Index Books, 2-B; Church Calendar, 3-B; Classified Ads, 7-11-C; Editorials, 1-B; Entertainment, 4-5-C; Obituaries, 7-A; Pinehurst News, 1-2-C; Social News, 2-6-A; Sports, 7-8-A. LOT Reviews Of the drama, “The House in the Horseshoe” by Sam Ragan, page 4-C, and Valerie Nicholson, page 11-A are given in this issue. Vol. 56, Number 37 40 Pages Southern Pines, North Carolina Wednesday, July 14, 1976 40 Pages Price 10 Cents Tobacco Sales Set Tobacco will be unloaded Friday as Carthage and Aber deen markets begin pr parations for the first tobacco auction sales of the season. Middle Belt tobacco sales wUl begin Tuesday, July 20 and continue until around the first of November. Warehouses in both Aberdeen and Carthage are preparing to open. Fentress Phillips of Planter’s on the Raeford Road at Aber deen expects prices to be around 95 to 96 cents a hundred pounds on the opening day of the sale, about five cents above last year’s first day. There is a “better crop” than there was last year, he said yesterday. Prices are expected to in crease after opening day, he continued. His warehouse will hold some 250 piles, which varies from five to fifty sheets per grower. The warehouse has hired 24 people who have already cleaned up the place for the Friday unloading looking toward Tuesday opening sale. Walter Fields, of the Agricultural Stabilization Board said that recent rains had not (Continued on Page 12-A) Democrats Caucus Set On July 24 The four Democratic can didates for Governor and all of the party’s candidates for Council of State offices are scheduled to be in Pinehurst on Saturday, July 24. Their appearance will be before the annual meeting of the North State Caucus, which was formed following the 1972 general election for the sole purpose of promoting a unified Democratic party. Each of the candidates will make a presentation to the Caucus and will be expected to pledge their support to the party’s nominee for the position they seek and to the Democratic ticket. The meeting will be held at the Pinehurst Hotel, beginning at 2:30 p.m., when the Democratic candidates for the Council of State offices will make their (Continued on Page 12-A) "O P'. Pinehurst To Get New Telephones patrons preceding the opening of the play on the thfdrnlin of grounds of the State Historic Site.—(Photo by Carla the drama, The House In the Horseshoe,” with a Butler). reception and buffet dinner for special guests and Party Precedes Drama’s Premiere At Historic House In Horseshoe On Saturday morning, July 17, at 2:01 a.m. United Telephone Co. of the Carolinas will put into operation new switching equipment in the company’s Pinehurst office, which will require some changes in customer dialing patterns. Joe Kimball, United’s Southern Pines District manager, said more than $2.5 million has been invested in the project to expand Wd .upgrade service in the^^ehurst area. But, he added, customers will have to change some of their dialing habits for the equipment to function properly. The electronic switching equipment“NX-lE, as it is technically called-will require Pinehurst customers to dial all seven digits of a local telephone (Continued on Page 12-A) Two Residents Are Cited For Handicapped Efforts BY PALMER HHX Governor Jim Holshouser honored Constance Matheson Baker arid Larry Marchese of Pinehurst in a special awards ceremony on Monday in reco^ition of their work with the handicapped. About 30 friends of the honorees and members of the press attended the ceremony. which took place in the Gover nor’s Press Conference Room in the State Administration Building in Raleigh. Before presenting the awards the Governor recognized Caroline Livermore, President of the North Carolina Association for Emotionally Disturbed Children, and Earl Hubbard, (Continued on Page 10-A) 1/ >1^ BY MARJORIE RAGAN A lush lawn circled by marigolds and zinnias ringed the House in the Horseshoe Wed nesday night as the Moore County Historical Association greeted guests at an opening night party. Skies were clear as the sun dropped behind the house and the stage at back. A highlight of the evening came when a portrait of Mrs. Ernest L. Ives was unveiled by former president E. Earl Hub bard and presented to her for her dream of restoring historic Alston House and dramatizing the events that took place during the Revolutionary War. Portrait painter William Fields and Society President Capt. Sherman Betts escorted Mrs. Ives to the stage during intermission. The play by Joseph Cole Simmons was well received by a gaily dressed audience, Aberdeen Annexing More Land Annexations by the Aberdeen Town Board of three areas were accepted Monday night and another requested was delayed. The annexations were from Mr. and Mrs. James WUson Wise, from J.C. Robbins to annex a street owned by him in the Town and Country Shopping Center and one from Sandhills Housing Associates, all ix-esented by Rodney Robinson of Johnson Poole Associates. The other proposed annexation was requested by a delegation of some 15 persons, among them Preston Reaves and Soloman Gillis. Necessary steps were voted to be made to work with the citizens in the Berkley and Cabbage Hill areas to annex the areas. The delegation presented a petition with 78 names of persons in the area requesting annexation of one square mile (Continued on Page 12-A) especially the climax which showed the battle between Phillip Alston and David Fan ning on the actual porch of the House where the battle took place and in its yard. Tem perance Alston (Christine Murdock) walked dramatically into the battle to surrender if Fanning would promise Uiat no one would be harmed. Applause sounded frequently as the play unfolded. The party started at 7 p.m. and arrivals admired the grounds with their old boxwood and the house with its authentic fur nishings. In the dining room, a red, white and blue blue buffet was served after punch on the porch. The menu included downeast fish stick corn bread, historic ham-sausage biscuits, new world Region Study Planned By AIA In September An intensive four-day study designed to provide directions for future growth and develop ment will be conducted in Moore County by a specialized team from the American Institute of Architects on Sept. 17-20. Architect E.J. Austin, who conceived the idea for the study some two years ago, announced plans for the visit by the Rural- Urban Design Assistance Team (RUDAT) at a meeting of the Sandhills Chamber of Commerce board of directors on Thursday. Austin, who with Voit Gilmore, has headed a special Chamber of Commerce committee planning for the RUDAT visit and study, said that the team will be headed by Jules Gregory, an architect from Princeton University. Gregory has made a prior visit to the area, and members of the team will have made an ex tensive preliminary study of various statistical information before they come here on Sept. 17. The team will be made up of architects, city planners, sociologists, humanists and others. They will tour the Moore County area, with special em phasis on the Sandhills, and will conduct extensive interviews with a variety of residents, also meeting for group discussions with citizens of the area. Land use planning is involved, but Austin said the team will not (Continued on Page 12-A) THE PILOT LIGHT REGISTRATION — Monday, July 19, is the deadline for registering to vote in the August 17 party primaries, and in Moore County it appears that the total registration will go above the 20,000 mark. The total registration as of June 30 was 19,806, and Mrs. Doris Fuquay, executive secretary of the Moore County Board of Elections, said the office has been busy in recent days putting new voters on the books. In reminding residents of the re^stration deadline she also said that anyone who has moved to another precinct must also get an official transfer. The first day for application either in person or by letter to the Board of Elections for an ab sentee ballot is July 18, and the last date for such an application is Aug. 11. Of the total registration at the end of June there were 12,289 Democrats and 6,649 (Continued on Page 12-A) ‘Pond Man ’ Reports 1,500 Of Them MRS. BAKER HONORED — Mrs. Constance Matheson Baker, owner of “Duncraig Manor” here, is presented an award by Governor Holshouser in ceremonies in Raleigh on Monday for her work with the handicapped. BY CRAIG LAMB There is a newly constructed farm pond on the Archie Kelly farm in Carthage. The bulldozers sit on one side of the earthen bowl, and the pond is already collecting water, although it will be months before the water level is up to its projected height. This is perhaps the newest of some 1,500 farm ponds that have been constructed in Moore County during the past twenty to twenty-five years. Most of these ponds, at least two-thirds, have been con structed with the help of the Soil Conservation Service in Car thage, and more personally with the help of Willard K. Keller, who has been the District Conservationist for this area for (the past 22 years. Known affectionately as “the pond man” around Moore County, Keller and the Soil Conservation Service have engineered the construction of most of the ponds in the county. There is also a new Dam Safety Law which involves Keller in the inspection of many ponds around the county. Any dam over 15 feet high which impounds over 10 acre feet of water and costs $5,000 or more, must have a permit from the Department of Natural and Economic Resources. Ponds around the county range in size from less than one acre to 300 acres or more, but most of the ponds are under 15 acres, residential ponds averaging about 5 acres. The ponds are used for many purposes, from fishing and recreation to farm irrigation and spraying. Multiple uses of ponds are encouraged by the SCS. Keller has seen many ponds built around the Sandhills and has been active in the con struction of most of them, in one way or another. The SCS can provide engineering services to anyone wishing to build a pond oa their land, provided the Hann height for tiie pond does not exceed 25 feet. “Over 25 feet and we have to have State approval,” explained Keller, “so it is usually more convenient for someone with a job of that size to go to a private engineer.” In a survey done by Keller between 1955 and 1965, he (Continued on Page 10-A) PO Denied Rezoning Thomas Out Of House Race Here James Thomas of Southern Pines has withdrawn as the Republican candidate for the State House of Representatives. Chairman C. Coolidge Thompson said Monday that Thomas’ withdrawal has been accepted by the Moore County Board of Elections. He also said that a letter has been sent to the Moore County Republican Executive Com mittee notifying the committee of the withdrawal and that the committee may now appoint a candidate to take the place of Thomas on the ballot. Thomas is chairman of the Executive Committee. The Executive Committee may choose to select a nominee but does not have to do so. Chairman Thompson said that Thomas gave family and business reasons for his with- (Continued on Page 12-A) The Southern Pines Town Council in a public hearing Tuesday night, in the face of numerous citizen protests, declined to re-zone the old Holl}Tvood Hotel site for possible construction of a new post office, but instead passed a motion to “encourage the Postal Service to pursue further the object of finding a suitable location,” also to ask the mayor to appoint a conunittee to “work with them toward this goal.” However, Hugh B. Hicks, real estate specialist with the Realty Management Division of the Postal Service at Atlanta, Ga., had already warned the council that, if the desired site wasn’t cleared for the purpose, “we will eventually come back to it, since it is the only one we want.” Though Hicks had got in late in the site selection, most of the work on which had been done by a predecessor, Joe Praeger, who is no longer in the Division, he said analysis had been made of all the sites in or around the downtown area, and there were various reasons why none of the others would do-either they weren’t large enough (an acre and a half is a “must”), or the (Continued on Page 10-A) beef-kidney pies, cinnamon apple wedges, molasses cookies, old graham bread with barn- aged cheese, apple cider, iced tea and coffee. Many of the guests were in festive red, white and blue dresses and many were from out- of-town, including Rep. Lura Tally of FayetteviUe and Mr. and Mrs. Heman Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wyim and many others of Chapel Hill, and antique lovers from as far away as Toxobel in Bertie County. At the premiere were Cultural Resources Secretary Grace Rohrer; Edgar Marston and Ardath Goldstein of Raleigh and Mark Sumner of the Institute of Outdoor Drama of Chapel Hill, as well as Dick Ellis of the N.C. Bicentennial Commission, and Peter Breck, TV actor of “Big VaUey” fame. (Continued on Page 12-A) Youth Dies In Cycle Accident Richard Louis Bates, 18, of Vass, Rt. 2, died early i^turday at Moore Memorial Hospital of injiffies suffered in a motorcycle accident at Lakeview a short while before. State Trooper John W. Smith said the accident occurred about 2 a.m. Saturday when Bates, one of a group of young people gathered in front of the store beside the dam over Crystal Lake, borrowed another boy’s motorcycle and went on a short run. Dennis Epps of Cameron, owner of the machine, told Smith that Bates had asked to borrow it and Epps refused, saying he had only about enough gas to get home. Bates jumped aboard anyway and took off, riding to the top of the hill to a street in tersection, where he turned, and rode back down. Nearing the foot of the hill, he (Continued on Page 12-A) Governors Gather Here In Autumn Governors from across the country rigriln be coming to the SaridllmS tms fall. Governor James Holshouser will be host to a conference for newly elected governors to be held in Pinehurst in November. Sponsored by the National Governors Conference, the orientation workshop has been tentatively scheduled for the weekend of November 13-15. Governor Holshouser said details will be announced later. This is the second time a national governors conference has been held here. In 1970 Governor Bob Scott hosted a similar conference, which was (Continued on Page 10-A) Train Platform Extended For Passengers Benefit The Amtrak station in Southern Pines has extended its passenger platform one block in both directions, extending now from Pennsylvania Ave. to Vermont Ave. With the new extensions, trains will only stop once to discharge passengers or allow them to board. Previously several stops were necessary to line up all sections of the train next to the single block platform. The new sections of the plat form will be lighted, but will not be under cover, as the present platform is, according to Wayne Quinn, the Southern Pines Amtrak official. A public address system will also be installed. Eventually the length of the platform will be zoned into areas, to direct passengers on where to board individual cars. The Amtrak office in Southern Pines is open from 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. every day, and opens one- half hour before scheduled train arrivals at night. They offer complete baggage and express service for shipping trunks or (Continued on Page 10-A) ! PASSENGER PAVEMENT — This newly installed pavement will make it easier for passengers to board and leave the trains at the Southern Pines Amtrak station.—(Photo by Glenn M. Sides).