•cond Uiqh TaH nqicw Glqndon Jcidson , pi«rbe )aq£ Cameron itvitf/' f'Vass nes' blu< ii^rdeen VOL. 39—NO. 51 SIXTEEN PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1959 SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE: 10 CENTS (a Horses Arriving For Training At Stables In Area Local Owners Acquire Yearlings At Summer Sales In Kentucky One of Moore County’s “indus tries” is gathering force here with the arrival from the northern tracks of s.everal thoroughbred racing establishments. Latest to come is that of Miss Eleonora Sears, with Mrs. Nancy Sweet-Escott, trainer, in charge. There are around twenty horses in all, seventeen of them track horses, or futur.3 track horses. Mrs. Sweet-Escott visited the Keenland Sales in Kentucky this summer and picked up seven yearlings: “a good, well-balanced, well-bred lot,” she says. The Sears Stable people feel pleased with 'the summer’s rec ord, with seven wins and a good many seconds and thirds picked up at the Saratoga meeting. The horses are stabled at the Collins place on Young’s Road, with some of them quartered in the barn back of the Walsh Stoneybrook Stables. , Earlier this month Lloyd P. Tate’s Starland Stables opened its doors to welcome back the veterans from Saratoga and also some young ones. Mr. Tate bought twelve year lings at the Kentucky sales, which are now beginning to get used to his track on the north side of Midland Road—the loca tion of the original racing in the county. With these yearlings and the ten or twelve older horses, the Starland barns have horses’ heads peering out of most every stall window. At Dooley AdamS’ barns, the story is the same. Here more than twenty good thoroughbreds are quartered and the woods resound to the thump of galloping hooves, as they take them out for con ditioning in eaoAy mornipg can ters along the piney trails. Mr. Adams, who has several times been named “leading point-to- point” r'der of the year, is his own trainer. The Walsh horses will be down soon, it is rumored, as' well as those from the New England stables of Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. Shaw McKean of Pinehurst. '"Wl \ V/ SANDPIPERS OFFICERS—These golfers will guide the destiny of the newly reorganized Sandpipers golfing group ^t the Southern Pines Country Club in the coming year. Elected at the reorganization meeting were Dr. Boyd Starnes (seated, center), president, who is flank ed by Jack Carter, left, vice-president, and Davis Worsham, secretary-treasurer. Standing is the board of governors. Left to right: Francis (Bud) Rainey, Will Wiggs, Jack Reid, Joe Steed and Harry Chatfield. Golfers in this area are invited to become members of the Sandpipers. The or ganization was founded in 1927. (Humphrey Photo) EDUCATION IN THE SPOTLIGHT Dr. McMillan Speaks At PTA Meet; Supt. Lee Tells Club Moore Plans Hearing Will Be Held About Order Involving Jugtown With the news that another in stallment of “The Jugtown Af fair” has been scheduled for the near future, Moore County may —or may not—look forward to futther unravelling of the tangl ed skein of this story of what is to become of the famed pottery in the northern end of the coun ty. A hearing for the purpose of deciding whether or not the tem porary restraining order at pres ent preventing operation of the Jugtown pottery by the owners, Jacques and Juliana Busbee’s Jugtown, Inc., shall become per manent, has been calendared for the November 16 term of court at Carthage. The order, stopping work at the pottery, was originally brought about as one more move in a series of efforts by a group known as Jugtown, Inc., to contest the claim of John Mare to ownership of the Jugtown property. The group includes members of the art and literary circles of Raleigh and Greensboro. Request for the coming hear ing was made in the names of Mr. Mare and Juliana Busbee, princi pal stockholders in the coopera tion of Jacques and Juliana Bus- bee’s Jugtown, Inc., against which the original order was issued June 1 by Judge W. Reid Thompson of Pittsboro. At that time Judge Thompson directed that Mr. Mare show cause why the pottery should not remain inoperative at a hearing set for June 20. Cir cumstances caused successive continuations of the case and it is this question which is scheduled to be brought before the Carth ago court next week. Presiding (Continued on page 8) “I am proud of our school. I want us to stay profld of it.” With these words. Dr. R. M. Mc Millan, local physician, concluded a talk on American education, past and present, at the regular meet ing of the East Southern Pines Parent-Teacher Association' Mon day night. Dr. McMillan, first president of the Asscoiation when it was foun-,^ ded several years ago, said that much of what he told his audi ence had been inspired by two books of Dr. James Bryant Con- ant, “The Child, the Parent and the State” and “The American High School Today.” He com mended both to the reading of parents. The speaker told parents that increased interest in education must be shown to meet the -chal lenge of a growing school popula tion and tightening of college en trance requirements. More money will have to be spent everywhere, he said—for teachers’ salaries, for buildings and for counseling and improve ment of curriculum, to provide a four-year high school program in languages, mathematics and Eng lish. He questioned also whether The Moore County school sys tem’s program for present im provements and future high school consolidation was explain ed to the Sandhills Kiwanis Club Wednesday by Robert E. Lee, county superintendent. The county school system in cludes all schools in the county except the independent city units at Southern Pines and Pinehurst. Mr. Lee listed as current im provements: a guidance depart ment that does testing and coun selling in all the schools; a mod em foreign language study pro gram in the elementary schools in which more than a thousand students are taking part, with 20 teachers instructing in French, 10 in Spanish and one in German; five schools, he said, are using television in language and history studies. Other developments in the county’s program, he noted, are a forthcoming sciehce fair and exhibit, designed to stimulate original work in science fields, a curriculum study and workshops for teachers in mathematics, art, music and audio-visual aids. Looking toward the future, Mr. Lee described plans to consolidate outside activities might not have | nine white high schools into four, (Continued on page 8) | (Continued on page 8) Lions To Sell Light Bulbs Next Week The Southern Pines Lions Club will sell electric light bulbs to residents of this area, starting Tuesday night, November 17, and continuing through Friday night, November 20, according to an an nouncement by the club president, Joe Carter. Proceeds of the sale will go into the local Lions Club blind" activity fund. Aid to the blind and visually handicapped is the principal project of the Lions Clubs in North Carolina. Each year the local Lions Club spon sors several fund-raising projects to assist this work. The light bulbs will be pack aged in an attractive package of eight assorted sized bulbs. Car ter said. The sale will be under the di rection of Lion Joe Marley. The entire membership of the local club will participate in the house- to-house campaign. Wood to Speak H. A. Wood, executive secetary of the North Carolina State Com mission for the Blind, will speak to the Lions Club Friday night, November 13, at the Southern Pines Country Club, during the regular supper meeting. Mr. Wood, a member of the (Continued on page 8) Funeral Held For Curtis Everette Dr. Monroe Heads Christmas Seal Sale In County Dr. Clement R. Monroe, senior surgeon at the Pinehurst Surgi cal Clinic, will be chairman of the 1959 Christmas Seal Sale of the Moore County Tuberculosis Association, it was announced this week by Dr.»J. S. Hiatt, Jr., of Southern Pines, president of the Association. Sheets of the Christmas greet ing seals, with appeal letters, will be mailed to residents of every community ki the county next week, part of the 53rd annual Christmas Seal campaign of the National Tuberculosis Associa tion. Community chairmen are be ing named throughout the coun ty and will be announced. Dr. Monroe said. An innovation of the Moore County sale this year is that all appeal letters will be mailed from the office of the sale chairman, rather than by the community chairmen, leaving, lo cal workers more time to promote and advertise the sale. For the second year, the Negro division of the Seal Sale will be headed by Samuel Kelly of Car thage who is also a member of the board of directors of the Moore County Tuberculosis Asso ciation. He will be assisted by workers in the various Negro communities of the county. Proceeds of the Seal Sale each year are used for health educa tion, for finding unknown cases of tuberculosis with free x-rays, (Continued on page 8) Supervisors Of State’s Schools To Gather Here Panel Discussions. Lectures Included On 3-Day Program “Newer Emphases in Education in North Carolina” will be the theme for the state-wide meeting of North Carolina public school supervisors that will open here Thursday of next week, Novem ber 19, to run through Saturday morning. Headquarters of the conven tion, which has been held here for several years, will be at the Hollywood Hotel. General ses sions will be conducted in Weav er Auditorium. Registration will begin at 1 p. m. Thursday at the Hollywood. Luther A. Adams, superintendent of Southern Pines schools, will greet the group as the first gen eral session opens in Weaver Au ditorium Thursday at 8 p. m. The local committee for the conference includes Miss Mary Logan, supervisor of Southern Pines schools, who is in charge of arrangements; ‘ Mrs. H. C. Mc Pherson of Cameron, director of instruction for the Moore County school system, who is tour chair man; and Miss Mary Currie, su pervisor of Lee County Schools, who has charge of decoration of the 'tetage at Weaver Auditorium. Miss Logan is one of three par ticipants in one of the panel dis cussions—on foreign languages— in study groups scheduled for Friday afternoon. At the Friday morning gen»eral session in the auditorium. Dr. Charles F. Carroll, State superin tendent of public instruction, and Dr. A. C. Dawson, Jr., executive secretary of the North Carolina Education Association, with oth ers, will bring greetings. Dr. Dawson is the former superinten dent of Southern Pines schools. The supervisors will hear a number of distinguished educa tors from State and Federal edu cation departments and from schools and universities over the State. The Friday afternoon study groups, with panel discussions, will be in the fields of mathe matics, guidance and testing, science, the Southern Association program for elementary schools (Continued on page 8) Golf Carousel To Be Held Here Next Week Outstanding Players Entpr Jaycee Event ... Parent-Teacher Games Planned Curtis Everette, 35, Southern Pines’ 1959 “Young Man of the Year,” died Friday. Funeral serv ices were held Sunday afternoon at Lakeview Presbyterian Church, conducted by the pastor, the Rev. Dan Norman, with buri al following in Lakeview Ceme tery. ' Mr. Everette had been serious ly ill for the past two months, with a heart condition and com plications. He had spent most of that time in Moore Memorial Hospital,' but left the hospital in a wheel chair on October 14 to attend a supper sponsored in his honor by the Southern Pines Elks Lodge. The supper was attended by more than 700 persons. All proceeds were turned over to Mr. Everette as tangible evidence of the regard in which he was held CURTIS W. EVERETTE in the community, helping to meet the high expenses of his ill ness. Two days before his death, he (Continued on Page 8) District 8-Man Football Title Game Set Here Carthage High School Bulldogs and Celeste Henkle from Iredell County will clash Friday night on the Southern Pines Athletic field at eight o’clock for the Western District 8-man football title. Winner Frida^ night will advance to the state championship game to be played on November 27 at a place to be announced. Celeste Henkle was declared winner of the Catawba VaUey Conference when Patterson, the leader, was ruled ineligible be cause it is a private school with different student residence rules. The Inedell school has a season record of seven victories and one defeat—at the hands of Patterson on a muddy field last month. Carthage was declared champ ion of the Sandhill Conference following the refusal of a protest entered by Candor of its loss to Boone Trail. The Carthage team went through the season with a record of eight victories and one tie, that with Candor last week. The team has averaged better than 35 points per game. Carthage has a strong running and passing at tack, from the “T” and single wing formations. Archie Kelly, rangy 6-3 end Spbnsored by the Junior class at Southern Pines High School, parent-veirsus-teacher basketball games will be played in the local gym at 8 p. m., 'Tuesday, Novenv ber 24. Proceeds of the contests'will go toward the Junior-Senior dance. There will be door prizes. Played in former years but omitted last year, the games fea ture fathers of students play ing men faculty members and mothers against women teachers. First practice sessions will be held Saturday—at 2 p. m. for women and at 8 p. m. for men. Women wishing to play are asked to notify Mrs. Ray McDon ald or Mrs. M. G. McRae. Men are asked to get in touch with Joel Stutts. SENATOR JORDAN , Senator To Speak At Scout Dinner; Awards Scheduled With U. S. Senator B. Everett Jordan as guest speaker, adult Boy Scout leaders, with their wives and guests, will gather at the National Guard armory on Morganton Road Thursday of next week at 6:30 p. m. for the annual Recognition Dinner of the Moore District Scouting organi zation. On the program will be instal lation of incoming District offi cers and pres.entation of awards to outstanding Scout leaders at various levels of the county or ganization. J. E. Sandlin, Moore District chairman, will make a progress report on Scouting activities. The officers will be installed by Barry Beard of Sanford, vice- president of Occoneechee Boy Scout Council of which Moore County is a unit. Awards will be presented by M. G. Boyette of Carthage, Superior Court solici tor of the 13th Judicial District. W. Lament Brown, county Re corder’s Court solicitor and a prominent Scouter for many years, will introduce Senator Jor dan. , ’The dinner is a “pot luck” af fair, Scout officials emphasized, to which each family is asked to bring a food basket. An attendance of about 700 persons is expected. Picnic Nov. 28 At Alston House A family-style picnic at the historic Alston House in Deep River township will be held on Saturday, November 28, from 1 to 3 p. m. In announcing the event, George Ross of Jackson Springs, president of the Moore County Historical Association, said that members of the Association and all interested persons are invited. Known as the “House in the Horseshoe,” the Alston House was restored by the Historical Association and is now one of the State’s historic sites. It was the scene of a skirmish in the Ameri can Revolution. ‘SjBcret Loves’ at Library Gallery The Library Gallery this week I prize at this year’s State Fair, opens its season of exhibits with ! Designed and hooked by Marga- a mixed show. Paintings, draw ings, sculpture, pottery, rugs— all originals and all beloved of their owners. For this, is a loan collection to which the owners have contributed their “secret loves,” those works which they treasure with special feeling. Collected principally from res idents of Southern Pines and Pinehurst, the exhibit is the joint effort of the Gallery Committee of which John Faulk is chairman. Members include Mrs. C. A. Smith of Pinehurst, Mrs. Eman uel Sontag, Mrs Alwyn Folley, Mrs. Stanley Austin, Mrs. James Boyd (trustee member from the Library Board), Daniel Harvat and Don Moore. Also on view this week at the Library is the rug which won a rot Montesanti Branigan, it is original and striking, a unique example of fine workmanship. Mrs. Branigan’s rug occupies a place by itself beyond the gal lery in the North Carolina Room. At a meeting held at Mr. Faulk’s house last week, the Gal lery Committee lined up exhibits for the coming months. They will cover the work of North Carolina artists and sculptors, photographs and loan collections of prints- or etchings. It is probablq that an exhibition of Oriental art will be on the spring calendar as well as a late May exhibit of the art work of the Elemontary School. The present exhibit will re main on view for three weeks, to be followed by the December Christmas show. Entries in next week’s Golf Carousel—the unique^ three- course, four-day tournament sponsored by the Southern Pines Junior Chamber of Commerce— are continuing to come in, Nor ris Hodgkins, Jr., tournament chairman, said today. The event opens with qualifying rounds on Thursday, November 19 and runs through Sunday, November 22. Some of the State’s outstand ing amateur golfers have enter ed, he said, along with others from the Eastern seaboard states, a number of entries from the Mid-West, and top-ranking local players. In addition to the defending champions, Dick Chapman of Pinehurst and Art Ruffin of Wil son, another Moore County pair is expected to do well in the tourney. Bill Woodward of Rob bins and Carlos Frye of Carth age. Tom Ruggles, entry chairman, listed some of the other expected players as: Bill Harvey and Don Smith, Greensboro; Grover Dil lon, Jr., and Reid Tower, Raleigh; James Collins of Lumberton, for merly of Southern Pines; Gene Lockabill, Charlotte; Will Wiggs, Southern Pines; Ernie Grauer, Long Island; and Wally Sezna, Norfolk, Va. Among outstanding pairs en tered in the mixed division— which is new this year—are Mr. and Mrs. Carl Risley of Toledo, Ohio, who have taken part in the Carousel before, and Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Smead of Orchard Lake, Mich., also low handicap golfers. Charles Marcum of Southern Pines, a professional who is agent for a golf equipment firm, will be tournament director, Mr. Hodgkins said. After the qualifying on "Thurs day—the men on Pine Needles course and the mixed division on either Mid Pines or the Southern Pines Country—match play will begin Friday and run through Sunday, with presentation of tro phies Sunday afternoon. All contestants will be able to play on all three courses during the tournament—a special feature of the event. Play will be on the basis of 18 holes a day in flights of eight teams each. There will be consolation awards in each flight. Social activities, in addition to cocktail parties, will include a dance at the National Guard armory Saturday ngiht. It is stressed by the Jaycees that this dance is open to the public. George Morrison at the Broad Street Pharmacy is ticket chair man and tickets may be obtained there, at the Barnum Realty and Insurance Co. or from any Jaycee. Ed Turbeville’s orchestra from Myrtle Beach, S. C., will play for the dance. Schools Marking Education Week Local schools are joining in the nation-wide observance of Ameri can Education Week, Supt. Lu ther A. Adams reports. Parents and all interested per sons are invited to visit the schools this week “to look and ask questions and see what the schools are doing,” he said.\ Purpose of the week is to place emphasis on the public schools of the nation. A number of ex hibits have been prepared in lo cal schools in connection with the observance. USE DRIVEWAY Parents who are letting out or picking up childrep at the East Southern Pines school, on the Massachusetts Ave. side of the school property, are asked not to stop on the street but to enter the driveway east of the school, Supt. Luther A. Adams told the Parent-Teacher Association Mon day night. He said the request comes from the police depart ment. Letting children out in the street is dangerous to those and other children, he s2dd.