Q A yield of 158 bushels per acre has won the county corn contest. Details, Page 1, Section 3. IGIcncion andor qrcond / Mle Opqk Cameron p} JaAi plorbc uthei :<view*VaS& Sties' blu< erdeen LOT More photos and features about the recent ice storm appear on Page 5 of this section. VOL. 48 — No. 10 TWENTY PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1968 TWENTY PAGES PRICE: 10 CENTS DR. RAYMOND A. STONE Dr, Stone ToRunFor State Post Dr. Raymond A. Stone, pres ident of Sandhills Community College here, told The Pilot this morning that he has call ed a news conference for 10 am tomorrow (Thursday) at the Hotel Sir Walter in Ra leigh, to announce his candi dacy for State Superintendent of Public Instruction. He plans to seek the Demo cratic nomination for the elec tive office in the May primary this year, and, if nominated, tn en+'^r th" November elec tion. Dr. Charles F. Carroll, who has held the post since 1952, recently announced his retirement after completing his present term at the end of this year. Dr. Stone said he would be pleased to have as many of his Moore County friends as pos sible attend the announcement news conference in Raleigh to morrow. He was working today on his formal statement and it was not yet ready for release before The Pilot went to press this (Wednesday) afternoon. Dr. Stone is the first presi- (Continued on Page 2) Caunders First Democrat To File For State Senate William P. (Bill) Saunders of Southern Pines became the first Democrat to file for the State Senate in the 19th dis trict as he paid his fee last week at the Moore County Courthouse in Carthage. Saunders is running for one of the two Senate seats in the senatorial district composed of Davidson, Montgomery, Moore, Richmond and Scot land counties. He filed for seat number one in the district as he paid the $18 fee. He had announced several weeks ago that he would be a candidate. He gave as one reason for the early filing, “I want to have plenty of time to see as many voters in the district as I can. This is a big district with a lot of people and I would like personally to see all of them.” Saunders said he also looks forward to a vigorous cam paign, both in the primary and general election. “This is a crucial time and the people expect every candidate to make himself known about the issues and how he stands. I intend to do just that with (Continued on Page 2) COMMITTEE SET County-Wide United Fund To Be Formed In a meeting attended by about 50 persons, at Holiday Inn here Tuesday night, there was unanimous agreement to proceed with organization of a county-wide United Fund. A steering committee of 12 was named to carry out this plan. Such an organization would coordinate and consolidate an estimated 20 to 25 charitable fund campaigns operating in the area, with an expected four of five drives not partici pating because of organization regulations or other reasons. Present to answer questions about United Fund operations was Dean Brady of Raleigh, representing Carolinas United of Charlotte, an organization working with such funds in the two Carolinas. W. H. Gentry, Jr., president of the Sandhills Area Cham- (Continued on Page 2) /ce, Sleet Storm Causes Fast Damage In Sandhills Area; Lack Of Heat, Light Forces Hundreds To Evacuate Homes 'V-l / m FRIDAY NIGHT Pancake Benefit Supper Slated The Interact Club at East Southern Pines High School will put on a pancake supper open to the public (“all yo” j can eat,” for $1), from 5 to 7 pm, Friday, January 19, in the school cafeteria. The supper will precede the school’s basketball games with East Montgomery High School, in the nearby gym. Interact is a boys’ student group sponsored by the South ern Pines Rotary Club and the school. Proceeds of the supper will be used to help support an orphan child in a friendly foreign nation, in line with a Rotary International program. trV Open Meet Set To Talk No. 1 Highway Saf ety The program at the 12:12 Club meeting in Aberdeen for Monday, January 22, will be on Highway 1 safety, between Aberdeen and Southern Pines. Cliff Blue of Aberdeen has announced that James O. Litchford, State Highway traf fic engineer, Robert J. Dodge, area traffic engineer, and Roy Williams, local Division traffic engineer, will be present to discuss the subject with inter ested citizens at 12:12 p.m. There will be the usual “dutch luncheon at Horne’s, All interested in the matter are invited to attend, particu larly the people who have business establishments on the highway. GERALD F. JACKSON Jackson Named Assistant V-P At Local Bank The election of Gerald F. Jackson as an assistant vice president of Southern National Bank at Southern Pines has been announced by Hector MacLean, Southern National’s president, from the bank’s headquarters in Lumberton. Mr.. Jackson, 34 years old, joined Southern National Bank as a management trainee in (Continued on Page 2) gliliiiiiiiliiilpiip Looking south on S. E. Broad St. To'wn hall to left; railroad, right Emergency Shelter Aids Storm Victims More than 100 men, women and children forced out of their homes by the cutting off of heat through power failures during last week’s storm found refuge and hot food from Thursday night through Sat urday night at Moore County Chapter American Red Cross establishments. John Buchholz of Southern Pines, the chapter’s disaster committee chairman who also is commander of the John Boyd Post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, arranged for setting up the shelter and feeding station first at the VFW home on Broad Street Thursday night. He said Tuesday there was no way of telling how many volunteers helped with the (Continued on Page 2) Local Soldier Saves Vietnam Boy's Life SP-4 Charlie White has been honored in Vietnam, where he is serving with the US Army, for saving a Vietnamese boy by killing a snake threatening the boy’s life. The snake was nine feet, five inches long. The incident was reported to The Pilot by members of White’s family here. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. O. D. White, 468 S. Henley St., and attended West Southern Pines High School. He entered the Army in New York City in 1966. The exact nature of the hon or conferred on White was not reported to The Pilot. PINEHURST HIT HARD BY STORM storm damage and per sonal hardships were ex tensive in Pinehurst, as well as in Southern Pines and ether parts of Moore County. A photo from Pinehurst and a detailed report on what happened there are on ‘'The Pine hurst Page” in today's P.lot. New Civil Defense Unit Aided Area The new government-aided Moore County Civil Defense communications system went into initial operation in time to help the area in last week’s storm. A. M. Koster of Southern' Pines, county CD director, said the auxiliary generator powering the new communica tions base in the basement of the Municipal Center kept the Police Departmenft radio equipment operating and the lights on in that area of the town hall after power failed because of the storm. He said William Gantt of (Continued on Page 2) AWARD POSTPONED The annual Bosses’ Night Banquet of the Southern Pines Jaycees, at which the Disting uished Service Award was to have been made to a local young man, was cancelled be cause of the ice storm. Satur day, and had not yet been re scheduled, a spokesman for the organization said this week. : .- - •' Three Drown In Moore Co. Traffic Mishaps Three people lost their lives this week in motor vehicle ac cidents on ice left by last v/eek’s storms. A Montgomery County woman—Mrs. Lorene Hamil ton Stutts, 32, of Candor, Route 2, drowned about 2:45 pm Tuesday when her pickup truck skidded off a bridge near Samarcand into Drown ing Creek on the county line. She was en route to her job in Aberdeen at the time. A Moore County dairy farm er and his 14-year-old son drowned about 10 am Mon day when the farm tractor they were riding skidded off the edge of a pond dam anc plunged into about 3 Vz tee* of water in the pond. The victims were John Harold Purvis, 41, and Eddie Harold Purvis, Moore County Coroner W. K. Carpenter Sr. reported. The coroner said the acci dent happened on the Purvis farm about six miles north of Robbins off N. C. 22. He said both victims were pinned under the tractor in the water. The elder Purvis, he said, managed to get hi' head above the water and cal led for help, but apparently weakened from the intense cold and slipped under again The coroner said Purvis’s wife, Cora Hussey Purvis, and Purvis’s brother, Gilbert Pur vis of Robbins, Route 1, who lives nearby, ran to the pond (Continued on Page 2) lii f’-' IWi S. May Si. between Mass. & New York Aves. High school, right Anybody Find Lineman’s Tools? Somewhere along or near E Massachusetts Ave., between May St. and the east end of the street’s extension, outside the town limits, a set of elec trical lineman’s tools, and the belt in which they are carried was lost during the ice storm emergency. A. R. Tucker, CP&L local manager, said the tools were laid down at one time in the hectic work to restore power and could not be located later, bv the South Carolina lineman who lost them. Anybody who finds the tools or knows what might have be come of them is asked to call 692-2012 or 692-2052. STORM PHOTOS on this page and on other pages of today's Pilot are by Emerson Humphrey, Southern Pines photog rapher, unless otherwise indicated. ' Living was virtually back to normal today (Wednesday) for Moore County people after the painful, uphill climb from the effects of last week’s ice I storms. I The effects of the storms took at least three lives this week in traffic accicents on still-icy pavements. One home in Southern Pines was gutted by fire Friday during the storm — the home of Hubert Watson at 255 Valley Road— while the family was out. Southern Pines Volunteer Fire Department estimated the loss at $15,006. The fire apparently was caused by a short circuit in wiring and struck, ironical ly, after power had been re stored to the home, one of hundreds left without heat and light intermittently since last Wednesday. Elsewhere, there were many traffic accidents on the icy streets and roads but few serious injuries. However, many pedestrians were injur ed in falls on ice. Fifty-six people were treated at Moore Memorial Hospital between the night of January 9 and yester day afternoon. Twenty were injured last Wednesday, after the fresh ice storm struck. Apparently none of the injur ies were serious. They includ ed fractures to arms and wrists. The county’s schools, closed since early Wednesday after noon reopened this morning. Sandhills Community College’s classes started again Monday. Meanwhile, telephone and power services were back vir tually to normal today, except in scattered cases. Above - freezing tempera tures earljt in the week permit ted Carolina Power and Light Co. and United Telephone Co. crews to speed their work of restoring the last of the strick en customers to normal. A. Reynold Tucker, Southern Pines district manager for CP&L, said the “cleanup” was under way Tuesday and the vast majority of the approxi mately 9,500 Moore County customers were receiving nor mal service by then. DVring the storms of Wed nesday, Thursday and Friday, approximately 50 per cent of the customers —- homes and businesses — were without power at one time or another for several hours, he said. Fred Teeter, speaking for (Continued on Page 2) Police Provided Rides For More Than 100 People At least 31 accidents — all minor—happened in Southern Pines last week because of the ice storms, Police Chief Earl Seawell reported. He said they produced no serious injuries. He said six occurred in 20 minutes the night of January 9,. and the rest from later that night through Sunday night. With traffic at a standstill or safe crawl, police kept busy much of the time transporting stranded people from their heatless homes to motels, to friends’ homes and to essential jobs, he said. Seawell said police cruisers transported more than 100 people on such missions. t . Icy wires down on N. E. Broad St. Two poles fell in next block. (Dove photo) Disaster Relief Sought For Moore; Leaders Confer On Storm Damages Federal financial help in paying for public and private property damages caused by the storms of last week in Moore County is being sought. Moore County state and local government and business leaders at a meeting Sunday drew up plans to apply for disaster status for the storm- damaged areas. State Sen. Voit Gilmore of Southern Pines talked by telephone with Gov. Dan K. Moore during the meeting about the proposal. The result was that A. M. Koster of Southern Pines, county Civil Defense Director, and others went to work Mon day gathering rough estimates from businesses and public agencies of damages to pro perty. The information will be turned over to the state Civil Defense office. The state agency is compiling data for areas throughout the state to give to Gov. Moore, who, in turn, will present it to Presi dent Johnson. The President will turn it over to the proper agency for action. It was Sen. Gilmore who initiated the emergency ac tions leading to the move. He invited key people in public agencies and private businesses and organizations working directly on different fronts of the storm emergency to meet in the Municipal Cen- (Continued on Page 2) MANY PERSONS GAVE HELP Hospitals Weather Storm Safely Patients at Moore Memorial urn kept hot coffee on hand. and St. Joseph of the Pines hospitals felt few effects of the storms of last week, because of the.extra efforts of employees and many volunteers. St. Joseph’s even opened its fourth-floor wing to provide temporary rooms for 14 people driven from their homes by the loss of heat from power failures. iSister Mary Patricius, St. Joseph’s administrator, said cots were put on the fourth floor. The heat and lights were off temporarily, she said, and the auxiliary generator failed, but cooking is done on a gas-fuel ed stove, so the patients miss ed no meals. She said a steam ii 4 mm f Cheer Up! Springes Coming! Shoots from Spring bulbs pushing up through ice and sleet promise better times to come. Their vigorous with standing of the past weelf’s buffeting by weather symbo lizes the way people of tf .is area met the storm emergen cy. (Pilot photo) The loss of power brought some inconvenience in that travel to the floors had to be done by foot up the stairs, since the elevators were not operating. Telephone service was off from midnight Wednesday un til 9 am Thursday. The telephone lines went dead about midnight Wednes day but service was restored at 9 am Thursday. Power was off from 7 pm to 10 pm Wed nesday and from midnight till 9 am Thursday. Approximately 80 people were taken care of in the hos pital during the period. Members of the staff, Sister Patricius said, worked over time and in many capacities during the emergencies, and many people served as volun teers to help the hospital. She expressed the gratitude of the hospital “to all the peo ple who came to assist the sis ters in the emergency.” ■Sister Patricius said she re ceived letters from home in Massachusetts during that period. At the time, her home community was experiencing bitter cold weather. The letters said she was “so (Continued on Page 2) 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. January 10 27 13 January 11 not available January 12 not available January 13 43 22 January 14 31 27 January 15 39 14 January 16 46 18

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