Page EIGHT THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 REELECTED— Dr. Charles A. S. Phillips of Southern Pines was reelected secretary and treasurer of the Fifth District Medical Society at the group’s convention in Pinehurst last week. Dr. H. W. Miller of Fayetteville is the new president. Gov. Terry Sanford was the banquet speaker at The Carolina Ho tel which was convention headquarters. Dr. Phillips is associated with the Pinehurst Surgical Clinic at Pinehurst. SUNRISE THEATRE Continuous Shows Daily Phone OX 5-3013 Thurs. and FrL Ocl. 19-20 Tom Tyron and Linda Hutchins in 'MARINES LETS GO' Shows - 3H5-5:10-7:10-9:05 Saturday — Double Feature Richard Widmark in 'THE SECRET WAYS' also Frank Lovejoy in "COLE YOUNGER" Continuous shows starting ll:30-last complete show 8:25 Sun. & Mon. Oct. 22-23 Ingrid Bergman and Anthony Perkins in "GOODBY AGAIN" Shows Sun. 1:00 • 3:00 - 5:05 - 7:10 - 9:15. Mon. at 3:00 - 5:05- 7:10 - 9:15. Tues. & Wed. Oct. 24-25 Esther Williams and Cliff Robertson in "THE BIG SHOW" shows at 3:00 - 5:05 - 7:10 -9:15 Thurs. & FrL Oct. 26-27 Joanne Dru - Mark Stevens in "SEPTEMBER STORM" shows at 3:20 - 5:10 7:05 - 9:00 Southern Pines Recorder’s Court A short docket was handled by Judge W. Harry Fullenwider and Solicitor Howard C. Broughton in the weekly session of Southern Pines Recorder’s Court yesterday. The csises tried were; Archie Moore, Fort Bragg, im proper parking, $5 and costs; Stancer Lee Pankey, Jr., assault with deadly weapon, pay costs; Russell L. Harrison, McCain, speeding 50 in 35 zon.s, $15 and costs; Daniel D. S. Cameron, dis regarding stop sign, pay costs; Bobbie Wayne Ivey, Route 3, Raeford, speeding 50 in 35 zone, $15 and costs. Talmadge E. Lindsey, Youngs- ville, failing to yield right of way, $5 and costs; Walter Bruce Fletcher, Mount Vernon, N. Y., careless and reckless driving re sulting in accident with property damage and personal injury, $40 including fine and costs; Wilbur Terry, assault, nol pros_ with leave, prosecuting witness taxed with costs; James R. Kemp, no valid operator’s permit, $10 and costs. Charged with public drunken ness and the penalties imposed were; James M. Stoots, one month, suspended for 12 months on payment of $15 fine and costs, not to be convicted of similar Of fense in 12 months; John R. Wil liams, Pinehurst, $5 and costs; James W. Perry, $5 and costs; Thomas T. Simpson, Vass, pay costs; Clifford L. Page, Route 2, Cameron, pay costs. CERTIFICATE, OF MERIT. Pictured above is Jack Barron (left), governor of the Southern Pines Moose Lodge, accepting a certificate of merit award for Moose community service from the district president of the North Carolina Moose Association, Edgar Lamb. The award was presented for the project of re building the Robert Kennedy home that burned last December, in which the Kennedy’s youngest daughter lost her life. The project was headed by the Southern Pines Moose Lodge with various church, civic and fraternal organizations assisting and with many individuals donating money and materials. (Humphrey photo) Patrol Installed At St. Anthony’s Members of the Boys Safety Patrol and the Girls Auxiliary Patrol, of Saint Anthony’s School, have been installed by Police Chief Earl Seawell. In speaking to the students. Chief Seawell stressed the im portance of the role of the Safe ty Patrol in the community and expressed his good wishes to the boys and girls who had been ap pointed to the nation-wide or ganization. Saint Anthony’s Safety Patrol is one of the many such organiza tions recognized by the North Carolina A. A. A. Its aim is to train boys and girls to assume re- sponsibile roles as members of tne Southern Pines community. ROAD DEATH 'Continued trom Page 1) pants stalled near the entrance to Sleepy Hollow Farms, where the accident occurred. The youths were said to have attended the regular Saturday night square dance near West End. The accident was still under investigation and no charges had been preferred by this morning. Funeral services for Ease were held Tuesday afternoon at Rock ingham. He is survived by his mother, stepfather, one sister and four brothers. Men of Church at Pinehurst Reelect Daiiiel McDonald Daniel McDonald was re-elect ed president of the Men of the Church of Pinehurst Community Church at the dinner meeting Wednesday evening in the church’s fellowship hall. Other officers elected for 1962 were Ray Hensley, vice-president; Roger Paschal, secretary and Thomas R. McKenzie, treasurer. Lewis S. Cannon gave the de- vocational and Billy G. McKenzie had charge of the program on Scouting. He showed a film of the local Boy Scout troop taken on a trip made last year. Need For Address 14-H Development System in Carthage Fund Kickoff Set Courtroom Noted Wed., November 1 THEATRE SUNRISE Bergman is back! In “Goodbye Again,” which opens Sunday at the Sunrise Theatre, through United Artists release, Ingrid Bergman stars with Yves Mon tand and Anthony Perkins in the dramatic study of loneliness, frustration and love which made Francoise Sagan’s novel, “Aimez- vous Brahms” a best-selling book both here and abroad. In this story of how' love is, and always will be. Miss Berg man plays a woman of forty Who, tired of being stood up by a lover her own age, becomes involved with a young man fifteen years her junior. Yves Montand plays the sophisticated and restless pld- er man and Anthony Perkins, who won the “Best Actor” award for his role in Goodbye Again” when it was shown at the Cannes Film Festival, is the younger man. This marks the third book by Miss Sagan to be translated into English and into motion pictures. Earlier, her “Bonjour Tristesse” and “A Certain Smile” were suc cessfully adapted for the screen. Now Samuel Taylor has written a tender and exciting screenplay for “Goodbye Again” retaining the subtle nuances of complex human emotions. The county commissioners at a special meeting Wednesday afternoon discussed the instal lation of a public address sys tem for the courtroom, also a rest room for women jurors and witnesses which could be install ed on the second floor near the courtroom with little remodeling. C. C. Kennedy, clerk of court, spoke to the commissioners of the need for both of these items, re minding them that several grand juries have noted the need. The public address system, he said, could be installed with two microphones and four amplifibds, town and without great expense. At pres- Committees ent, he said, the jury has a hard •time hearing witnesses and a great effort is placed on the judge in making his charge to the jury. As for the rest room, he noted that there is none for wom en nearer to the courtroom than the first floor. The commissioners discussed both items with favor, postponing decision pending further study, till their November meeting. Chairman L. R. Reynolds said they had already asked Mrs. Es telle Wicker, county accountant, to get some comparative prices on the public address system. Baptist Group Has Record Attendance The Sandhills Baptist Associa tion had a record attendance for its 12th' annual sessions held Thursday and Friday of last week. The opening session Thursday evening was held at the First Baptist church in Aberdeen and the Friday session at Lemon Springs church in Lee County. The Rev. C. A. Kirby, pastor of the First Baptist church of Car thage, was elected moderator to succeed the Rev. R. D. Spear, pastor of First Baptist church in Aberdeen. ' BROOM SALE The Vass Lions/Club will hold its annual broom sale on the night of Thursday, October 26. 5 O'CLOCK CLUB Presents Geec/iee Robinson AND ms BAND THURS., FRL & SAT. OF THIS WEEK League Bowling Businessmen's No. 1 Results Clark & Bradshaw 3, Trimble 1. Flinchum’s TV O, Carthage Fabrics 4. Kenndy & Co. 2, Wedge Inn 2. Sandhills Bonded Whse. 4, Jackson Motors 4. High Ind. Series, Ralph Martin (Clark & Bradshaw) 509. High Ind. Game, Thurmond Wilson (Clark & Bradshaw) 197. High Team Game, Clark & Bradshaw, 825. High Team 3-games, Clark & Bradshaw, 2348. Standings W L Pet. Carthage Fabrics 17 7 .708 Kennedy & Co. 14 10 .583 Clark & Bradshaw 13 11 .h42 Trimble 13 U -542 Wedge Inn 12 12 .500 Flinchum’s TV 12 12 .500 Sandhills Bonded Whse. H 13 .458 Jackson Motors 4 15 .200 HARVEST SALE Country Ham Supper Sat., Oct. 21 5-8P.M. Lakeview Community House Sponsored by Lakeview Presbyterian Church for benefit of Biulding Fund. Door Prize—Ham Plates $1.00 PETTICOAT LEAGUE : Results Woodpeckers 4, Chickadees 0. Warblers 4, Thrushes 0. Wrens 3, Hummingbirds 1. Bluebirds 3, Cardinals 1. High Ind. Series, McCarthy 453 High Ind. Single, Fisher 182. High Team Single, Woodpeck ers 558. High Team Lines, Woodpeckers 1560. Standings Woodpeckers Bluebirds Wrens Cardinals Hummingbirds Chickadees Warblers Thrushes George Ross, county chairman for the 4-H Club Development Fund, has announced that Wilton H. Brown, cashier and manager of the Carolina Bank in Carthage, has accepted the position of treas urer. Purpose of the project is to pro vide college scholarships for de serving 4-H members and to build camping facilities. The pro ject is being conducted state wide with an over-all goal of $1 million. The $5,000 goal for Moore ! County will be broken down into community quotas, in each area will work to raise their part of the funds. Industry, small businesses, civic clubs or civic groups and individuals will be asked to con tribute to the 4-H Club Develop ment Fund. Mr. Brown will re ceive the donations. Headquar- terd for the organization will be in Carthage. Mr. Ross pointed out that there are over a thousand 4-H Club members in Moore County. These boys and girls come from both urban and rural communities. He said that the 4-H Club Program in Moore County “has been very active for a long time and that interest in the organization is high.” There will be a kick-off meet ing for the 4-H Development pro gram on Wednesday, November 1 at the Carthag.e High School, with a barbecue supper that will be served by 4-H Club members. Lex Ray, chedrman of the North Carolina Agriculture Foundation, will speak to the group. Many of the civic clubs throughout the county plan to attend this supper meeting. The general public is also invited. 4-H Club Members are selling tickets. The proceeds from the supper will be used as a starter for the 4-H Development Fund drive. Community chairmen have been announced as followsby Mr. Ross: West End, Billy Johnson; Rob bins, Mr. and Mrs. Therman Maness; Pinehurst, Dr. Emily Tufts; Westmoore, Dan Dunlap; Eagle Springs, Lynn Martin; Glendon, Carr Paschal and Rich ard Dowd; Vass, John Baker; Cameron, Mrs. W. G. Ferguson; Highfalls, Terry Seawell. Chairm..3n for other communi ties and special committees will be announced as plans progress. CONCERTS (Continued trom page 1) the group highly for their versa tility; for the elan of their inter pretation of the Gershwin selec tions and their delicacy of touch and understanding in the Mozart, Schubert and Chopin.” Mr. Muddimer stressed that this group is the ORIGINAL First Piano Quartet. “They played to a packed , house when they appeared at I Weaver Auditorium in one of the arly series,” he said. “We be lieve next week’s concert should draw a big crowd.” Other concerts listed for the series include: Lucile Turner, blues and folk-tune singer of rec ord and radio fame, on 'Thursday. November 30; assisted by a local men’s chorus; the National Opera Company in Donizetti’s “Don Pasquale” on Saturday, January 27; and the North Carolina Little Symphony on Thursday, Febru- arv 15. The annual Young Musicians Concert in May will again be held at the Pinehurst Country Club, and two special concerts for members are being planned. Officers of the Sandhills Music Association this year are be sides President Muddimer, Mrs. Jam.ss Boyd, president elect. Dr. W. Harrell Johnson, vice presi dent, Mrs. John S. Ruggles, treas urer, and Mrs. William Benson, secretary. Miss Katherine Wiley heads the ticket sales committe.3, Shirley O. Wooster, Jr., is chair man of the membership commit tee, Edison J. Willis is in charge NORTH CAROLINA MOORE COUNTY The undersigned, Mary Miller Watson and Livingston L. Bid dle. II, having qualified as Ancil lary Co-Executors of the Estate of John Warren Watson, also known; as John W. Watson, deceased, late of Wayne, Pennsylvania, this is to notify all persons firms or cor porations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned at the office of Bid dle & Company, Pinehurst, North Carolina, on or before the 20th day of April, 1962, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 19th day of October, 1961. Mary Miller Watson and Livingston L. Biddle, II Ancillary Co-Executors, Es tate of John Warren Watson also known as John W. Wat son, deceased Pollock & Fullenwider Attorneys for Estate 135 E. Pennsylvania Ave. Southern Pines, N. C. ol9,26,n2,9c GOING PLACES Last week Voit Gilmore, director of the U. S. Travel Service, cklled his family from Berlin. It was hjis birthday and, after H.B.T.Y. had been fit tingly sung by the four children up on Indiana Ave nue, the two parents look pver to give them details of ihe trip. Most intriguing was the news that from their room in the Berlin Hilton Hotel, the Gilmores could look over into East Berlin and see the guards patrolling behind their barbed wire. Now comes a card: "Today we stood with families wav ing to their dear ones across the Communist wall in East Berlin—a sad, sad spectacle of a modern tragedy. Also we drove through East Berlin out to a Russian military post." So an American can go to a Russi^ln military post in East Berlin! Wonders never cease. And so this travelling salesman cum laude keeps going. From Pole to posL AT ST. JOSEPH'S Mrs. J. Reid Healy slipped on a rug Wednesday evening while visiting at the home of a Knoll- wood friend, and broke' her left leg. She was taken to St. Joseph’s Hospital where she is reportedly getting along very well. 0 12 VANDALISM While much of the vandalism of highway signs comes on re mote s.3condary roads it is by no means limited to such facilities. It is commonplace on major pri mary and .interstate roads as well Not long ago a state highway of ficial returned ■ to Raleigh from an Asheville trip to report that he found sixteen damaged signs in a row along US 64. On one 16-mile stretch on an in terstate roadway, sign crews re placed between 50 and 75 deline ators in one week. These are small glass reflectors moimted on m.stal posts at the edge of the shoulder and are especially help ful for nighttime driving. The first state-sponsored trade fair opens October 12 at Charlotte to run through October 21. At Ra leigh, the 94th annual North Car olina State Fair is October 16-21. The Cherokee Indian Fair in the great Smokies is October 3-7. Autumn color begins at mile- high elevations in early October, decorates the entire “Land of the Sky” within the next few weeks, and reaches across the Piedmont and coastal Plain by the latter part of the month. of publicity, and Dr. Charles Phillips is chairman of the pro gram committee, assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cozzsns. MINERALS (Continued trom Page 1> were Roy Harris, manager of the Standard Miasral Company which mine^ pyrophillite near Robbins; Howard Butler of Southern Pines, president of the General Creosoting Co. of Gulf; and Reece Graham of Graham Brothers, a well-digging com pany of West End. Displayed were a large color map of rock formations and a line map of place names, water ways and roads, “including prac tically every cowpath, the most accurate map ever made of Moore.” It all had to be started from scratch, beginning with aerial photos. Previous maps, largely inaccurate, and a brief 1927 sur vey only -‘caused confusion.” The full survey, which will cost the State about $35,000, won’t be ready for distribution until next May or June, when some 2,500 copies will be available through the State office. It will include the two maps, with leg end and symbols in explanation, and a book-length description of the minerals and soils. In its preparation, initiated in September 1959, Dr. Stuckey paid several visits to the county and Conley has spent most of his time in field work here, partly with £11 assistant. Of the 47 types of mines active in the State’s history, many have existed in Moore and all which could be traced down have been marked on the maps. They in clude pyrophillite, gold and coal mines, sand and gravel opera tions. The pyrophillite deposits— “probably the largest in the United States, maybe in the world,” also the old gold mines lie along two major faults in the volcanic rock of upper Moore. Of coal there appears to be only a trace in the Glendon area. NORTH CAROLINA MOORE COUNTY The undersigned Seth G. Nel son having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Mary Alice Wal lace, deceased, late of Moore County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms or cor porations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned at 1819 Canterbury Road, Hampton, Virginia, or to W. Harry Fullenwider, Process Agent, 135 East Pennsylvania Ave., Southern Pines, North Car olina, on or before the 20th day of April, 1962, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov ery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment to the under signed. This the 19th day of October, 1961. Seth G. Nelson, Executor Estate of Mary Alice Wallace deceased Pollock & Fullenwider Attorneys for Estate 135 E. Pennsylvania Ave. Southern Pines, N. C. ol9,26,n2,9c SPROTT BROS. FURNITURE CO. HAS MOVED Visit us at our new place, 114-118 S. Moore Street QUALITY CARPET-- Gulislan Lees Cabin Craft Quality Furniture • Drexel • Victorian • Heritage • Henzedon • Globe Parlor • Sanford • Henkel Harris • Craftique • Thomasville Chair Co. Early American Pieces By • Cochrane • Empire • Temple - Stewart • Cherokee • Brady • Maxwell • Royall • Fox • Magee SPROTT BROS. 114-118 S. Moore St. Phone SP 3-6261 SANFORD. N. C. uo pint 4/5 quart 86 proof J.r.S. BROWN’3 SOU COMPANY Lcmrmcehurtt Kenltulv BUtidei Whiekev S0% atraigU e geara old 70% grain neutral spirit*

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