Fashions for Spring and Summer-Section C today. tGlendon tand Car^aqc ^ qliSpqi Cameron p)l , . WiAtna lohviev'Vass Jackson •“« ij ««■ «* ^llerbc pifjaKiu|^'’\*'^ LOT Pinebluff is visited by The Pilot photographer.- Page 10-A. Vol. 53-No. 22 52 PAGES Soathern Pines, North Carolina Wednesday, April 4, 1973 52 PAGES Price 10 Cents Moore Given Clean Sweep Second Spot i' ♦ Moore County won second place in the Statewide beautification competition as a result of its Clean Sweep ’72 program. A plaque and certificate were presented to the Moore County coordintor, Fred W. Garrett of Southern Pines, and Walter E. Bolte a member of the com mittee, at the annual meeting of Keep North Carolina Beautiful, Inc., at the Sir Walter Hotel in Raleigh on Monday. Winner of first place among counties was Vance. Neighboring Lee County won third place. Dr. Arthur W. Cooper presented the awards, assisted by John H. Harris, State chairman of the Qean Sweep program. Garrett said a similar effort is planned for this year. Other counties which received certificates were Davidson, Caldwell, Henderson, Robeson and Lincoln. Among the cities that par ticipated with a population of 10,000 or over Fayetteville was the first place winner. Kenan- sville in Duplin County was the (Continued on Page 7-A) AWARD TO MOORE — Fred Garrett (left) and Walter Bolte hold the plaque awarded Moore County on Monday by Keep North Carolina Beautiful, Inc. Moore won second place in the Statewide competition. Education-Heritage Week To be Observed in Moore Moore School Superintendent R.E. Lee has announced Moore County Education Week, to coincide with Heritage Week, April 8-14. “The parents and citizens of Moore County are invited to take advantage this week of all the great things taking place in the 19 schools,” Superintendent Lee said, adding, “You are welcome at any school participating in Heritage Week or Education Week.” Heritage Week in North Carolina has been expanded. Instead of the one-week celebration of the past two years, it will become a two-month long Heritage Festival. The months are March and April, with special emphasis by the schools Chinese Minister Visits; Says Country ‘Booming’ The Nationalist Chinese Republic in Taiwan is now en joying a booming economy and is hopeful of continued friendly relations with America despite the new accord reached with the Communist government on the mainland. This was the view expressed here this past weekend by S.K. Hu, minister to Washington from the National Republic and special assistant to the Am bassador. Mr. and Mrs. Hu were guests of Miss Lena Stewart of Highland Trails, who had known the Chinese emissary since 1960 when she was personnel officer in the U.S. Foreign Aid Mission office in Taiwan. Minister Hu was then a lieutenant general in the Army and Mrs. Hu was Record Rain Floods Area; Dams Saved Raleigh Man Is Charged In LSD Case Sheriff’s officers arrested James Bruce Masterson, 20, of Jones-Franklin Road in Raleigh and charged him on two counts of drug possession early Saturday morning. He is under a $3,000 bond on felony possession of LSD charges, and $500 bond on the misdemeanor charge of marijuana possession. His case will be heard in Carthage District court April 19. Sheriff C.G. Wimberley said the drugs were found in a ’62 Ford owned and operated by Masterson during a routine check on US 1 South of Aberdeen. The young man, said the sheriff, told him he was taking friends to Florida at the time of the arrest. Other young people, both boys and girls, were not charged. The car was con fiscated pending the trial. -I FIGHT FLOOD — The dam at Lakeview was sand bagged Sunday in an effort to keep it from breaking. Deputy Sheriffs Charles Watkins and Don Davis . I..' .-v. !.■■■ inspect the scene above. Water was flowing over the road and the road into Lakeview was closed.—(Photo by Glenn Sides). during the week of April 8-14. A Moore County businessman, Voit Gilmore, has been named State chairman of the Heritage Festival, which is sponsored by: the Cultural Arts Division of the State Department of Public Instruction. Gilmore is a travel executive, land developer, tree farmer, and^ conservationist. He was the country’s first director of the United States Travel Service and has served as mayor of Southern Pines and as a State Senator. His business and political activities are directed from Southern Pines, where Gilmore makes his home. Melvin Good of the State' Department, who will coordinate the project, has invited schools, (Continued on Page 12-A) employed at the Foreign Aid Mission office. Miss Stewart, who returned to her native country upon retirement from the service, entertained the Minister and Mrs. Hu and another Chinese friend, Nancy Chow, at her home on Glenwood Drive Sunday evening. Mrs. Chow is employed by the National Education Association in Washington as a computer expert. Minister Hu spoke to a group of students at Sandhills Community College Monday morning and was impressed with the questions which they asked about the current situation in Taiwan and on mainland China. In speaking of his country. Minister Hu said that his (Continued on Page 12-A) Bank Cites AreaGrowth As Factor An analysis of Southern Pines and the Sandhills area, with several growth factors cited, was presented to the State Banking Commission by the First-Citizens Bank and Trust Company in its application to establish a full service bank here. The application is now awaiting approval from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation before construction is started on an office at the corner of South West Broad Street and Indiana Avenue. In its presentation to the Banking Commission, First- Citizens noted that the over-all economy of North Carolina has been favorably influenced in recent years by the continuation of industrial development and by substantial expansion of recreational facilities and ac tivities in the Southern Pines and the Sandhill area. The bank cited Southern Pines as a dynamic banking market (Continued on Page 12-A) Census Facts The U.S. Bureau of the Census found that, in 1970, the average age of residents of Southern Pines was 70.4 percent higher than the State average. They also found that women in Southern Pines are 6.5 years older than men. The fertility rate in Southern Pines is 10.1 percent higher than the state average. Stoneybrook Committees Are Named With Stoneybrook Race Day less than two weeks away, on Saturday, April 14, the Stoneybrook Hunt Racing Association’s Chairman, William H. Frantz, is announcing the committees and officials who will be responsible for the suc cess of the biggest Stoneybrook Races ever. Frantz is chairman of the Executive Committee under whose over-all supervision the races are put on. Thomas E. Morton is vice-chairman of this (Continued on Page 12-A) Gardens at Peak Clarendon Gardens with its thousands of azaleas and other flowers is open to the public and Francis W. Howe said this week they are “more beautiful than ever.” He said the gardens should be at their peak this coming weekend. Clarendon Gardens, off Linden Road at Pinehurst, are 28 years old. Manager Bud Rainey Interim Dies Here at Age 58 Manager Named Francis F. Rainey, son of an Irish immigrant, a captain of paratroops in World War II and Southern Pines town manager since 1961, died Thursday at St. Joseph’s Hospital after two months’ illness. He would have been 58 years old on Tuesday of this week, AprU 3. His death climaxed a courageous fight against lung cancer, during which for more than a year he had continued working whUe going back and forth to Duke Hospital for treatments, until he entered St. Joseph’son January 27. He was perhaps better known to his townspeople than any other citizen, and perhaps knew the town better than anyone, serving it with intense loyalty and dedication during more than a decade of great growth and change. Memorial services were held Francis F. Rainey Saturday afternoon at Brownson Memorial Presbyterian Church, of vidiich he was a member, conducted by the Rev. William Edwards, assistant pastor. (Continued on Page 12-A) 1300 Campers To Attend Carthage Campvention The National Campers and Hikers of North Carolina will hold their Spring Campvention in Carthage Friday, April 6, through Sunday, April 8, at the Moore County Fair Grounds. This is the first time the event has been held in Moore County. Hosts will be the Moore County Campers Association and Robbins Fun Lovers group. Between 1,300 and 1,400 are expected to be in attendance. There are 43 NCHA Chapters in the State and reservations have been received from 38. Campers are expected to arrive at the fairgrounds on Friday. Special events lined up include square dance and cake-walk (Continued on Page 7-A) Bloodmobile The American Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at the Rescue Squad No. 4 building in Aberdeen on Wednesday, April 11, from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Chapter officials said blood is urgently needed in this area and urged that donors come to the Bloodmobile and give. The Southern Pines Town Council, meeting briefly Thur sday afternoon following the death of Town Manager Bud Rainey earlier that day, ap pointed Mrs. Mildred McDonald as interim manager and finance officer. Town Attorney W. Lament Brown told them that such an appointment was necessary, and should be made immediately, so checks could be signed and the town business carried forward as usual. Mrs. McDonald, assistant manager and town clerk, has been serving as acting manager for the past few weeks. The council also authorized the attorney to draw up a memorial resolution. Mayor Pro Tern Emanuel C. Douglass presided. Deputy Quits Deputy Sheriff James Kearns resigned April 1, Sheriff C.G. Wimberley said Tuesday. No reason was given for the resignation and Kearns has not been replaced. Hearing Scheduled On System Three members of the hard working Moore County water and sewer committee, appointed last summer to develop plans for the proposed county-wide system, get if funded, then construct and operate it, made a progress report to the county com missioners in regular session Monday. They revealed plans for a public meeting to be held at the courthouse at 7:30 p.m. Thiu'- sday, April 19, at which representatives of business, industry and local governments, with all other persons interested or affected, will be given a rundown on the plans so far, and the prospects for completion. Opportunity will be given for questions to be asked, and suggestions or objections to be made. The three-Hoke Pollock and W.P. Davis of Southern Pines, and Haywood Lane of Robbins, with county planner Bob Helms, who has worked with them from the start, said they jnet last week with the engiiiWfi from Charlotte to go over all the data in a preliminary draft. They said they approved the overall con cept, though many details need ironing out and many questions (Continued on Page 7-A) A record rainfall in Southern Pines and surrounding areas caused considerable flooding this past weekend but no major damages. There were fears throughout Sunday of dam breaks, however, and a close watch was kept on the dam at Lakeview and Thagard’s Lake at Whispering Pines. Howard Ulsh, retired Weather Bureau official of Southern Pines who keeps local weather records, said he measured 4.55 inches from Saturday morning to Sunday morning. It was a new 24diour rainfall record for Southern Pines, he said-the previous high being 3.25 inches. Up to Saturday there had been 4.70 inches of rainfall here, with rain falling in measurable quantities for 17 days in March. Heaviest rains came Saturday night, and by Sunday water was pouring over several roads in Moore County. Henry Jordan, Division Engineer for the State Highway Department, said that at Lakeview water started pouring over the road which crosses the dam to the big lake. Operators (Continued on Page 12-A) Index Book page-2-B Editorials-l-B Fashions-l-8-C Obits-7-A Pinebluff Pictures-lO-A Pinehurst-l-2-3-D School Pictures-9-B Social News-l-6-A Want Ads-8-12-D Catholic Church Here To be Torn Down Soon St. Anthony’s Catholic Church here will be torn down im mediately, by authorization of the Bishop, Father Edward J. Waters, pastor, told the parishioners Sunday. The announcement was made at two masses which, he said, would be the last held in the little church building, a holdover from the small village Southern Pines used to be about 1890. The church has a modest building fund, accumulated over several years, but not nearly enough for a new church, and no new building is foreseen for the near future. Instead, the auditorium of St. Anthony’s School near by, which was closed last year, is being prepared for use as a church. It has been so used from time to time during winter seasons, when crowds overflowed the small church building. THE PILOT LIGHT Two Brothers Killed in Wreck Of Auto on Rain-Slick Road regained consciousness, died about 6 a.m. while being carried to N.C. Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill. A third boy in the car, Roger Taylor, remained in Moore Memorial with serious injuries, including a broken leg and facial injuries. (Continued on Page 12-A) Two teen-aged brothers were fatally injured Saturday night in a one-car accident, which took place in pouring rain on the Carthage-Vass Road, about a half-mile east of Matthews Crossroads. Coroner A.B. Parker said the car apparently went out of control when it hit water from a small branch flooding across the road. Steven Wayne Bibey, 15, a Union Pines High School fresh man, was dead on arrival at Moore Memorial Hospital, where his brother, Pfc. Ronald Lee Bibey, 18, was admitted in critical condition. The older Ivother, who never II T] REVENUE—Within the next two or three weeks Revenue Commissioner Andy Jones is expected to let the members of the General Assembly know that an extra $50 million can be an ticipated above current revenue estimated. The announcement will come while the 39 members of the joint appropriations subcommittee is putting the finishing touches on the annual budget. It is this subcommittee which wUl really prepare the budget and once its work is done the General Assembly will be near ad journment. The joint appropriations subcommittee is the most in fluential group in the Legislature, and among those named to the body last week was Rep. T. Clyde Auman of Moore. Rep. Auman said this past weekend that a mid-May ad journment is still expected. MANSION—The Holshouser administration is making a head charge for participants in social and promotional functions at the Governor’s Mansion. One arts group gathering at the Mansion the coming week is being charged 25 cents per head. Many organizations seek th* use of the Mansion to launch membership drives or to .promote special causes. They are all worthwhile but they do eat into the budget set aside for operation of the Governor’s Mansion. The charge being made by Governor and Mrs. Holshouser is obviously being made so that they won’t go into the red. But as far as anyone could learn this is the first time a head charge has been made at the Mansion. COURT—Governor Hols- (Continued on Page 12-A) mj .A * * ^ DEATH CAR — This is the wrecked car in which two teen-aged brothers—Steven Wayne Bibey and Pfc. Ronald Lee Bibey-were killed on the Vass-Carthage road Saturday night.-(Photo by Glenn Sides).