TODAY'S PRESS RUN 4.200 TODAY'S PRESS RUN 4.200 VOL. 49 — No. 2 TWENTY-FOUR PAGES , SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1968 TWENTY-FOUR PAGES PRICE: 10 CENTS 2 Receive Sentences For Manslaughter; 3 Tried In 'Pot' Case Two defendants, indicted for issued a?ainst a friend of his, murder in separate cases, Titus Douglas, and that when pleaded guilty last week in he pounded on her door that Moore superior court in Car thage to involuntary man slaughter, which the State ac cepted. They drew prison sen tences Friday. Mrs. Irene Brown Fairley, 49, was sentenced by Judge Thomas W. Seay, Jr., of Salis bury, presiding, to serve not less than three nor more than five years in the Women’s Di vision of State Prison for the rifle slaying of Roger John son, 55, an Aberdeen town employee, at her home in the Berkley section, September 13. Mrs. Fairley said Johnson night and tried to get in, she feared for her life and shot him through a window. She said she did not mean to kill him, and fired at his feet Struck in the thigh, he fell and bled to death in her yard. Clyde Currie, 26, drew nine to 10 years for the fatal stab bing of his first cousin Leroy Wooten, during a fight at Taylortown, near Pinehurst, August 26. There was testi mony that both men had been drinking. Gets 5 to 7 Years Howard C. Sheffield of Car- ROBBINS, RT. 2 had assaulted and threatened thage was sentenced to five her in an effort to get her to' seven years on conviction, take up a warrant she had following a jury trial, of as sault with intent to commit rape on his 16-year-old daugh ter. Earlier in the court term, Sheffield had drawn 18 to 24 months for assault with dead ly weapon (by pointing a pistol) on a neighbor, Gurney Martin, from whom the girl had sought protection. Testi- (Continued on Page 6, Sec. 2) Fatal Shooting Of Boy, 9, Is Ruled Accident Funeral services for James Ray Stewart, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Palmer Stewart, Jr., of Robbins, Route 2, were helu Saturday afternoon at Swan Station Baptist Church in Lee Coun ty. Sunday would have been his tenth birthday. He was killed Thursday afternoon in a shooting inci dent, ruled accidental by Moore County Coroner W. K. Carpenter, which occurred in a field near his home. The coroner said the child, with two brothers, David, 12, and Steve, 11, were target shooting with a bolt-action .22 rifle shortly after they had arrived home from school. After shooting holes in a tin can and a plastic bottle, the boys decided to “chunk rocks” at their target. One of the brothers put the gun down and as he did so, it went off. The bullet pierced James Ray’s face at the nosetip and pene trated the brain, killing him instantly, the coroner report ed. A sister, Teresa, was in the (Continued on Page 2) DONALD GRANT Highland Scot To Be Speaker Here Nov. 27 Donald Grant, a Highland Scot who is an honors gradu ate of Edinburgh University and a traveller all his life, will be the guest speaker at Moore County Historical So ciety meeting, Wednesday, November 27 at 7:30 p.m., an nounces Lawrence M. Johnson of Aberdeen, program chair man. Mrs. Ernest L. Ives who has recently returned to the fami ly’s Paint Hill Farm between Southern Pines and Aberdeen, (Continued on Page 6) C. Montesanti Killed When Hit By Car In N. J. Constantino F. Montesanti, 57, a native of Southern Pines and a brother of four local residents, died about 4 am today (Wednesday) at Me- tuchen, N. J., of injuries re ceived when he was struck by a car there about midnight last night. The information came to family members here this morning from his wife at Me- tuchen where he had made his home for the past 15 years. Details were not available this morning and funeral ar rangements were not known here, although funeral and burial will be in New Jersey. According to information received here, Mr. Montesanti was struck by a car in the (Continued on Page 6) W. O. Moss, Joint MFH, Moore County Hounds, In Action-Packed Scene From A Former Season's Hunting Here (Humphrey Photo) First Hunt: Thanksgiving Day The traditional opening meet of the Moore County Hounds will again take place next week On Thanksgiving Day — Thursday, November 28. The joint masters, William O. Moss and Richard D. Webb, have announced that drag hounds will meet at 10 am on the Young Farm, out Youngs Road, opposite the T. E. Mor ton place. The meet will be planned so that as much of the hunt as possible can be observed by spectators who always enjoy turning out on opening day. Mrs. “Ginny” Moss, wife of the joint master and MCH secretary, said this week that record-breaking interest and participation are expected dur ing the coming season. The usual schedule of Tues day and Thursday morning meets for fox hounds will be followed and fox or drag hounds will meet Saturday rriornings at the discretion of the masters. Persons invited to hunt are asked to check with the secre tary as to whether the size of the field will permit guests— a new regulation this year. Also, Mrs. Moss said, juniors are welcome but will be re quired to ride with a designa ted field master. IN ABERDEEN THURSDAY. FRIDAY Blood Program Donors Needed Blood donors are urgently needed at two collections to be made this week in Aber deen, reports Col. John Dibb, chairman of the Moore Coun ty Red Cross Blood Program through which blood of all types is supplied free of charge to both the hospitals in this county. A bloodmobile from the Red Cross center in Charlotte, which serves the hospitals, will be at the Gulistan plant Thursday, and at the First Baptist Church from 9 am to 2:30 pm on Friday. Persons from anywhere in the county may give blood at either of the collections. Colonel Dibb said last week that blood donations were running some 166 pints short of the amount used by the hospitals during July, August and September, the first three months of the program’s ac- from noon to 5:30 pm on counting year. School Study Group Organizing The executive committee of a citizens’ group which will study uses of the elementary schools of Area HI (Southern Pines, Pinehurst, Aberdeen and West End) following con solidation of seven high schools next September, last week drafted a letter to go to some 200 Area III residents pro posed by their school advisory councils, from which the group will be formed and divided in to subcommittees to study various aspects. The first general meeting was set for Tuesday, Decem ber 3, at 7:30 p.m. at Pine-j crest. I I Presiding was Micajah R. Wyatt of Pinehurst, chairman. Others attending were J. Mil- ton Sledge, West Southern Pines, vice-chairman; Mrs. Norris L. Hodgkins, Jr., South ern Pines, secretary, and Mrs. L. M. Johnson, Aberdeen. Un able to attend was the fifth member, Allen McDonald of West End. Present to provide informa tion were Moore Supt. Robert E. Lee and Pinecrest princi pal J. R. Brendell. Among subjects to be studi ed, with recommendations to be made by January 7, are the organizational structure of the feeder elementary schools and uses of the physical plants in relation to it; necessary reno vation of buildings, and funds available, or to become avail able; the “middle school” con cept as opposed to the junior high school; problems of full integration and the prevailing guidelines under which feder al approval must be gained; possible revision of attendance areas to make the best use of classroom space; and other re lated matters. Lang Will Brief New AF Leaders In Washington John A. Lang, Jr., 58, a Car thage native who has had a long career in federal govern ment administrative posts, was in the news spotlight this week as the man who will greet and brief the Nixon ad ministration’s new secretary of the Air Force and other high-ranking Air Force per sonnel when they move into the Pentagon in Washington. An Air Force Reserve ma jor general, Lang is now ad ministrative assistant to Ah' Force Secretary Harold Brown who has named him “continu ity man” to take the incom ing officials on a tour of major Air Force commands and otherwise brief them on their duties. Later, he will assume di rection Of the staff of 500 working under civilian lead ership in the department. Lang maintains his ties with Moore County and North Carolina and visits and speaks here occasionally, He was a speaker in Aberdeen at the (Continued on Page 6) WED.. NOV. 217 NOV. 17-23 OBSERVANCE Children Invited To New County Library For ‘Book Week’ Events November 17-23 is Chil dren’s Book Week, marked for the 49th year by public librar ies and school libraries across America. Children’s Book Week 1968 has as its theme, “Go Places with Books!” All pre-school children in Jaycee Turkey Shoot Slated Here Friday The annual Thanksgiving “turkey shoot” sponsored by the Southern Pines Jaycees will take place Friday of this week, starting at noon and running through the after noon. The location will be the Little League ball park on Morganton Road, opposite the National Guard Armory. Proceeds of the event will be used by the Jaycees for civic projects. Thanksgiving Service Slated The Annual Southern Pines Community Thanksgiving Ser vice will be held Wednesday, November 27, at 8 pm at The United Church of Christ whjch is located at the corner of North Bennett St. and W. New Hampshire Ave. The Rev. Phillip Deese, pas tor of Our Saviour Lutheran Moore’ County are invited to church, will preach on the go to the new Moore County I subject, “The Substantial Library at Carthage for a Thanksgiving.” Other minist- special Book Week celebra-1 gj-s participating in the Service New Court Will Open In Moore December 3 The new district court, sup planting the three recorder’s courts which have been ope rating in Moore County, will open at Carthage Tuesday morning, December 3, and continue with daily sessions that week, and into the next if necessary, to dispose of all pending cases. This information came this week to Charles McLeod, clerk of court, from F. Fetzer Mills of Wadesboro, who will be chief district judge. Mills, along with A. A. Webb and Walter M. Lam- pley of Rockingham and Ed ward E. Crutchfield of Albe marle, will be sworn in as judges of the 20th Judicial District, Monday, December 2, by Judge F. Don Phillips at Rockingham. Which judge will preside at Carthage for the opening session has not yet been announced. Moore is one of 61 counties in 19 judicial districts in which the district court division of the' North Carolina General Court of Justice will be esta blished on that date, following 22 in which it took over on the first Monday in December, 1966. The remaining 17 coun ties are expected to come un der the system on the same date of 1970, which will mean the uniform lower court sys tem will be operating from Murphy to Manteo. The two upper levels have been in effect since January, 1967 — the appellate, com posed of the State Supreme Court and the new Court of Appeals, and the superior courts, which continue largely unchanged but with some changes ahead To Change Patterns Hailed widely as bringing the administration of Justice out of the “horse and buggy” era — especially in the lower courts, which have become a patchwork through the years —the new system will change some familiar patterns. Penalties for specific of fenses, the court costs and re cord-keeping will be uniform in all district courts, which will have jurisdiction as be fore over misdemeanor cases, also civil cases up to $5,000. Juries will be provided for civil, but not criminal, trials. Basic court costs will be $15, of which $2 will go to the (Continued on Page 6) ON DECEMBER 2, the office of Charles McLeod, clerk of Moore County Superior Court, will become part of the Gen eral Court of Justice of North Carolina, making Mr. McLeod clerk of all trial courts in the county, their fiscal and record keeping agent. Next week. The Pilot will have a detailed re port on how his office will operate and what the changes will mean to him and his staff. On Page 4, Section 3, of today's Pilot, there’s a story on physical changes the new court sys tem has brought to the clerk’s office, as well as other altera tions and renovations throughout the courthouse in Carthage. 3 Recorder's Courts To Cease Operations The Southern Pines and Aberdeen Recorder’s Courts are winding up their affairs this week, and Moore County Recorder’s Court at Carthage will do the same next week, before going out of business effective Monday, December 2. On that date, the new dis trict court system of the North Carolina General Court of Justice will be established in Moore and 60 other counties in 19 judicial districts. Moore is a part of the 20th district, which also includes Anson, OLD NAME WITH NEW MEANING Magistrates To Replace JP's The justice of the peace is are about eight “JP’s” now on his way out. As of Mon day, December 2, when the district court system becomes operational here, he will ex ist no more in Moore County. His place, or places—there tion, Friday, November 22, at 10 am. There will be songs and stories. School children in the first through fifth grades are in vited to go to the County Library at 4 pm Friday, for the showing of twp films about horses, borrowed from the State Library. Miss Pamela Carnes, youth services Librarian, will tell a story about a horse “and maybe an other story about another way of travelling,” an announce ment says. On display this week are “some of the Moore County Library’s prettiest picture books,” old favorites and others. Available also are lists of picture books, children’s fic tion, and children’s non-fiction (Continued on Page 6) are: Martin Caldwell, rector of Emmanuel Episcopal Church; John Stone, pastor of First Baptist Church; James Dellert, pastor of Brownson Memorial Presbyterian Church; and John Harrison, pastor of The United Church of Christ. The offering taken at this service will be sent to the American Bible Society, to be used to increase distribution of Bibles everywhere. GIORGIO CIOMPI Violinist LOREN WITHERS Pianist MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25 Concert By Duo Set The Sandhills Music As- Prix du Conservatoire in Shareholders Of SNB Vote Reorganizatiou Shareholders of Southern National Bank of North Car olina have approved a propos al to reorganize as a one-bank holding company to be known as Southern National Corpora tion. The approval took place' at a special shareholders’ meet ing On November 12 at the bank’s headquarters in Lum- berton. Before the reorganiza tion can become effective, it must be approved by the In ternal Revenue Service and the U. S. Comptroller of the Currency. Southern National has an office in Southern Pines and numerous sharholders through out Moore County. Southern National Bank would become a wholly owned subsidiary of the Southern National Corporation through reorganization as a holding company. Present shareholders will become shareholders in the Southern National Corpor ation through a one for one stock exchange. Southern Na tional Corporation will own j all of Southern National Bank’s stock except the direc tors’ qualifying shares. Hector MacLean of Lum- berton, president of the bank, said the proposal to reorganize “would give Southern National the necessary flexibility to re spond to our customers’ chang ing financial requirements.” in the county—will be taken by the magistrate, an old name which has now been re vived with new meaning. The new magistrate will be an officer of the district court, with State-paid salary rang ing from $1,200 per year for part-time work, to $6,000 per year, fulltime, depending on the business he is expected to do, and the time it will take. He will be available, at times to be designated, by the Chief District Judge, in an office, with hearing room, provided by the county at the county seat, or by a munici pality where an additional seat of court may be held. In Moore, that means Carthage and Southern Pines. The General Assembly set four magistrates as the mini- num for Moore County, five as the maximum, and the new system will start off with four, all on full-time duty. As reported by The Pilot Novem ber 6, these have been ap pointed and announced as fol- ows by Chief District Judge F. Fetzer Mills: R. G. Fry, Jr., and G. K. Suggs, who will share an office now be ing prepared in the court house basement; J. B. Ed- (Continued on Page 6) Union, Richmond and Stan ly- Actually, the new system will not start functioning here until Tuesday, Decem ber 3, after the four district judges are sworn in Decem ber 2 by Emergency Judge F. Don Phillips at Rockingham. In the meantime, because of next week’s Thanksgiving holiday, the Southern Pines Recorder’s Court held its final session today (Wednesday). An effort had been made to set this aside as a “clean-up” lay but a number of new cases had to be heard and Judge W. H. Fullenwider and Solicitor H. C. Broughton put in a full day of work. At Aberdeen, Judge J. G. Farrell and Solicitor Robert N. Page HI have two or three new cases scheduled for their Friday morning session but plan to devote most of the session to cleaning up. In Moore Recorder’s Court at Carthage, Judge J. Vance Rowe and Solicitor W. Lament Brown—who held a special clean-up session No vember 7—plan to work next (Continued on Page 6) Lowder Named As Prosecutor Of New Courts Carroll R. Lowder, 36, of Wingate, now serving as judge of Union County Recorder’s Court, has been appointed prosecutor for the new 20th District court by Resident Superior Court Judge John D. McConnell of Southern Pines. He will take office Decem ber 2, when the State court will be established in the dis trict composed of Moore, An son, Union, Richmond and Stanly counties. His present Union County judgeship will terminate at that time. He will be sworn in for a (Continued on Page 6) DIRECTORS ELECT OFFICERS $146.50 COLLECTED The Halloween collection made by young people from church groups in Southern Pines, for the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) amounted to $146.50, reports the Rev. Herman Winbeery, pastor of the Southern Pines United Methodist Churcl sociation will present as its second concert in this season’s series. The Ciompi - Withers Duo from Duke University, to be7 held on Monday, Novem ber 25, at Weaver Auditorium at 8:30 pm, featuring Ciorgio Ciompi, violinist, and Loren Withers, pianist. Giorgio Ciompi joined the Duke University music facul ty in 1964 as visiting artist vio linist. He was born in Flor ence, Italy, and received the Paris, studying under Bouch- erit. He later did advanced work under George Enesco and Dir an Alexanian. He taught at the Conservatorio Benedetto Marcello in Venice under its director, Malipiero. Before coming to the United States in 1948, for a concert tour and Carnegie Hall debut, Mr. Ciompi concertized in Europe. He joined the NBC orches- (Cpntinued on Page 6) Humane Society Plans To Renew County Animal Control Proposal PTA Show, 'Wedding' To Be Given Nov. 26 A variety show and “wom anless wedding” to be staged by the East Southern Pines Parent - Teacher Association, for benefit of school pro jects, will take place in Weaver Auditorium, Tuesday, November 26, at 8 pm. At the November PTA meeting Monday night, W. La- mont Brown, local attorney and solicitor of Moore County Recorder’s Court, spoke on teenage drinking. A question and answer period followed. (Editorial, Page 2, Section 2) The Board of Directors of the Humane Society of Moore '”ouniv, at a meeting in the Campbell House last week, elected the following officers for the year ending September 30, 1969: chairman of the Board, Miss Betty Dumaine; president, Raymond E. North; vice-presidents, Mrs. James Buchanan, Mrs. Colin Smith and Mrs. Robert D. W. Vroom; secretary-treasurer, William B. Crews, Jr.; and general coun sel, James R. Van Camp. The board also discussed at length the status of its pro posal to the county commissi oners to assume under com pensatory contract the entire responsibility for animal con trol work. Mr. North stated that the proposal was first made to the commissioners in March, 1967, but there has not yet been any final action taken. An act of the General As sembly, Mr. North pointed out, specifically grants power to the commissioners to enter in to a contract with “HUSOM.” Since the work of the County dog warden has not been ef fectively performed, he said, the board believes the delay on (Continued on Page 6) THE WEATHER Maximum and minimun 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. November 13 61 29 November 14 62 24 November 15 69 35 November 16 72 48 November 17 74 54 November 18 67 58 November 19 66 37