by the time of the “10-day !feport.” In fact, he said, he expected one teacher might be added, in the HighfaUs elementary schooL Most of the loss was in the Negro schools. Indications were it was caused by the one-week earlier opening which caught many rural families still working in the tobacco crop. To Be Honored; Open To Public Gov. Luther H. Hodges will deliver a major speech on educa tion in Southern Pines tomorrow (Friday) night. An address by the Governor had been scheduled on a program in Weaver Auditorium, honoring Dr. A. C. Dawson, but it was not known here until today that his speech would be on education and would be rated as a major address. The program, open to the pub lic, will begin at 8 p. m. The Governor will appear previous ly at 6:30 p. m. at a banquet in the school cafeteria. He is expect ed to speak informally then and answer questions. A likely topic for queries is his recent trip to Russia. Voit Gilmore of Southern Pines, a member of the State Board of Conservation and De velopment, told The Pilot today that he had talked with Gover nor Hodges yesterday and that the Governor said he planned an important address on educaton. The speech is expected to in clude comment on what the 1959 General Assembly did in the field of education, a topic the Gover nor has not previously had an opportunity to review at length, and a discussion of where North Carolina stands in education to day and may stand in the future. Governor Hodges is expected here by plane late Friday after noon. Following the program that will recognize the services of Dr. Dawson—^now the executive sec retary of the North Carolina Ed ucation Association—as teacher, principal and superintendent here for 22 years. Governor Hodges will spend lYiday night in the Governor’s suite at the Howard Johnson Motor Lodge on No. 1 highway. South. Local hosts to the Governqj; hope that he can get in a short round of golf on a Sandhills course Saturday morning. He is scheduled to speak to the North Carolina News and Feature Writers Conference at Chapel Hill early Saturday afternoon and then plans to attend a birth day party for Sen. Everett Jordan at Saxapahaw. Dr. Walter Sergeant, chairman of a committee planining the two-part event honoring Dr. Dawson, said that the commit tee, composed of representatives of a number of civic clubs and other organizations, met 'Tuesday night for a final planning ses sion. He said that Mrs. Dawson, to whom a daughter was born a few days ago, would not be able to attend. Belvedere Hotel Leased To Pappas; Renovation Program Now Underway Effective September 1, the Bel vedere Hotel on Pennsylvania Ave., has been leased to Harry Pappas of Greensboro, an ex perienced hotel operator, by the owner, J. Addison Smith of Greensboro. The hotel had been under lease to C. Allan McLaughlin of Sou thern Pines for about the past four years. Mr. Smith, a retired general contractor who bought the hotel from Frank Welch in 1945, was in Southern Pines this week sup ervising the start of a renovation program that includes inside and outside painting, reconditioning of furniture, remodeling the ga rage at the rear of the building and other work. Mr. Pappas, who is staying here for an indefinite period, to supervise operation of the hotel, has been a resident of Greensboro for more than 30 years. He owns the furnishings, but not the build ing, of the Greensboro Hotel and was personally active in its man- Mr. Pappas sold the Puritan Cafe in Greensboro in 1955, after hav ing operated it for more than 25 years. He retains his interest in the Greensboro Hotel. M. W. McQuay, who was with the Carolina Hotel at Raleigh for 23 years, has been employed by the new management of the Bel vedere as day clerk. Mr. McQuay is the father of Mrs. Dorothy Sho- maker, wife of State Highway Patrolman Edward G. Shomaker of 869 N. Leak St. Mr. McQuay’s wife is expected to come from Raleigh to join him here later. Personnel retained at the hotel include Billy Madison, also a day clerk, and Frank A. Monroe of 360 N. Bennett St., night clerk. Mr. Pappas’ wife is remaining in Greensboro, for the present. They have two sons> and a daugh ter. E. H. Pappas, a graduate of the University of North Carolina, is with Sears, Roebuck and Co., at Miami, Fla. J. H. Pappas is a student at Guilford College, near Greensboro. Miss Olga Pappas of