Page EIGHT
the PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1962
Association For
Retarded Opens
’62-’!63 Activity
Delegates and alternates to the
state convention at High Point
were elected by the board of di
rectors of the Moore-Hoke Coun
ty Association for Retarded Chil
dren, meeting Monday evening of
last week in the study of the pas
tor of the Aberdeen Baptist
Church, the Rev. Dennis Spear.
The pastor, president of the asso
ciation, presided.
- The meeting opened activities
of the Association for the 1962-
’63 year.
Elected as delegates to the con
vention which will be held at
the Sheraton Hotel September 14,
15 and 16 were three Southern
Pines .residents; Mrs. Donald R-
Scott, immediate past president
and current public relations
chairman; Mrs. Joseph Qanis, a
member of the National Associa
tion for Retarded Children; and
J. Kimball Watson, fund drive
chairman.
The • alternates named are Dr.
Emily Tufts of Pinehurst, vice
president of the Moore-Hoke As
sociation; Dr. W. Harold Gentry
of McCain, a director; and the
Rev. Mr. Spear.
The convention will observe 10
years of organization work by the
North ■ Carolina Association for
Retarded Children, Inc., with
which 4he Moore-Hoke group is
affiliated.
Mr. Watson announced plans
for the fall fund drive, dates of
which have not yet been set, and
reported $40 proceeds from a ben
efit bridge tournament.
This, year, it was noted, the
Moore-Hoke Association provi
ded a .camping scholarship to a
16-year-old Moore County boy
who spent two weeks at a sum
mer camp for the retarded near
W’'ashirigton.
Last year the Association provi
ded scholarships that made pos
sible special training in speech
instruction for two teachers in
the Negro schools of the county
system. Their work in these
schools, with students having
speech problems is reported to be
highly successful and is continu
ing in the present school year.
The Association will meet
monthly during the coming year,
on the third Thursday of each
month, at various places in Moore
and Hoke Counties. ’ Interested
persons are invited to attend.
Other officers of the Associa
tion, in addition to the Rev. Mr.
Spear and Dr. Tufts, are Mrs.
Thomas' Kelley, corresponding
secretary; Howard Broughton,
treasurer; and Mrs. Shirley Woos
ter, recording secretary.
Further information about the
Association and its work can be
obtained from Mrs. Donald R.
Scott, 460 Morganton Road,
Southern Pines.
Khvanis Resolution Honors Paul Dana
For Civic Service, Work With Club
A resolution of tribute to the
late Paul £)ana of Pinehurst, who
died last week, expressing love
and esteem for him and sympa
thy to his family, was adopted by
the Sandhills Kiwanis Club at its
luncheon meeting at the Jeffer
son Inn yesterday.
Mr. Dana had been a member
of tb.3 club since 1923, its presi
dent in 1928 and winner of the
club’s Builders Cup, for outstand
ing civic service, in 1938.
The full' text of the resolution
follows;
‘•WHEREAS, in the death of
Paul Dana, a member of the
causes and a willing worker for
the church, the hospital and
growth of the area as well as a
friend to all.
“NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED;
“That, valuing his services as
president of our Club in 1928 and
his unselfish work for The Vil
lage Chapel and Moore Memorial
Hospital over many years, we do
give formal expression of our
deep affection for him. We shall
miss the cheerfulness of his pres
ence, his faithful attendance, his
willingness to assist in all that
was good and his many other ad-
jraui jjdiia, a. mciiiuci. wj. o - -
Sandhills Kiwanis Club since mirable and competent qualities.
1923 and who passed to his re
ward on August 27, 1962, there
has been lost not only to our Ki
wanis Club but to the Village of
Pinehurst, the entire Sandhills
community and the whole State
of North Carolina, one of its most
beloved and devoted citizens, for
he was a man of great character.
but his memory shall abide;
“That, grieving at his passing,
we hereby preserve as a lasting
record of our love and esteem for
him, and express to his family
our sympathy and bereavement;
“That this Resolution be en
tered in the permanent records of
our Club and that a copy hereof
dedicated to all worthwhile ■ he sent to his family.
Funeral Will Be
Held Friday For
Andrew R. Hall
Sanford Business
College To Open
Term Sept. 17
Bonsai Will Head
Finances For Girl
Scouting In Moore
William R. Bonsai HI of South
ern Pines has been elected Moore
County Finance Chairman by the
Central Carolina Girl Scout
Council. The Council directs Girl
Scout activities in Moore, Lee,
Harnett and Chatham counties.
Mr. Bonsai will supervise all fi
nancial activities in Moore
County.
In making the announcement
Mrs. Annie Mae Caddell, council
president, stated that Mr. Bon
sai’s training and business experi
ence in finance would bs most
beneficial to the Council.
Mr. Bonsai, a graduate of Yale
University and Wharton School
of Finance, was financial anaylst
for West Virginia Pulp and Paper
Co. prior to moving to Southern
Pines in 1960 when he became
secretary and treasurer of the W.
K. Bonsai Co. of Lilesville. Mr.
and Mrs. Bonsai have been ac
tive in church and civic affairs.
He is president of Men of Em
manuel, Emmanuel Episcopal
Church. Mrs. Bonsai is a Girl
Scout leader and Day Camp di
rector.
Mr. Bonsai is now selecting a
representative from each town in
the county to serve on his com
mittee.
Andrew R. (Bill) Hall, 65, re
tired railroad man, who served
for nearly three years as desk
clerk and radio dispatcher for the
Southern Pines police depart
ment, died Wednesday night at St.
Joseph’s Hospital after a month’s
illness.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 2 p. m. at the First Bap
tist Church, conducted by the
pastor, the ReV. Maynard Man-
gum, assisted by the Rev. Carl
Wallace, pastor of the United
Church of Christ. Burial will fol
low in Harnett Memorial Park at
Lillington.
Members of the police depart
ment will serve as pallbearers
and members of the Southern
Pines Moose Lodge will attend
the services in a body.
Born in Cumberland County, he
was employed for a number of
years by the Durham & Southern
Railroad Co. at Erwin, then in
1941 went with the Seaboard Air
Line, moving to Southern Pines
as chief freight clerk. During the
war he was employed in this ca
pacity at Hoffman, serving
Camp Mackall, then after the
closing of the camp was transfer
red to Hamlet.
He continued to live at South
ern Pines, driving back and forth.
On his retirement in October,1959,
he took the police station job,
mostly on night duty.
He was a member of the First
Baptist Church, and of the South
ern Pines Moose Lodge.
Surviving are his wife, the for
mer Odis Mae Byrd of Bunnlevel;
one son. Bill A. Hall, of Southern
Pines; two grandchildren; his
mother, Mrs. L. D. Hall, one sis
ter, Miss Etta Hall, and one
brother, Roland, all of Dunn.
Monday, September 17, has been
set for opening of the fall term
of Sanford Business College, in
its new building located on the
No. 1 Highway by-pass, off Wick
er Street Extension, Sanford.
The college, now in its 45th
year of operation, offers more
space, better facilities and air-
conditioned classrooms in its new
building. Merritt Robinson is head
of the college.
Diploma courses are offered in
secretarial, steno^aphic, general
business, accounting and business
administration fields. There are
numerous other special courses
and both day and night classes.
Lawrence on complaint of Robert
Taylor, who suspected him of
having broken into and robbed
Taylor’s cafe in the Berkley sec
tion of Aberdeen Wednesday
night. Some $30 in change had
been taken from the “piccolo.”
Fonville, at first denying any
knowledge of the break-in, later
in the hospital admitted it to
Chief Dees, implicating another
person. Dees said this angls is be
ing checked out, and in the mean
time a warrant has been placed
on filO against Fonville pending
his recovery and capture.
It was ascertained last Thurs
day night that he was wanted in
Fayetteville, whero he was con
victed with another youth of
breaking and entering about
three weeks ago, and escaped
from officers’ custody while be
ing transferred from the city to
the county jail. Fayetteville au
thorities were notified when he
was picked up at Aberdeen, and
two detectives arrived for him
just after the suicide attempt.
The youth has recently been
staying with relatives near Aber
deen, Dees said.
He has been committed twice
to Morrison Training School at
Hoffman, tbe first time in Octo
ber, 1957, when he was 11 years
old. He received a conditional re
lease in April, 1960, and was re
turned to the school in November
of that year. He ran away in Au
gust, 1961. and last February a
dishonorable discharge was re
corded against him by the school,
which no longer wants him.
He told Dees his mother lives
at Asheville. He formerly lived
with his grandmother at Fayette
ville, until her death last winter.
Since then. Dees said, apoarently
he has liv^ “wherever he could
hang his/hat.”
camp is only incidental. The
schools want to impound the
stream going across the property
to afford water for washing
school buses in the summer.”
This would cost only about $150
or $200 for pipe, added Lee, and,
it would be done anyway, wheth
er or not the officers wanted to
build their lodge there. The
school bus fleet has to be wash
ed every summer, and while the
deep well on the property af
fords plenty of water for the gar
age building, it isn’t enough for
the big washing job.
The officers asked for, and re
ceived, a nominal lease of 99
years for some land on the far
side of the lake to build their
lodge at their own expense. They
have already put on a fish fry
and are sponsoring a show at
Carthage September 22 to raise
funds for the project.
The land they will use for their
lodge isn’t needed for anything
else, “and personally,” noted Lee,
“I think it will be fine for the
officers to be going in and out.
With the buses and other valu
able property kept there, it will be
definitely an asset.”
the church which fell last week.
He was a leading member pf the
church and worked in the rtiove-
ment to build a new structure,
walls of which are now rising be
side the old.
Funeral services ' were held
Wednesdajl afternoon at the Mis
sionary Baptist church, conduct
ed by the Rev. C. H. Smith of
Lumberton, followed by burial in
West Southern Pines Cemetery.
Sm-viving are his wife; one
daughter, Addis Mae,; of the
home; one son, James, of West
Southern Pines; one sister, Mrs.
Della Everett of Laurinburg; two
brothers, the Rev. CaRie Living
ston, of Laurinburg, and Parrish
Livingston, of Troy; seven grand
children and six great-grandchil
dren.
YOUTH ESCAPES
(Continued from page 11
two and a half miles south of
Aberdeen, to check on a report
that he was there. The lanky six-
footer nearly knocked them down
as he burst out of the back door
and fled across the yard, vanish
ing behind a barn. After fruitless
pursuit the officers sent for rein
forcements and bloodhounds, and
combed the area, in vain, till 4
a.m.
Wednesday, they checked re
ports that he had been seen in
the Ashley Heights area. They
found that at one home of a
Negro family he spoke threaten
ingly to the woman of the house,
forcing her to let him use the
phone to call his mother at Ashe
ville, collect. He asked her to
wire money to his sister at
Fayetteville, who,_ he told her, ‘^Jn'for^Albert Coates, who with
was sick. She isn t^ sick, it was; J f„„nded the North Caro-
TUFTS RESIGNS
(Continued from page 1)
M. Pleasants of Southern Pines
was unable to be present.
The commissioners authorized
the drawing up of a resolution of
appreciation to Richard Tufts for
the many years of unselfish serv
ice he has given in guiding the
airport committee, and develop
ing the airport—the first county-
owned one in North Carolina—
thus bringing about great prog
ress for the SandhiUs.
In another action, the commis
sioners officially appointed the
present members of the airport
committee to a Board of Appeals
to serve in connection with the
federally required airport zoning
ordinance, adopted in July. They
are J. E. Sandlin, Southern Pines;
W. H. Brown, Carthage; W. S.
Taylor, Aberdeen; L. R. Rey
nolds, Highfalls, and Albert Tufts,
Pinehurst
Coates Recognized
The commissioners on Tuesday
authorized the drawing up of a
resolution of honor and apprecia
AGED MAN
(Continued from Page 1)
ty in 1921, and during his first
nine years here worked for Dr.
Dickey at his sanatorium, which
was located on the property of
the Pine Crest Manor Apart
ments. Following retirement from
the town’s work he went for sev
eral years to New York City, re
turning home in 1956. Since then
he had done yard work and odd
jobs for several local families.
He joined the Missionary Bap
tist Church soon after coming
here, but several years later help
ed found the Mt. Olive Bible
Church of God and helped build
DAMAGE SUIT
(Continued from Page 1)
Simpson, guardian of Wayne
Rosser Simpson, and Thomas
Roberts McCants, arising from a
three-car pileup near Lakeview
in 1961. Two Lakeview cars and
one from Durham were involved.
The minor plaintiff was a passen
ger In one of the Lakeview cars.
Council for the plaintiff are
Bryan & Bryan and Wilson &
Bain, legal firms of Dunn, and for
the defendants, Haj^ood &
Denny of Durham; Quillin, Russ
& Wort of Fayetteville, and
Gavin, Jackson & Williams of
Sanford.
Six Divorces
The first week opened with the
granting of six uncontested di
vorces, as follows; Alton O.
Monroe, Jr., vs. Claire Silva
Monroe; Kenneth L. Barton vs.
Katherine C. Barton; Joan S. Aid-
rich vs. Alton L. Aldrich; Edna
Hunt Cole vs. Edward Comer
Cole; Joseph Frank Zona, Jr., vs.
Grace S. Zona, and Bessie Nall
Williams vs. Will Alvis Williams.
A couple of motions, in pending
civil suits were heard, and one
case went to the jury Tuesday,
presented by M. G. Boyette, at
torney, on pleadings only. This
was L. R. Reynolds vs. Cone
Maness and wife Ola Maness, to
clear a real estate title, and the
jury rendered its verdict for the
plaintiff.
A settlement was emnounced
in the second case cMendared that
day, Billy Leonard Needham vs.
Colin G. Spencer, for recovery
for personal services, bringing ad
journment about the middle of the
day.
Other settlements were report
ed in progress and it appeared
likely there would be no actual
trials, or very few.
Persons called for jury service
next week, whose names were
drawn before the county commis
sioners at a special meeting
August 23, are
Clyde Allred, Robbins, Route
2; Lyle T. Alverson, Pinehurst;
James M. Ballard, Southern Pines;
Robert Barrett, Pinehurst; Glenn
Black, West End, Route 1; W. R.
Black, West End, Route 1; Harolf
Blair, Carthage Route 3; J. W.
Briggs, Carthage, Route 3; Robert
T. Cagle, Carthage; Charles Dowd,
Carthage RFD.
C. H. Hartsell, Jackson Springs,
Route 1; Horace Herring, Jr.,
Cameron, Route 1; Malcolm I.
Hill, Southern Pines; G. H. Hil
lard, Aberdeen; F. C. Hodges,
Aberdeen, Route 1; Y. W. Lea,
Carthage, Route 3; Herman Luck,
Seagrove Route 2; Garton Maness,
Robbins, Route 2; Cliff Moore, Jr.,
Star, Route 1; Alex McKenzie,
Lakeview; F. G. Raines, Manly;
E. M. Rice, Carthage; A. R. Rich
ardson, Carthage, Route 1.
H. Milton Russell, Aberdeen; J.
T. Saunders, Southern Pines;
Robert H. Short, Cameron;
Nathaniel Smitherman, West End;
Hubert Speer, Carthage Star,
Route; Foy E. Williams, Robbins,
Route 2; G. L. Wilson, Vass.
was sick She isn t sicK it w^ , founded the North Caro-
14 TAR HEELS
(Continued from Page 1)
officers of neighboring towns and
counties, to apprehend the youth.
Fonville was under round-the-
clock guard at the hospital, where
he had a number of viisitors.
After visiting hours closed Mon
day evening, he was escorted to
the bathroom by his guard as
me Dainiuuiii uy
James Collins, Southern Pines, no ‘routine preparation for the night,
card. When he did not come out within
Charles Smith of Gastonia led
the Tar Heel hopefuls in the
sectional qualifying scores, with
143. Billy Joe Patton of Morgan
ton shot 144 and Pat Brady of
Reidsville was third with 145.
The other 11 North Carolina
qualifiers are; Bill Harvey,
Greensboro; Ken Folkes, Concord;
Frank Merchant,: Charlotte; Keely
Grice, Charlotte; James Deemer,
Camp Lejeune; Bob Galloway,
Winston-Salem; Gene Lookabill,
Charlotte; David Griffith, Char
lotte; R. L. McDonald, Jr., Chapel
Hill; Roger Little, Charlotte; and
John R. Hughes, Greensboro.
Alternates are: Sonny Grant,
Greensboro: Bill Williamson,
Charlotte: Reid Tull, Jr., Winston-
Salem; Eddie Honeycutt, Winston-
Salem; and Horace Ervin, Kins
ton.
a few minutes, the guard went
in to find the windowscreen un
hooked and Fonville gone. ’The
alarm was broadcast immediately
and the grounds were searched.
The plastic collar was found close
by but not the patient.
The Allsbrooks were among his
Monday night visitors, leaving a
few minutes before the escape.
They denied, however, helping
him escape and, when he ran out
of their home, Allsbrook told the
officers that he and his wife had
gone to bed and didn’t even know
he was there.
Fonville, from Fayetteville,
was cut down within seconds
after the suicide attempt about
1:30 a. m. by Night Officer D. M.
Winfree, on duty in the police
station, who was alerted by a
Chapel Hill and is retiring this
weflk as its director.
The resolution will be adopted
in response to a request of the
board of commissioners of Coates’
native county, Johnston, which
will collect such expressions from
all over the State and bind them
in a leather book for presentation
to Coates.
Road Requests
Six road requests were receiv
ed and passed on to the State
Highway Commission with the
commissioners’ approval, for ad
dition to the secondary system
and State maintenance of the
following:
(1), Crest Road, Ridgeview sub
division, Aberdeen, .5 mile, 14
homes; (2), No. 1636 and No. 1634,
one mile, six homes, the ends to
be joined to keep school buses off
railroad crossings; (3), proposed
extension or connecting of Pine
hurst Ave., Carthage, with NC 22,
.7 mile, four homes; (4), No. 1461,
in Robbins area, one mile, 12
homes: (5), Yow Road in Sea-
grove, Route 2 section, 2.7 miles,
11 homes, mail and school bus
ATTENTION PARENTS
(Of College Studenls)
Keep Your Son or Daughter Informed on The
Goings On in Their OF Home Town by Plaeing
An Order For A Student Subscription To
The Pilot
^3.75
CIVIL 'WAR REPORT
Glsnn Tucker’s “Front Rank:
the Story of North Carolina in the
Civil War” will be published by
The North Carolina Confederate
Centennial Commission, it was
announced today by Norman C.
Larson,: Executive Secretary.
Hertitage Printers, of Charlotte
North Carolina will manufacture
the book, which is scheduled to
appear in local bookstores in
early December. “Front Rank” is
a brief narrative of North Caro
lina’s part in the Civil War—both
on the battlefield and at the home
front.
RAYMOND TART
(Continued from naee 11
and horse play and that Tart lay
down and dozed off, then woke
and asked them all to leave,
and Scarboro said he saw Holder
get Tart’s shotgun from a wall
rack, load it with a shell he took
from a kitchen cabinet and fire
it through a wall of the kitchen.
Scarboro said he left then, and
Tart testified he tried to get the
gun away from Holder and that
it went off in the scuffle.
Scarboro said that at one point
during the evening he took a
kitchen knife away from Holder
as the young man was thrusting
it at Tart’s back, but said he
“di,dn’t mean to hurt him.”
'ii’art, who is not known to have
had any troubles with the law
before, was expected to make
bond Wednesday for his appear
ance at the November criminal
term of Superior Court at Carth
age.
Funeral services for
work prisoner occupying a near
by cell.
Police Chief A. F. Dees said
Fonville had apparently fastened
his belt about his neck, then
about a cell bar, while lying on
a top bunk, then had let himself
fall from the bunk.
He had been picked up by Win-
free and Deputy Sheriff J. A.
were held Tuesday afternoon at
the Vass Church of God, conduct
ed by the Rev. William Faircloth.
Burial followed in the Spring Hill
Church cemetery near Lillington.
Surviving are his wife, the for
mer Lucille Scarboro of Vass, and
one son, Alvin Dean, of the home;
his mother, Mrs. Norman Frye, of
Vass; two sisters, Mrs. Robert E.
Cockman of Sanford and Brenda
Joyce Holder, of Vass; and five
brothers, Daniel B. Holder, Jr.,
with the U. S. Navy, Glendale,
Calif., James D. Holder, with the
route; (6), Vermont Ave., Niag
ara, connecting Virginia Ave. and
Connecticut Ave., one block, six
homes.
Candidate's Questions
Wallace O’Neal of Pinehurst,
candidate for commissioner on
the Republican ticket, cleared up
;ome doubts he had about the
law enforcement officers’ lake
side camp by asking questions at
the meeting.
O’Neal, who regularly attends
the board meetings and asks
questions “because I want to
learn,” wanted to know if county
funds would be used to build the
lake on the countv garage prop
erty, where the officers’ associa
tion has been granted permission
to build a lodge or camp.
'The questions came during a
period in which Supt. Robert E.
Lee was discussing school mat
ters with the commissioners after
making his report.
dci
Kentucky li
FBourbonUthisK^ i
$i
U. S. Marine Corps, stationed on » -
Okinawa, and Winston E., Don- Commissioner Taylor respond-
ald W. and Billy E. Holder, aU of I ed that county funds would cer-
Holder Vass. tainly be used “but the officers’
BOURBON DE LUXE
THE BOURBON DE LUXE DISTILLERY COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY. 86 PROOF-CONTAINS 49% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS.,