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Page TWENTY
Winners Listed
In Horse Show
Held on Sunday
REEVES SPEAKS TO ROTARY CLUB
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1962
State Ports Activity Increasing
But Facilities Can’t Meet Needs
Following are results of the in
formal schooling horse show held
Sunday afternoon at Mr. and Mrs.
Warner L. Atkins’s Second Wind
Farm: . ,
Beginners Horsemanship: 1
Miriam McDonald, 2. Molly Bot
tle, 3. Martha Parks, 4. Jane Wil-
let.
Intermediate “B” Horseman
ship: 1. Vicki Ritter, 2. Janet Ful-
lenwider, 3. Terry Lassen, 4. Mar
garet Hubbard.
. Intermediate A Horsemanship:
1. Elaine Beard, 2. Carol O’Cal
lahan, 3, Jan Millspaugh, 4. Mau-
ireen Hassenfelt.
Green Working Hunters Over
Fences: 1. Dingo, Gen.s Cunning
ham; 2. Nice ’n Sweet, Miss
Eleonora Sears; 3. South Lark,
Mr. and Mrs. Warner Atkins; 4.
Danger Bound, Mrs. Q. A. Shaw
McKean.
Advanced Horsemanship: 1.
Adelaide Johnston, 2. Beth Win-
borne, 3. Julia McMillan, 4. Susan
Huntley.
Green Working Hunters Un
der Saddle: 1. South Lark, 2. Twi
light, Mrs. Gardiner Fiske; 3.
Black Brave, ridden by Mrs. F.
Dooley Adams, Mrs. Owen
Rhoades; 4. Portelious, Miss Eleo
nora Sears.
Junior Working Hunters: 1.
Suzanne Reeves, 2. Nancy O’Cal
laghan, 3. Beth Winborne, 4. Ade
laide Johnston.
Open Working Hunters: 1. South
Lark, 2. Colonel Crow, Mr. and
Mrs. Warner Atkins; 3. Teddy
Bear, Mrs. Gardiner Fiske; 4. Lo
renzo, Mrs. William Frantz, Jr.
Mrs. Walter B. Fletcher and
Mike Kerr were the judges.
Speaking at the luncheon meet
ing of the Southern Pines Rotary
Club, at the Country Club Friday,
John M. Reeves of Pinehurst,
chairman of the North Carolina
State Ports Authority Board, de
scribed rapidly increasing activi
ty at the ports of Wilmington and
Morehead City and said that port
facilities should be expanded if
their great potential value to the
state is to be realized.
Mr. Reeves, who is chairman
of the board of Reeves Brothers,
Inc., a textile firm, was introduc
ed by E. Earl Hubbard, program
chairman. Robert Leland, club
president, presided.
The Pinehurst man, who has
been ports chairman since his
appointment by former Gov.
Luther Hodges four years ago,
said that $1 million per moidh
“is now being generated in North
Carolina by our two port facili
ties.”
Tonnages handled have in
creased from 687,000 tons in 1959
to over 900,000 tons in 1961, he
said, while vessels handled have
risen in number from 448 to
624 in the same period.
“Increased use of the Tar Heel
ports by North Carolina indus
try and agriculture means mil-
lions of dollars yearly added to
‘stay - at - home’ money,” Mr.
Reeves said. “Our competitive
ports to the north and south of
us are expanding rapidly. We
cannot remain static, but must
go forward to maintain our com
petitive position.”
Ports authority officials are
studying the possibility of a
revenue bond issue tb finance
ports expansion, IV^r. Reeves not
ed.
To show the need for expansion
he pointed out:
That 150,000 tons of North
Carolina’s exports and imports
are available for shipping via N.
C. ports, but the present state-
owned docks are inadequate to
handle this additional tonnage.
That six times in six weeks all
ship berths were occupied at the
ports, with vessels waiting in the
stream, last October and Novem
ber.
That gross income from the two
ports last year was $1,135,000,
for an operating profit of $457,-
000.
That the state exports enough
farm and industrial products now
to furnish employment to ap
proximately 18,000 North Car
olinians.
At Kitty Hawk
Damaged in Storm
Oregon Inlet up to Kitty Hawk,
Dr. Johnson said, observation
from the air showed that mail
boxes which had been about
chest-high are now about kneq-
high, due to the sand that had
washed over the island.
The disastrous storm that hit
the North Carolina and Virginia
outer banks last week damaged
but did not destroy a summer cot
tage that is jointly owned by a
Southern Pines resident.
Damages Awarded in Accident Cases in
Civil Term of Moore Superior Court
Only four cas.es
Scouting Leaders
\
7rged to Attend
Training Classes
Adult Cub, Boy Scout and Ex
plorer leaders of the Moore Dis
trict were reminded this week by
William R. Bonsai of Southern
Pines, District training chairman,
that training sessions for all three
groups of leaders will be held
in the next 10 days.
Leaders, imit chairmen, den
mothers, committee men, advis
ors associates and parents are
urged to attend especially those
leaders who have not received
previous training. •
■ The courses will be given in
Cub Scout and Explorer work,
with two sessions in each divi
sion, each session running from
7:30 to 10:30 p.m. The Cub and
Scout sessions will be at the Unit
ed Church of Christ, Southern
Pines, and the courthouse in Car-
- thage.
Dates of the sessions are: Cub—
March 23 and 30; Scout—March
22 and 23; Explorer—March 23
and 30.
Both sessions in any of the
three groups must be attended,
to qualify as a certified leader
Mr. Bonsai said.
jury in last week’s term of Moore
County Superior Court, for trial
of civil cases, at Carthage, and of
these one was settled after the
evidence was in, and another end
ed in a mistrial.
Finding for the plaintiff in W.
B. Guin vs. J. L. Riley Co., an
auto accident case, the jury
awarded him $1,000 for personal
injuries while allowing the de
fendant to recover nothing on his
counterclaim of contributory neg
ligence.
The jury also found for the
plaintiff in Ken S. Hall vs. Dolen
F. Henderson, a contractual dis
pute, finding defendant indebted
to plaintiff in the sum of $55 for
a survey, $12 for a helper and
$12.50 in attorney’s fees.
In another accident case, Jo
seph M. Phillips by next friend
Joseph B. Phillips vs. C. M. Kiser,
after the evidence was introduced
the court gave its opinion plain
tiff had failed to present a cause
of action and found as a fact that
he was injured as the result of an
unavoidable accident. Following
conference of attorneys, de-
went to thef Chriscoe case, the defendant with
permission of the court withdrew
her answer and cross-action.
fendant’s offer of $250 in full set
tlement was approved as reason
able and fair, the clerk to pay
hospital and medical bills out of
this sum.
In the case Bert Mario Lewis
by next friend vs. Ellerbe Poul
try Co., Inc., a juror was with
drawn and mistrial declared.
Archeologist at
Indian Site Tells
About Work There
Divorces
Six uncontested divorces were
granted: Ina R. McBride vs. Edg-
bert Lee McBride, Roy Lester
Pope vs. Lois A. Pope, Clarence
Dezalia vs. Nancy Dezalia, Lu
cinda Dowdy vs. Samuel Dowdy,
Geneva Williams Hill vs. James
Alfred Hill and Clyde L. Chriscoe
vs. Omita P. Chriscoe. In the
Largest Award
Largest award of the week was
a compromise settlement of $5,-
000, with costs of action, to be
paid to plaintiff by defendant in
the auto injury case of James G.
Pack by next friend J. H. Pack
vs. William R. Puckett by guard
ian ad litem Wade Puckett. The
money was directed to be paid to
the clerk, who was to pay any
outstanding medical and hospital
bills, attorney fees of $1,500 and
$500 to J. H. Pack, father of the
minor plaintiff, as reimbwsement
for expenses he had already un
dergone; the balance to be retain
ed for the use and benefit of the
minor plaintiff.
Other cases retired from the
docket: Claude E. Miller vs. Hen
ry Seawell Tillman and Charlie
Willis Cook, deceased, vs. Thomas
Bennett Rogers, in both of which
plaintiff took a voluntary non
suit; Ola F. Presley vs. Dock
Layne, Jr., non-suited when
plaintiff failed to appear, plain
tiff to be taxed with costs; and
settlements or consent judgments
as follows:
Fields Plumbing and Heating
Co., Inc., vs. Mrs. Lillian T.' Dod
son, $19^38 to plaintiff, he to pay
costs; Dossenbach’s Finer Furni
ture, Inc., vs. David C. Lambert
et als, settled between plaintiff
and defendant Highland Lumber
Co., costs up to $20 to be taxed
against Highland Lumber Co.,
above $20 against plaintiff; Lin
ton H. Kidd -vs. James Parker,
Jr., settled and compromised, de
fendant to pay costs.
Demurrers and motions were
heard in sev-eral pending suits.
Dr. W. HarreU. Johnson, local
dentist, said this week that the
huge waves that had beaten over
the Outer Banks had torn off the
front and side porcjies and some
of the wooden siding shingles of
a cottage that is owned by him
and his brother, Charles E. John
son, an attorney .who lives in
Hertford. They have owned the
property since 1939.
Damage at the house was in
spected on the spot by his broth
er. Dr. Johnson said. The local
man saw it from the air Sunday
when Dr. Charles Phillips, South
ern Pines physician, flew his
plane to the coast to survey the
situation there.
Making the flight were Dr.
Phillips and his son, “Tar,” and
Dr. Johnson and his daughter,
Julie. Leaving about 1:35 p. m.,
they flew to Oregon Inlet and
then up the coast to Kitty Hawk,
where they circled the Johnson
cottage. They landed at the Man-
teo airport to refuel and were
back at Southern Pines-Pinehurst
Airport shortly before 5 p. m.
Dr. Johnson said that his fam
ily cottage had been threatened
by a rising high water line last
y.3ar spd had been moved back
from the beach, toward the high
way along the beach, as much as
possible. While some cottages in
the area were filled with sand
after the storm, the Johnson cot
tage, which had been on pilings
about three feet above ground,
is now perched about ^ix feet
above the level of the sand.
Interior damage has not been
assessed yet. Dr. Johnson said, as
his brother, who had visited the
damaged cottage after the storm,
had not been able to get into the
dwelling at that time.
All along the highway from
However, he noted, the worst of
the damage seemed to come in
spots. Two fishing piers had been
completely destroyed, while a
third seemed not to have been
damaged.
No damage was reported from
other North Carolina or South
Carolina “Grand Strand” beaches,
where a number of Sandhills res
idents have cottages.
Miss Dorothy Joan Frye, 33,
died Monday night at a Durham
hospital after a long illness.
Rosary service was held Wed
nesday at 7 p. m. at Powell Fun
eral Home and requiem mass was
offered this (Thursday) morning
at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church,
with the assistant pastor, the Rev.
Thomas M. McAvoy, officiating,
followed by burial in Mt. Hope
Cemetery.
Surviving are her mother, Mrs.
Joan Miles, of Southern Pines,
and one sister, Mrs. Stanley Grif
fin, of West Palm Beach, Fla.
PROGRAM HONORED
The North Carolina public wel
fare program has been national
ly hpnored by a 50-page publica-!
tion just printed by the United
States Department of Health, Ed-:
ucation, and Welfare, titled “The
North Carolina Experience:'
Home-maker Service in Public
Welfare.” The homemaker service
program for the aged began as a
demonstration project in three
counties in 1958 and has been in
cluded in the public welfare bud
gets of many counties since then.
Regulations for
Wildlife Area
Lakes Announced
Fishing regulations for the
Sandhills Wildlife Management
Area lakes were announced this
week by the North Carolina Wild
life Resources Commission.
An open season of April 1
through October 31 is set for Mc
Kinney, Gum Swamp, Crawford,
Broadacres, Kinney Cameron,
Bagget’s and Crappie Lakes and,
for Scotland Lake only, the sea
son is set June 1 through October
31.
Open days for the lakes are set
as Wednesday through Sunday
for all but McKinney and Gum
Swamp Lakes which are open
daily. No permit is required at
these two lakes but a permit must
be obtained at Hoffman for all the
others. All permits are free.
Complete regulations govern
ing fishing in the Wildlife Area
lakes can be obtained from game
protectors or from the Manage
ment Area office at Hoffman.
^ Bennie Keel, archeologist at
the Town Creek Indian Mound m
Montgomery County, was the
principal speaker at a meeting
of the Upper Cape Fear chapter
of the Archeological Society of
North Carolina, at Howard John
son’s Restaurant Friday night.
He showed slides of archeologi
cal features of the Mound where
an Indian town site is being re
stored under state ownership.
Dr. Jerry Jemigan of Dunn
presided at the meeting which
was attended by 17 members of
the chapter and 30 guests. Mem
bership is drawn from several
east-central North Carolina coun
ties, including a number of mem
bers from Moore.
Next meeting of the group is
scheduled at the Bel Aire Restau
rant on Route 301, south of Fay
etteville, April 20, at 7:30 p. m.
Lt. Cbl. H. A. MacCord of Fort
Bragg, who started a move to
form the chapter several mont^
ago, will review Indian-white
contacts and acculturation in
North Carolina prior to 1700. The
public is invited.
Miss Helen McLean
Listed in ‘Who’s
Who in Education’
The name of a Gibbs Junior
College instructor who is a
Southern Pines native has been
listed in the 1961-62 edition of
the publication, “Who’s Who in
American Education.”
Miss Helen McLean, head of
the communications department
at Gibbs Junior College, St.
Petersburg, Fla. is mentioned in
Robert C. Cook’s twentieth edi
tion of the publication devoted to
publishing biographical sketches
of outstanding people in educa
tion.
Miss McLean is a 1954 graduate
of North Carolina College. She
received the M. A. degree from
the University of Pennsylvania
Pleasant Hill Church
Sets Revival Services
Revival services will be con
ducted at Pleasant Hill Baptist
Church near Niagara at 7:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, March
22-30, it was announced this week.
The Rev. James Porter of Sanford
will be the speaker.
CARD OF GRATITUDE
Te family of Colon Sidp wish
es to express deep gratitude to
friends and neighbors for their
thoughtful kindnesses following
his death. Colon Sides high school years.
She spent two years as an in
structor at Wilberforce Univer
sity, and following that, she came
to St. Petersburg to join the
junior college faculty. Her organ
izational affiliations include NEA,
FSTA, Mod. Lang. Assn., College
Lang. Assn.; Delta Psi; Arn.
Teachers Assn.; YWCA; and
NAACP.
She has been listed in the pub
lication ■'Who’s Who in American
Colleges and Universities.”
She is the daughter of Mrs.
Nora McLean Jackson, 154 S.
Gaines St. She attended West
Southern Pines elementary schOTl,
but did not live here during her
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