Hurrah for Keep Your Fingers Grossed! VOL. 40—NO. 17 EIGHTEEN PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1960 EIGHTEEN PAGES PRICE: 10 CENTS George H. Maurice, Outstanding Citizen ^ Of County Since 1912, Succumbs at 88 MR. MAURICE Baptist Church ^ Staff Changes Are Announced Miss Anna Ruth King has re turned to the First Baptist Church to assume her responsibil ities as director of music and re ligious education. Miss King worked in the church on a tem- ^porary basis last summer, but re turned to Wake Forest College at the beginning of the Fall semes ter to complete the necessary re quirements for a B. A. degree. \ She has an outstanding record of service and evidence of a con tinuing interest in her work. In high school she distinguished her self as editor of the Wallace High . ^3chool annual and was valedic- ■^^rian of the class of ’56. In addi tion, she sang with the High School Glee Club for four years and while in high school directed the youth choir of the Poston Memorial Baptist Church for two years. She has had one year of voice lessons and five years of piano to help equip her for her work. Miss King sang for three and a 44salf years in the chancel choir of the Wake Forest Baptist Church while she was a student in Wake (Continued on Page “B”) A large gathering of friends, acquaintances and admirers from throughout Moore County paid tribute to one of the Sandhills’ leading citizens Tuesday afternoon when funeral services were held at the Village Chapel in Pinehurst for George Holbrooke Maurice, 88, who died Saturday after an illness of several weeks. Officiating at the service were the Rev. Martin Caldwell, rector of Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Southern Pines, and Bishop Louis C. Melcher of the ViUage Chapel. Burial was in Mount Hope Ceme tery, Southern Pines. Mr. Maurice died at his home, “Ballintoy,” near Eagle Springs on the more than 600 acres of farm and woodland he had ac quired and developed since settl ing in the Sandhills in 1912. Mr. Maurice’s wife, the former Ethel Eglin of Fairfax i County, Va., died in 1949. Surviving are two daughters. Miss Ellen P. Maurice of the home and Mrs. ♦John C. Hammond of Clinton, N. Y.; a son, Charles Stewart Mau rice of Chapel HiU; four grand children; and a sister, Mrs. Char les Whitney Dali of Cedarhurst, N. Y. As a public official, as a leader and advisor in various civic pro jects, as a historian and as a farm er and outdoorsman, Mr. Maurice won a great measure of respect and admiration from his ass'oci- ates in these activities and from many more of the county’s people. When Mr. Maurice bought about 350 acres of land near Eagle Springs in 1912, he was seeking a permanent home and retirement from the active life of an engineer he had led since his graduation from Lehigh University in 1893. In those years, he had designed and built bridges, railroads and other structures and had supervis ed municipal engineering pro grams, at various places in the East and South. He was bom at Ossining, N. Y. From 1912 until 1924, when he (Continued on page 8) SCIENCE FAIR FRIDAY The Science Fair featuring or iginal projects of students in the schools of the Moore Coimty sys tem will be held Friday in the Carthage school cameteria, with the public invited to come at 8 p. m. Originally set for Friday of last week, the exhibition was postponed because of bad weath er. Advance Census Forms To Be Received Soon Mail Carrier Service Marks 10th Year Tuesday was the 10th anniversary of the be ginning of mail carrier service in Southern Pines and four of the five present carriers were photographed then as they came in from their routes. Left to right: Lawrence McCrimrnon, Leroy Mclnnis, Harry Klabbatz (the only car rier of the gr^up who has worked the entire 10 years) and R,pbert Henderson. At right is Post master Max Rush. C. N. Page, the fifth local carrier, was not present when picture was made. The service, which began when Garland Pierce was postmaster, started with three routes, with all three mail carriers walking. Now there are five routes, one walking and four “mounted” (motorized). The carriers make about 500 more , stops daily now than they did then, Postmaster Rush said. Carrier Klabbatz recalls that one of the heaviest rains in the history of Southern Pines fell on the day the service was inaugurat ed in 1950. (Pilot photo) MEMORIAL TABLET TO BE PLACED George Ross of Jackson Springs, president of the Moore County Historical As sociation, said this week that plans are being made to place a brorue tablet at the Alston 'House in Deep River Town ship as a lasting memorial to the late George H. Maurice. Mr. Maurice had been in charge of restoration work at the pre-Revolutionary house which is now a ^tate historic site. Mr. Ross said that mem bers of Mr. Maurice's family had been consulted about the tablet and feel that donations for it would be suitable mem orial gifts. Donations should be sent to Norris L. Hodgkins. Jr., of Southern Pines, treasurer of the Historical Association. ^Full of Years and Honors...^ By RALPH W. PAGE Geoi'ge Maurice — who died full of years and honors at his be loved plantation, “Ballintoy^’ — was recognized as the leading citizen of Moore C:ounty. He held the confidence of' and was relied upon on ail occasions by the whole settlement. This came about without any method on his part, or because of any known criterion of popularity. In fact he despised popularity. Contrary to the canons of politics, he expressed his opinions with emphatic bluntness, uncompro mising conviction, utter indifference to results and,with an ac- ciuracy exceedingly disconcerting to conventional hypocrisy. . As far as I know, he never made a speech, never asked a favor of anybody, consorted with no political, financial or social af filiates—all in all was as independent in mind, body and estate as any man alive Nevertheless, tlie community steadily came more and more to enlist his support and advice for its interests, endeavors and quandaries. This was not because we all learned the warmth and loyalty of his friendship. It Wcis because we came to recognize that George ■ ' had two essential attributes to a degree greater than anyone else we knew. ■ . ,. , % The people learned that his terrifying truthful speech stemmed from a towering integrity—an iihpregnable honesty in thought and action—that inevitably took command. And with this, it soon became manifest that his participation was completely selfless. He never wanted, imagined or would conceivably accept any benefit to himself. He was the embodi ment of objective and disinterested service. (Mr. Page, longtime distinguished correspondent emd co lumnist for The iphiladelphia Bulletin, is spending the win- ter in his native Sandhills where his friendship with the Mr. Maurice began mainy years ago.) New Cup Given For Featured Race March 26 \ A new Sandhills Cup trophy, donated by Mr. and Mrs. Dwight W. Winkelman of Southern Pines and Skaneateles, N. Y., wiU be offered Saturday, March 26, for the winner of the Sandhills Cup, featiued race on the card of the Stoneybrook Steeplechase to be rtm here that day. The former cup, also given by the Winkelmans, was retired last year when Mrs. Michael G. Walsh’s Bin Junior won the race, giving Mrs. V^alsh permanent pos session of the cup by reason of a third win in the event. ^e new cup will carry the same stipulations: any owner whose horses win the cup three times, not necessarily consecu tively, will have permanent pos session. Bin Junior will be entered again this year in the 19th run ning of the Sandhills Cup, about two and a quarter miles' over timber for a purse of $1,000. Six entries have been received in the children’s race (one fur long on the flat for riders 13 years old and imder) which is always one of the main attractions of the meet. Entered to date: Nell Wilkins and Suzanne Reeves, of Sanford; and Carol O’Callaghan, Nancy O’Callaghan, Susan Hunt- ley and Michael Adams, all of Southern Pines. Young Adams is the son of F. Dooley Adams who was for six years the leading money-winner steeplechase rider of the nation. The 13th annual Stoneybrook Hunt Meeting will open the American sanctioned steeplechase (Continued on page 8) CONCERTS SLATED IN COMING WEEK Navy Band to Play Twice Sunday; Karlsrud. Fetsch Here March 24 Only 15 reserved seats remain for the concerts to be given at Weaver Auditorium on Sunday, March 20, by the United States Navy Band. The band will play at 3 p. m., when students will be admitted at a special reduced rate, and at 8:15 p. m. The sponsoring. Jaycees report ed this week that there are plen ty of general admission tickets left, but that sales are brisk. Tick ets are on sale locally at Larry’s Men’s Shop on W. Pennsylvania Ave. A county-wide audience is an ticipated, with many persons coming from towns and cities out of the county. Tickets are avail able in other Moore County com munities from: Tommy Gschwind in Aberdeen; Mrs. A. N. Derouin at Pinehurst; J., L. McGraw in Carthage and Jamie Loy in Rob bins. All proceeds of the concert, above expenses, will be used by the Jaycees for civic projects, in cluding their continuing program of purchasing playground equip ment for the town park. The evening concert will be conducted entirely by the band’s conductor, Cdr. Charles Brend- (Continued on page 8) Road Requests Will Be Heard Residents of the eight-county area comprising the Eighth High way Division will have an oppor tunity to present road requests, petitions and problems to repre sentatives of the Eighth Division at a public hearing at Carthage on Tuesday, March 29. Announce ment of the hearing was made to day by Division Engineer T. C. Johnston, Jr., of Southern Pines, The Sandhill Kiwanis Club will® whose office is at the Division award $100 in prizes again this j headquarters in Aberdeen, year to the Moore County broiler City and county officials, along growers who produce three with the general public, are in broods of broilers most efficient- vited to attend the hearing if they ly, with a minimum of 3,000 birds have road requests which they Club to Reward \ Broiler Growers per brood. The contest was announced this week by F. D. Allen, county agri cultural agent who said that broiler producers can get instruc tions for the contest from feed dealers. Advice on housing, equipment and management is available from the county agent’s office. LUTHERAN SERVICE Pastor Lester Roof of Sanford announces that he will conduct a Lutheran church service at the Civic Club here Sunday, March 20, at 7:30 p. m. All interested persons are invited. feel should receive attention. The hearing will be held be tween 2 and 4 p. m., in the court house. The Eighth Division is composed of Chatham, Lee, Hoke, Moore, Scotland, Richmond, Montgomery and Randolph Coun ties. SCANDALS GOING ON “Scandals of the Sandhills,” the home talent musical show being staged for benefit of the Pine hurst Recreation Association, wiU present its second and third per formances of a three-day run at the Pinehurst school auditoritim tonight (Thursday) and Friday. As the third program of its 1960 concert series, the Sandhills Mu sic Association will present Ed mond Karlsrud, bass-baritone, and U. Wolfgang Fetsch, pianist, at Weaver Auditorium, Thursday, March 24, at 8:30 p. m., Tickets are on sale at the Bar- num Realty and Insurance office on N. W. Broad St. or can be ob tained at the box office on the night of the concert. A buffet dinner will be served before the concert at the Holly wood Hotel. Advance reservations are necessary. The Music Association, whose membership is county-wide, has one more program listed after the Karlsrud-Fetsch event—the Col umbus Boy choir on-Friday, April 22. Previous presentations this year have been the National Grass Roots Opera’s “Carmen” and the North Carolina Little Symphony. In May, the Association will again sponsor the Young Musi cians program, open to the pub lic free of charge, in which music teachers of Moore County present their outstanding instrumental and voice pupils. Mr. Karlsrud is a native Mid- westerner. An outstanding athlete and mu sician, he graduated from Scobey, Montana, High School at 16 and entered the University of Mitme- sota intending to become a law- (Continued on page 8) AT NCEA MEETING Luther A. Adams, superinten dent of Southern Pines schools, and Miss Mary Logan, supervisor, are attending the annual conven tion of the North Carolina Educa tion Association in Asheville, to day through Saturday. SCHOOL MAKE-UP DAYS DETERMINED 'The Southern Pines board of education has directed that the five school days lost in Hie past month because of the weather will be made up by having school on the (follow ing days: Friday, April IS: Friday, June 3; and Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, June 6. 7 and 8. This schedule adds four days at the end of the school term and cuts one day, April 15, from the Easter holiday. Easter Monday, April 18, will stiU be observed as a holiday. Under the new schedule, the baccalaureate service for the high school graduating class will be held Sunday, June S, and commencemienl exercises Wednesday, June 8. Advance Report Forms for the^ 1960 Census of Population and Housing will be distributed by Post Office employees to all households in this area. District Supervisor Coy S. Lewis, Jr., an nounced today. Postmaster Max Rush of South ern Pines said today that the forms had not yet been received at the local post office but that they would be distributed as soon as they come in. The Advance Report Form is a new census-taking device which is designed to speed up the field canvass and provide more accur ate statistics. Distribution of this form before the start of the house- to-house canvass gives the family a chance to assemble information about each member in advance of the census taker’s visit. The dis trict supervisor urges all residents to fill out the form and have it ready for the census takers when they start their rounds in April. The Advance Report Form con tains seven questions about every person in the household and six questions about the household’s dwelling. The household informa tion asked for is name, address, sex, color or race, month and year of birth, whether married or sin gle, and relationship to head of the houshold. The information re quired about the dwelling is the number of rooms, cooking facili ties, plumbing, and whether rent ed or owned. At every fourth household, the census taker will leave a Census Household Questionnaire which contains additional questions cov ering population and housing characteristics which are being asked of a 25 percent sample of the nation’s population. House holders are requested to fill out the household questionnaire and mail it within three days to the local census district office. A pre addressed, postage free envelope is being provided for this pur pose. ’The “sample” population ques tions include inquiries on country of birth, mother tongues of for eign bom, schooling, employment, income and related items. The ad ditional housing questions relate to rent or value of dwelling, heat ing equipment, water supply, and other facilities and equipment. The district supervisor pointed out that information about indiv iduals and their homes furnished to the Census Bureau is kept con fidential under Federal law. Only statistical totals and averages are published. No individual person can be identified in published're ports and census information can not ,be used for regulation, inves tigation or taxation. N. & S. Women’s Tourney Opening Pinehurst Today Omitting the qualifying round, four matches of the North & South Women’s Amateur golf tournament at the Pinehurst Country club were being played this morning. Sixteen more matches are scheduled for tomorrow (Friday). The tourney, due to start Wed nesday, was delayed because of the weather. The title goes undefended for he second time in four years with last year’s winner, Mrs. Ann Casey Johnstone of Mason City, Iowa, unable to enter the 1960 competition. Leading players entered in clude National Amateur cham pion Barbara McIntyre of Lake Park, Fla-, who was 1957 N&S champ and co-medalist last year with Doris Phillips of Belleville, Ill., also a 1960 entry along with last year’s runner-up Joanne Goodwin of Haverhill, Mass. On the Florida circuit, Joanne and Doris partnered to win the Orange Brook Four-ball tourney. In addition to McIntyre and Goodwin, a third Curtis Cup member IS in the field here, Judy Bell of Wichita, Kan. who was recent Florida East Coast Cham pion at St. Augustine. Joining this trio of Curtis team regulars are alternates Barbara Williams of Richmond, Calif., runner-up to McIntyre at Ellinor Village this year, and Mrs. Paul (Alyce) Dye, Jr. of Indianapolis, Ind. 'WEDNESDAY JINX' FOILED THIS WEEK What local residents have come to call the "Wednesday jinx" appeared to be opera ting in all its impleasant force yesterday as Sandhills residents awoke to find a freezing rain falling and ice building up heavily on trees and shrubs that had been through the worst ice storm in 50 years last month. On the preceding two Wed nesdays heavy snow had fal len. It looked like another bad Wednesday for this area. Ice continued to accumu late until about noon when a few degrees' rise in tempera ture was enough to stop the rain from freezing and, as the afternoon progressed, ice be gan to fall, from the trees. By night most of the ice was gone. Today gave prom ise of clearing and warming weather. Antiques Fair At Armory to Open March 23 Antiqtie dealers from eight states and one from England will show their wares at the 'Third Annual Antiques Fair sponsored by the Moore County Historical Association, at the Southern Pines Armory for three days and nights next week—^Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. The success of the two previous shows has, brought “the widest response we have ever had,” said Mrs. Ernest L. Ives, general chairman. She added, “We are delighted with the quality we are offering this year. Inquiries coming in from all over the country, almost faster than we could handle, made it possible for us to be ex tremely selective. We believe our Fair and Sale will be outstanding among events of this kind in the East.” One of the new exhibitors will be M. Raphael of London, Eng land, coming from the big New York City Antiques Fair and Sale. Other leading dealers, several of whom have taken two or more booths, will be on hand from Cape Cod, Mass.; Jamaica, L. I., N. Y.; Greenville, S. C.; Charles ton, W. Va.; Atlanta, Ga., and Ann Arbor, Mich. North' Carolina dealers are list ed from Chapel Hill, Raleigh, Wake Forest, Wagram, Kannapo lis, Roxobel, Southern Pines and several other points. All space had been taken by the middle of this week, and in quiries were still coming in. The generM committee will be (Continued on page 8) School Choir to Sing Here Friday The choir of St. Peter’s School, Peekskill, N. Y., will sing Friday kt 7:30 p.m. in Emmanuel Episco pal Church on E. Massachusetts Ave., presenting a selection of sacred music and anthems. Directed by the Rev. Frank C. Learning, the choir is stopping over Friday night in Southern Pines while on its annual spring tour. The 35 young men compos ing the choir will stay with fsuni- lies of Emmanuel Church. . Because the presentation is an evensong service of the church, there will be no admission charge but an offering will be taken to cover expenses and to make a con tribution to St. Peter’s School. The school, founded in 1938, is noted for its glee club and choirs. The musical service will be open to the public. PTA CANCELLED The March meeting of the East Southern Pines Parent-Teachers Association, scheduled for Mon day night of this week, was can celled because of weather condi tions and difficulty in obtaining a si>eaker. C. S. Patch, Jr., presi dent, said that the meeting will not be rescheduled. Next meeting will be Monday, April 11.