Income tax informabiBi from the In ternal Revey® Service—first of a series reports—is on Page 5, SectiiiBs. /tGIsndon qteopqs. Cameron PjL Nic^oira/ N LOT A report on the new Sandhills Invita tional Basketball Tournament, played here last week, is on Page 3, Section 1. VOL. 48 — No. 8 EIGHTEEN PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1968 EIGHTEEN PAGES PRICE; 10 CENTS ij» X MAKING PLAIS Gilmore of Souther date for the 8th D gressional nominat mary, is flanked b — Stite Sen. Voit Pines (center) candi- trict Democratic Con- n in next May’s pri- Mrs. Carolyn Blue of Eagle Springs and Mayor James B. Garri son of Albemarle, who were announced this week as co-chairmen of his campaign, as they check over a map of the 10-county district which includes Moore. IN NEW 8TH IjlSTRlCT Mrs. Blue, Garrison Head Gilmore Drive Mrs. Carolyn Blue of Eagle Springs and Mayor Jaimes H. Garrison of Albemarle will be co-chairmen of State Senator Voit Gilmore’s campaign for Eight District Congressman, the candidate has announced. Both experienced in political campaigning, Mrs. Blue and 10-county organizatiorf of catn- paign committees now being formed. Gilmore, a Democrat and a Southern Pines resident is the only announced candi- 'BOSSES NIGHT' date for the Eighth District seat. “Two such able and well- known people give my cam paign a fine start for 1968,” Gilmore said. “Mrs. Blue and Mayor Garrison know our area, its people and its issues. They are practical business people Mayor Garrison wilHdir2i4_g.[ y,hn resiparr'tho value of a ■rTor SIX 2-HOUR SESSIONS AT SCO Young Man To Be Honored At Jaycee Program Bosses’ Night, the annual banquet-meeting of the Jay- cees and their employers, will be held at the Southern Pines Country Club, Saturday, Jan uary 13, at 6:30 p.m., accord ing to Charles Scott, local president. A feature of the evening will be the announcemerft of Southern Pines’s outstanding young man of the past year. A committee headed by ’ Dr. H. D. Bruton is can\lassing businesses, clubs and or^ni- zations to determine w'hich young man — 21 through 35— has contributed most to the community during the year. Evidence of leadership abil ity and evidence of personal or business progress are also considered in the judging. Bosses’ Night is an annual feature of Jaycee chapters throughout the nation. It is dedicated to the employers who support the Jaycees a^nd recognize the value of the or ganization. Project Chairman Guy Wal ters said the speaker for the evening will be Bill Suttle, a tal Farm Planning; Jahuary past National president of the i 31, Farm Labor; February 7, Jaycees. The ma.ster of dollar and who share my be lief in sound government.” Garrison, 42, is serving his second term as mayor and pre viously was Albemarle’s mayor pro-tern four years. He is presi dent of South Central Oil Com pany of Albemarle, 'secretary of Royal Chemical Company, and currently is vice president of the N. C. Oil Jobbers As sociation. Garrison was chosen Albe marle’s young man of the year in 1956 and has served as president of the city’s junior and senior chambers of com merce. A Democrat and a Pres byterian, he is married to the former Betty Hearne of Albe marle. They have two children, a son. Banks, at St. Andrews College and a daughter, Jane, at Albemarle High School. Mrs. Blue is employed by Quality Oil Company of West (Continued on Page 2) Playmakers Set Auditions For Friday, Jan. 5 The Sandhills Playmakers, community theater group sponsored by Sandhills Com munity College, will hold au ditions Friday, January 5, for roles in the second production of this season. Two reading sessions will be conducted the first at 4 pm and the second at 7:30 pm. All persons interested in drama may attend either or both sessions which will be held in Room 110 of the Mary Luman Meyer Building at the college. According to William Wat son, chairman of the Depart ment of English and Fine Arts at the college and director of the Playmakers, the second production will consist of three one-act plays dealing with man’s conflicts with modern society. They will be presented February 21 and 22 in the Pinehurst School audi torium. The three plays are: Malcolm Marmorsten’s con temporary religious play, “Will The Real Jesus Christ Please Stand Up?,” with roles for six men and two women. William Saroyan’s realistic tragedy of social' injustice, “Hello, Out There!,” having (Continued on Page 2) Murder Charged In Shooting Of High Point Man A High Point man employ ed as physical director at a Winston-Salem YMCA was fatally shot early Sunday morning at the Hole in the Wall, a night spot near Aber deen, in an incident which re mained mystifying early this week. Deputy Sheriff J. A. Law rence said Willie Hubbard Verbal, 42, of Aberdeen, Route 1, is charged with murder in the shooting of Carlton Phil lips Bell, 30, of High Point. There are allegedly five eye witnesses, Lawrence said. The seven Negro men had been at the Hole in the Wall, which is located in woods west of Bethesda Road, until about 5:30 am, Sunday, when the manager said they had be come contentious, and he put them out and closed up the place, Lawrence said. The ar gument continued outside, cul minating in the shooting, ac cording to fhe deputy’s report. The witnesses said Bell ran off into the woods, and some time later, around 7 am, they heard him groaning and found him where he had collapsed in a clump of trees, the officer said they told him. Verbal took Bell to Moore Memorial Hospital, the others following, and all remained until the deputy arrived, Law rence said. Bell died at 2:20 pm despite intensive efforts to save him, which included sev eral blood transfusions. Coro ner W. K. Carpenter said he (Continued on Page 2) Farm Management Course Slated By F. D. ALLEN County Extension Chairman Moore County farmers are invited to participate in a tele vision discussion course, “Managing the Farm Busi ness,” beginning January 10 at Sandhills Community College. Six two hour sessions will be held, at 2 pm each Wednesday, on the following topics: Jan. 10, Planning Changes in Farm Practices; January 17, Enter prise Budgets; January 24, To- for the evening will be Del- mar McAdams of the local club. discussions should get in, touch with the county agent’s office in Carthage or the Adult Edu cation Department at Sand hills Community College, lor further information and en rollment procedure. We will follow up the tele vision presentations with dis cussions of actual farm situa tions. Moore County Agricul tural workers will -be there to assist farmers with their prac tical exercises after the TV presentations. Moore County farmers need to improve their manage- Farm Leasing Arrangements; ment skills so they can make and February 14, Family better economic decisions. Farming Agreements, j Farmers and others interest ed in these Farm Management your farm business. economic These courses will give man agement tips for improving LARCENY CASES 3 Youths To Face Superior Court Action Probable cause was found against three youths in Moore Recorders Court at Carthage, Tuesday, on charges of a series of felony robberies committed during December. They made bond of $2,000 each for their appearance at the January criminal term of Superior Court, in Carthage. The three, all of whom pleaded guilty, were Kenneth Rick Hare, 19, of Maple Shade, N. J.; Claude A. Fitch, 18, of Burlington; and Billy Wayne Warden, 19, of Kernersville rfd! They had been living with six other students, not in volved in the robberies, in a house in Southern Pines while attending Sandhills Communi ty College. All three have now left the college without wait ing for official action by au thorities there, it was learned. Southern Pines Police Chief Earl Seawell gave testimony at the hearing regarding the robberies, which he said were solved by the police depart ment in cooperation with the Moore County sheriff’s de partment headed by H. H. Grimm, chief investigator. No total estimate was made as to the amount of property taken but he said it was well over $200, the felony amount, in each case. Only about half the loot was recovered, found in the students’ house. Seven robberies were in volved, Seawell said, of which six were from cars of hotel guests, locks of which were I slipped open in guest parking ; areas in Southern Pines and (Continued on Page 2) RICHARD S. TUFTS Tufts Given Service To Sports Award Richard S. Tufts, chairman of the board of Pinehurst, Inc., who is known internationally for his many contributions to amateur golf, was named Sat urday for the Service to Sports Award given annually by the Atlantic Coast Sports Writers Association. No man has served as chair man of more committees of the United States Golf Asso ciation, of which he was pres ident in 1956 and 1957. He is acknowledged world-wide as an authority on the rules of golf and helped write and ne gotiate; the present code. Development of the Caro- linas Golf Association into one of. the largest district associa tions, with membership of ap proximately 240 clubs and 9,- 000 individuals, is credited to his guidance. He took over as secretary - treasurer of the association in 1933 and served (Continued on Page 2) Firms, Homes Get Prizes For Decorations steed Realty Co., in the commercial division, and the J. W. Causey home at 710 S. Ridge St., are winners of $15 first prizes in the annual Jay cees’ Christmas decorations contest. Placing second in the two categories — commercial and residential—and winning $10 prizes, were Management, Inc., on the old No. 1 highway ac cess road in Pinedene, and the Dante Montesanti home at 345 Country Club Drive. Two honorable mentions were designated in the com mercial division — the Fancy This shop and Sullivan’s Foot gear. Residential honorable men tion went to these homes: A. C. Palmer, 355 N. Ashe; G. W. Bruning, Fairway Drive; C. J. Thorpas, Inverness Road (for the door); and R. E. Irby, 690 Kensington Road. The awards were announced by Charles Bennett and Kes- ter Woody, co-chairman of the contest for the Jaycees. I County Board I Seeks Ambulance Service Plan The Moore County commis sioners Tuesday started work to maintain ambulance service in the county. They named two of their number to see what they could do to keep W. K. Carpenter Jr. of Pinebluff, operator of a private service, in business until a new plan could be put in action. They adopted a motion to ask Dr. Robert S. Myers of Pinehurst to determine what it would take to maintain an ambulance service and to give recommendations to the coun ty commissioners at an early date. The action was taken at the board of county commissioners regular meeting for January in the courthouse at Carthage. This followed receipt of a letter from Carpenter saying that he would have to discon tinue his service February 1 because it was financially im possible for him to continue. Board Chairman John M. Currie of Carthage delegated Commissioners Robert S. Ew ing of Southern Pines and W. S. Taylor of Aberdeen to con fer with Carpenter as soon as possible to see what it would take to keep Carpenter operat ing until a substitute operation could be worked out. Ewing and Taylor planned to talk with Carpenter this week about it. McKeithan Funeral Home of Southern Pines has the coun ty’s only other ambulance ser vice. The other funeral homes discontinued their ambulance services in October 1966 be cause of financial difficulties. Carpenter instituted his at about the time the five funeral homes went out of the ambul ance business. However, reports to the commissioners in previous meetings have said the bulk of the ambulance work has fallen on the county’s four rescue squads, which were or ganized to handle emergencies only. Their constitutions say they cannot charge for their services. Commissioner C. W. Purvis of Robbins said Tuesday, as he has said before, that Car penter’s difficulties are based on a “lack of business” be cause people call on the res cue squads for ambulance ser vices. Rescue squad leaders, on the other hand, say they do not know until they arrive (Continued on Page 2) New Registration Needed For County. Official Reports The Board of Moore County Commissioners was told Tues day a new registration would have to be held and the loose- leaf registration system esta blished before the next pri mary, scheduled lor next May 4. S. C. Riddle Sr. of Carthage, GARDNER TO RUN FOR GOVERNOR Republican Fourth Dis trict Congressman James C. Gardner of Rocky Mount, at a news confer-, ence in Raleigh this morn ing, announced that he would be a candidate for Governor this year. His decision assured a E.epublican primary, as John L. Stickley of Char lotte is a previously an nounced candidate ifor the gubernatorial nomination. Yule Outlook Bullish At Fox Hollow Farm Thomas Morton of Fox Hol low Farm, Young’s Road, got, among other things, a lot of bull for Christmas — about 1 300 pounds of it, to be almost exact. The bull , is a 26-months-old purebred Aberdeen-Angus and was a present from Mrs. Mor ton to her husband. She bought it from Monocacy Farms at Frederick, Md. The gift promptly joined the Fox Hollow Angus herd of one other bull and approximately 60 cows. Smith Baby Is First For 1968 In This County Moore County’s New Year baby was a boy, born at Moore Memorial Hospital at 1:14 pm, Monday, to Mr. and Mrs. James P. Smith of Carthage, Route 2. Weighing five pounds, 10 and a half ounces at birth, he is reported “doing fine.” There are three other children in the Smith family. Runner-up for New Year honors at Moore Memorial was another boy, born at 3:43 pm to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mc- Fadyen of Ellerbe, Route 1. He weighed six pounds, 12 ouhees at birth, is also doing fine and has four brothers and sisters awaiting his arrival at home. chairman of the county board of elections, said this at the commissioners’ regular meet ing for January at the court house in Carthage. The commissioners decided to hold a special meeting by mid-Januaiy on the matter after Commissioner C. W. Pur vis of Robbins said he wanted a week to think about it be fore the board acts one way Or another. The 1967 state act requires counties to convert to the loose-leaf registration system by January 1, 1970, from the old bound-book system. “But January 1, 1970, will be here before the next elec tion after 1968 (primaries and general election),” Riddle said. He said the realization of the significance of this came to him recently as he was re reading the election-law changes enacted by the 1967 General Assembly. Mrs. Estelle Wicker, county auditor, told the commission ers the county would be “in trouble” if it had to call a special referendum in 1969, for example, before converting to the loose-leaf system. Riddle said registration for the May primaries would start March 30. He told the commissioners he would have to know soon whether the loose-leaf registra tion would be made this spring so that he could tell the State Board of Elections Chairman Alexander Brock in time to order the .special stationery, in cluding loose-leaf binders. Riddle said 15,567 people are now registered for voting in the county. He estimated the cost of equipment and supplies at ap proximately $3,800 and of pay for the office work at approx- (Continued on Page 2) Historical Society Purchases Lot On Morganton Rd. Near Shaw House The Moore County Historical Society has purchased valu able property across from the Shaw House, at the intersec tion of S. W. Broad Street and Morganton Road, it was learn ed this week from the presi dent, H. Clifton Blue of Aber deen. He said the directors had felt for some time that modern business was “crowding in too close on the Shaw House,” af fecting the aesthetic value of this restoration project of the society, where a tea room is operated on a seasonal basis, with an old-fashioned garden on the grounds. The sum of $30,000 was paid by the Society for the proper ty, now containing Lane’s used car lot, office and poolroom. An adjoining abandoned ser vice station is not included in the purchase. Several members of the so ciety made substantial contri butions which were added to treasury funds to make the purchase possible. Blue said there are no im mediate plans for use of the lot other than to have it cleared off and made sightly (Continued on Page 2) STARTS SUNDAY Headlines Summarize 1967 Moore Co. News I* Many headlines reported much news in Moore County during 1967—good newSj bad news, joyful news, sad' new.s, with honors for some individu als and disaster or tragedy lor others. In choosing the headlines to follow, from county papers published during the year, an effort has been made to select those summarizing news af fecting many persons, rather than a few. Not listed, for lack of room, are the war deaths, most of the accidental deaths and oth er personal tragedies, and the crimes. No dates are used, but the headline record for each month moves chronologically through each weed’s papers. In summary—1967: JANUARY Moore County commis sioners designate all four banks in county as depositories . . . Moore Memorial Hospital receives $50,000 gift for inten sive care unit . . . Page Sham- burger of Aberdeen becomes first woman to fly new Air Force RF-4 . . . John M. Reeves is new chairman of Pinehurst Community Founda tion. Southern Pines council en dorses optional “liquor-by drink” for possible legislation . . . J. R. Brendell named Area III school principal. . . Sisters of Providence take over ad ministration of St. Joseph Hos pital from Sisters of St. Fran cis. Reynolds Mill area citizens start building home for burn ed-out family. . . Carolina Ho tel opens new Cardinal Ball room and convention facilities. Coach John Williams wins Southern Pines Jaycees’ “Dis tinguished Service Award’ ’. . . Mrs. William C. Walton, Earl G. Harbour are Carthage Jay cees’ “Outstanding Young Edu cator” and “Outstanding Young Farmer”. . . Dr. W. F. Hollister honored at dinner for 20 years’ service as surgeon in Sandhills. FEBRUARY Mrs. Bessie M. Beck resigns as assistant clerk of superior court, is honored for 16 years’ service as assistant and also as clerk. . . Sam H. Poole install ed as State YDC president. . . J. D. Arey, Jr., injured 'when car strikes same tree, fractur ing same leg, as three years be fore. Commissioners request leg islation postponing school board election from April, 1967, to May 1968. . . Emergen cy Civil Defense communica tion system approved for Moore by federal agency. . . Mark Liddell nominated by President for Southern Pines postmastership. Snow blankets Sandhills. . . Troop 223, Southern Pines, wins Storey Cup. . . County ; school offices move to new Administration Building. . . Prison camp escaper nabbed at (Continued on Pg. 5, Sec. 3) Postal Rate Increase Set Increased rates for all class es of mail except parcel post and international mail will go into effect Sunday, January 7, Postmaster Morris Johnson reminded postal customers to day. “Even with the new rates of six cents per ounce for the 'first class mail and 10 cents per ounce for all air mail, postal service is still a real bargain,” Johnson declared, “For six cents, you can send a letter to any of the 50 states, to any,United States territory or possession, to Canada or I Mexico, or to an American serviceman stationed any- I wnei'e m the world.” Johnson pointed out that the new rate for post cards will be five cents and for air mail post cards, eight cents. He said the added cent in the letter rate is a 20 per cent increase compared to a 24 per cent boost in the rates for mailing newspapers and maga zines and a 34 per cent hike for advertising circulars, “oc cupant” mail, and other ma- (Continued on Page 2) POSTHUMOUS AWARD — Mrs. Patricia C. Collier of Southern Pines, center, holds the Purple Heart Citation presented pos thumously with the medal, which she is wearing, to h^r husband, Private First Class James A. Collier, who died of wounds ceived during enemy action the Re public of Vietnam last year. The presenta tion was made at Fort Bragg by Captain R. E. Childs, chief AG Casualty Branch, ^ XVIII Airborne Corps and Fort Bragg. At right is Mrs. Ruby Cai^nter, mother of Mrs. Collier. The PinaJ^fceart Medal re cognizes wounds re(|^^^^^ combat. ,.Arnjy photi THE WEATHER Maximum and minimum temperatures for each day of the past week were recorded as follows at the US Weather Bureau observation station, at WEEB, on Midland Road. Max. Min. December 27 49 28 December 28 .v ,44 35 December 29 ^ 47 26 December 30 48 24 December 31 1 41 29 January 1 9 .... 43.^,. 34 Januai-y '2