.-SG? m FARM NOTES By A. S. Knowles mii;-. !•» ; / . r l-tfe Cotton farmers will want to remember that a Cotton Produc tion and boil weevil control meet ing will be held at the Court House in Raeford on Wednesday, February 18, at 2:00 p. m. This meeting will be for the benefit, of all cotton farmers desiring to make greater yields of their cot ton crop. Mr. J. A.''Shanklin, Ex tension Cotton - Speci^istj BJr. Dan Holler, Extension Cotton Mar- ketimg Specialist; Mr: J. T. Conner, Jr., Extension Entomologist; and others will lead th® discussion on Production prOiblems and boll weevil control methods, Cotton farmers are especially urged to attend to help work out a practi cal program for Hoke County. The interest in this meeting may de termine the extent of cotton pro duction progress in this County The future production of cotton is facing many problems and it may take the bulk of our farmers working in unison to solve them 'ouple Arrested or Holdup Last Saturday A. M. MAN AND WIFE HELD FOR ROBBERY OF TAXICAB DRIVER 4 - Ws'.* !> f k ,jr It is regretable that the series of meetings scheduled for this week had to be postponed because of the bad weather. Those sche duled for next week will be held if the weather is favorable. The OUTLOOK meetings will be as follows: McLauchlin Township at Wayside Community House Mon day, February 16; and Rockfish Community House on Tuesday February 17. Stonewall Township at Mildouson School on ,. Wednes day, February 18; and Raeforc Township a,|- the ings will be at 7:30 p. m. Motion pictures will be shown at each meeting. Charged with slugging and rob bing a taxi driver. Pvt. Johnny Hookano', of Fort Bragg, and his wiife are lodged in the Hoke Coun 1;y jail. Hookano was described as being a Hawaiian. Marvin D. West, driver for the Safety Taxli company of Fayette ville, told police the couple en gaged him last Saturday morning at 3:30 to drive them to Raeford. About 10 miles from Raeford (in Hoke county) he said the woman said she was cold and he stopper so that she could move to the front seat. Shortly thereafter Wes1: said the man struck him and put his arm around his neck and told the woman to get his money. ^ He said that after they had taken $S8 from hiim he . managed to break away, taking the car keys. He stopped at a house and called for officers and when they got there the Hookanos were gone. The cab was still there unhurt. Fayetteville police traced them to a cafe in Fayetteville where they found Hookano using a telephone. They said he fled into the kit chen where he was arrested. His wife was taken into custody at tkeir rooming place and both were identified by the driver. They were brought to Raeford by Rural Policemen Wright and price and Deputy sheriff Dees, and Ileal officers state that they have ^bnfessfer the crime. _n——— TAPP MAKES “STATE” Farm Bureau In Convention Backs A.id For Europe J. C. Smith, Jr., one of Hoke County’s delegates to the cop- vention of the North Carolina Farm Bureau held in Asheville the first of last week, returned with a few notes on the voliim- nous .and diverse resolutions and recommendations passed by vthe convention. The resolution passed consisted of 18 single-spaced, typewritten pages and contained about, 11^000 words. They calldd for co-opera tion in the Marshall plan » to the extent of our' ability and based upon the principle of helping the stricken people help themselves. The resolutions covered subjects as international co-operation, in ternational trade, the National Farm program, and practically every aspect of na/lohal life. On crop insurance the bureau urged that the Federal government a- bpt enabling legislation to per mit all-risk insurance coverage from the time tobacco is planted until it is sold on the warehouse floor. The convention advocated con tinuation of the parity principle and pledged itself to resist any efforts to destroy it, saying “Un til something clearly superior has been developed we favor the re tention of the present parity for mula with adjustm^ts among the various agricultural products being made by the Secretary of Agriculture as prescribed by the present law.” It urged that sufficient funds for research in several fields be made ayailabl'^, ‘to State CoH^e andb„that this inclttde *1;hh 6st*- lisbment of a school of veterinaVy medicine there. 0 *— The price losses on the cotton and grain markets are causing much confusion. There seems to be no gopd reason for the market to break as it has during the last few days. The estimated carry over of cotton July, 1948 is still about the lowest'of recent years and the e.xport -trade is strong. Grain is short of demands both for domestic aijd Export. While there was some increase in the number of pigs farrowed last fall, the number will be reduced by a- bout 10 per cent this Spring, While no one knows what the trend Willi be, it appears that prices will become more steady as soon as Congress acts ujoon the 'Marshall Plan for aid to Europe. MEETINGS CANCELED A great many gatherings and activities of various kinds^ have be^n canceled in this coanimun- ityliin the past few days be came of the snow and ice. Some Of those not.to be held follow. TONIGRT—There will be iic^’floeetix^: of the-Raeftrd Ki- ivanis clBL^,,:and the FTA will ^trlhold |iie Valentine party they ted plannedlto^djiave in Rui Ui^.schpoi gymitt^iuni. TBe dti^kt ■ g U^^h was io have :jhttgdayjto Ftoehurst d by dittriet ehair IF. psox VifatMlt. The Guard unit did hot fiiill on Monday night. There w^s no sQuare danee at (her armory last night. Judge eonlte’t get to thWti so there was no recorder’s court Tuesday morning. School, of course, has been closed*; all week and will not sthrt aiain nntil Monday at the earliest. Ciwanis Club To ^lay Basketball James Next Week CAROLINA NOW DIGGING OUT FROM SECOND BIG SNOWFALL An interesting article by J. De witt Tapp, Hoke county farmer, appeared in the lead position in last week’s- “State Magazine.” The article was about beavers in Que- whiffle township, which he seems last Saturday. The operation was MRS. CULBRETH BETTER Mrs. T. F. Culbreth, who has been a patient at Moore county hospital since January 26, under went a serious operation there to have spent considerable time observing. It is illustrated with several photographs of their ac tivities—loidges, cut trees, etc. 0 GREENE TO RUN AGAIN IS Harry Greene, Hoke County’s representative in the last North Carolina. General Assembly,'ask ed The News-Journal'this ■week to announce that he intended to be a candidate to succeed himself. Greene ha§ served one term, suc ceeding Dr. G. W. Brown. quite successful and she is, re covering satisfactorily. She ex pects, to be in the hospital about another, week. 0 COUNTY OFFICE BUG. To CLOSE SATURDAYS J. A. McGoogan announced yes terday that all offices in the coun ty office building would be closed on Saturdays until further notice, beginning wiith Saturday of this week. This is being done because of the shortage of fuel. Upcburch Postpones Clptbing Collection Clyde Upchurch, Jr., local chair man for the drive for clothing be ing staged iin North Carolina for overseas relief by the Church World Service Center of New Windsor, 5 Maryland, announced this week that the house to house collection. would be made the first Sund^that the weather was nice. This collection, which is to be made by the Boy Scouts in Rae- fprd, - w|i|^^gcheduled for^each of the past two S'unaay,^-* and- J»«s been postponed each time due to bad weather. Upchurch said that he deciided, not to schedule another date for the collection, but 'to sim ply announce that it would be made on the first fair Sunday af ternoon. First county in the State to re port its drive over supplies shipped, is Washington, where Mrs. W. R. Collins of Ply mouth, is chairman. The 1,534 pounds of clothiing, shogg and bed ding gathered in the drive there were sent off to the Church World Center at New Windsor, Maryland on February 2. The contribution included three pitch forks, most valuable tools in countries abroad where numerous farms, wiith all buildings and equipment, were completely destroyed. 0 The Raeford Klwanis club and the Aberdeen Lions club have scheduled two basketball ■ games wiith each other, the first in Aber deen on the night of Monday, Febrauary 16, and- the second game in the Hoke High school gymnasium on the night of Thurs day, February 19. The game here is expected to be’ a finale for the sports careers of many of the well known athletes aivolved, in other words it is considered likdy that they will retire from the game af ter these two great,, appearances To be certain- toat a spectacle is in store for all attending these games, the public has but to glange at the list of stellar athletes on the two squads. The Raeford first string consists of K. A. MacDon ald, Paul Dezerne, Arch Currie, J. D. Whisnant and C. L. Thomas. Reserves include Tommie Up church, R. L. Murray, Julius Jor dan. Buck Blue, Walter Baker, Israel Mann, Bob Lewis, Dave Hodgiin, P. O. Lee and several others. These men are expected to see action in both games, but were just unable to make the starting lineup over the first team named. Aberdeen players include Dr. J. P. Bowen, John Sloan, Curtis Lawhorn, Hardin Gunter, H. Clifton Blue, R. C. Fields and Buz- zy Blue. The public is invited to attend these games and a small admis sion will be charged. Funds, raised are to be used for club’s Boy Scout program. ‘ . — 6. DRAMATIST MANY COMMLIOTIES ABE ISOLATED; DAMAGE IS, NOT GREAT HEBE JEANNE WELTY CUMBERLAND COUNTY PEDESTRIAN DIES .WHEN HIT BY CAR Those fortunate) enough to sec and hear charming Jeanne Welty when she was presented at Flora 'IVIacdH>nald college in “The Life ci Theodosia Burr”, several years ago, will look forward with keen anticipation to another evening of fine dramatic entertainment on Monday evening, Feb. 1 ; at 8:15, when Miss Welty will appear at the college again. The talented^, young dramatist wilV this time; persent the elassie three-i|ct coimedy. “The World and N([^ie Bly”, her most recent one-%liill^||^j)i^uctlon. She was starred in Max Rein hardt’s California production of “T|i(? MIrgcle”, and has played leading roles ip a repertoire wliiph included .“The Rivals”, .“^|e^,4Raops 'to~€on«uor?’, Merry Wives' of Windsor”, ^ and “Lady Windemere’s Fan”. North Carolina was djggtn^ it" self out and totaling the damflpH yesterday following the secOttd heavy onslaught by winter_^.i*t/lB days. Af'V In this county most commanilie* were fortunate m that there was imsullicient ice formation on po wer and telephone lines to break them as happened in much of the state. Worst trouble around here seems to be the lack of fuel of various kinds, although no cases of actual hardship have been re ported as resulting from that. Roar's here have, of course, been hazardous as they have -’oeen elsewhere, but no serrous acci dents have been reported. High way 15-A. which had ’oeen open after the snow to Fayetteville, was closed yesterday morning by one bus, four trucks and one semi trailer which couldn’t make the grade, stallai and skidded, block ing the road. The road was closed from about five o’clock until nine- thirty. 15-A at the Scotland county line had the same' trouble with a semi-trailer and a bus causing" the trouble. This rokd was closed from about five to nine also. As in the January 31 blizzard. Eastern Carolina appeared to have borne the brunt of the attack. The coastal cities of Wilmington, More- head City and Beaufort remained all but isolated late yesterday,.and Kentucky 31 fescue grass (Continuned on Page 4) —^ 0 DANCE TICKETS GOING Buck Blue, American Legion dance committee chairman, stated yesterdajr that tickets for the dance the post is staging for the ball park lighting fund are going good in. the advance sale. The dance is to be at the armory on the niight of Friday, February 20, and music will be furnished by Stephen Lambert and his orches tra of Fayetteville. Tickets are ibeing offered at a lower price in advance than they will be sold for at the gate and they are on sale at McLauchlin Company, Howell Drug Store, Hoke Drug Company and C. P. Kinlaw’s Jewelry store. 0 FIRE Al^ARM TUESDAY ' There was a fire alarm Tuesday night at shortly after eight o’ clock. The blaze was a small one in the stable of McLauchlin com pany which was quickly extin guished with little or no damage. 3 . McDUFFlE ON BOARD SCHOOL. NEWS BY K. A. MACDONALD !: All schools in the county will be closed until Monday. Announ cement about re-opening wiill be made over Raleigh “WiPTF, and Laurinburg WE.WO. Miss McKeithan’s 8th grade put on a health program at chapel at Hoke IJigh last Friday. This was in celebration of National Health week. Special work was done and programs presented in all schools of the county. Health , has been one of the major emphasis of the work in all the schools this year. ^ As they were expected to do, the Board of commissioners of the Town of Raeford at their regular meeting last Friday night chose • John Murdock McDuffie to the' seat on the board made vacant by the death of Milton Campbell. The colored eyb clinic sche duled yesterday and today has been postponed until early in March on, account of the enforced closing of schools. colored teachers meeting held at the Upchurch school at 3 o’clock p. m. Thursday, February 26. A county-wide white teachers ineet- ing will be held that ,mght at the Hoke-High school at 8 o’clock. Dr, Richard Weaver, executive director of the Resource-Use Com mission at Chapel Hill, will ad dress both meetings. Dr. Weaver will also' speak to the Kiiwanis club at 6:30. Key Club Fund Keeps Growing (From The Fayetteville Observer) Cumberland county’s second traffic fatality of the year occur red SatLip-ay night on the Raeford and its relief [“oad when John S. Davis, 44, tex tile worker of Cumberland Mills, was struck and instantly killed by an automobile operated by J. D. Kemp, ne.cro, of Raeford. The accident was investigated by . State Highway Patrolman John L. Carpenter. Coroner Joe W. Pinkston re- portei that several witnesses to the accident said that Davis walk ed across the road directly into the path of Kemp’s car and that the accident was unavoidable on the part of Kemp. Kemp was not taken into cus tody, an: Coroner Pinkston im- dicated that an inquest was not necessary. To Hold Joint Meeting Monday At Presbyterian Church On Monday evening, February 16; a joint meeting of the Men's club and the Woman’s Auxiliary •of the Presbyterian chii-ch w ’-l be held, begimting with a basket sup per at 6:45 In the Undercroft of the church, .-^t 7:45 an address will be given ;n the Sanctuary by Dr. H. ’V. Carso'n, who is . vice- president of Queens college in Charlotte. Dr. Carson will speak on the top.c, “One World, One Gad.” The public is invited to hear his address. virtually wi&Bdt commarucalions. ^ Telephone and telegraph communi- ,cations had been restored into V New Bern, which also had been on the isolated list. The storm laid a white blanket, ranging from three to more than 20 inches, over virtually all of North Carolina, and reoorts from several Easte'^n comiP.'unities 'said the snowfall was contir.'uing in termittently yesterday. The dam.age appeared greatest along Coastal Ca^'-olma. where sleet and ice combined to pull utility lines and tiisrupt commu nications facilities in half a dozen cities. Wilmington Hard Hit Wilmington again was hardest hit. Commander T. B.Smiley of the Naval Reserve electronic war fare unit was in contact with the seaport ciity and reported that be held in Some of the county teachers have triied to get home during the week. We hope they wqre able to make it. Miss Louise Fletcher, who taught in Raeford for a number of years, passed through Tuesday afternoon en route to her home at McColl from Sanford where she is now teaching,. The Sanford schools are also closed until Mon day. County Chairman W. L. Poole, of the March of Dimes drive, asks that all schools report at their earliest convenience. Mr. Poole is anxioLi.s to reach the quota for Hoke'at as early date as possible. We are sorry that the schools will be as late reporting as they now will on account of the weather. We are glad to announce that Mrs. McGregor, mother of Miss Hortense McGregor of the MM- douson faculty,' is much better. She is now at Dundarrach with Miss McGregor. We hope her health continues to improve. There will be county-wide The Hoke County High School Key Club’s fund to help the A- meriican Legion and others jvith the installation of lights at the. local ball park continued to grow this week, with a total of $83.,50 in contributions being received. This brings the total raised by the Key club to date to $557. Those contributing during the week are as follows: Mrs. J. H. Plummer W. C. PhiiUips Mrs. R. L. Bethune Addle McFadyen Frank Chisholm Raeford Dry Cleaners E. B. S'atterwhite R. S. Goodwin D. H. Johnson Co. Edwin, Smith M. H. Markham E. R. Pickier If Wood’s Furniture Store J. K. McNeill H. W. McPhaul T. D. Potter A. V. Sanders H. C.' Roberts In last week’s papei; the con tribution of G. C. Lytle was in correctly listed as $10 when it should have been $26. NORTH CAROLINA MARKET HEWS Released By N. C. Dept, of Agriculture Dr. and Mrs. W. T. Koonce have a room at the home of W. W. Ro berts while Dr. Koonce is doing dental hygiene work in the schools of the county. $ 1.00 ■ -5.00 1.00 1.00 5.00 10.00 2.00 2.00 5.00 5.00' 1.00 5,00 6.00 10.()0, .50 10.00 ^ 10.00 5.00 SHORTER LIBRARY HOURS The Hoke county public library will be open only on Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons from one o’clock until five-thirty. This is effective immediately and is because, of the fuel shortage. livestock AND ME.ATS Livestock prices, along with many other food items, dropped sharply during the week. Hog prices -ropped from 1.00 to 1.50 per hundred at Carolina’s cash hog buying stations and closed with tops of from 23.50 to 24.00 as compared with the previous week’s close of 25.00. On the Bal timore market, hog prices closed the week 1.25 per hundred lower with top hogs at 26.50. Richmond reporteii a drop of 1.50 and a closing top of 24.00. This week's run of hogs at the country’s four teen -leading markets 'was lighter with approximately 294 thousand head as compared with the pre vious week’s run of 340 thousand. Receipts of cattle on Rocky Mount’s auction livestock markets were limited with'transportation difficulties on account of the hea- vy^now the primary cause. Offer ings were too light to establish quotations. On the Chicago mar ket. most grades of slaughter steers and heifers were under con siderable price pressure. Steers closed 50 cents to 1.00 lower and heifers, from 50 cents tca^.OO. Good beef cows lost 1.00 to 1.50 and other cows from 25 to 75 cents. Immediately following Dr. Car son's address an important busi- ness meeting of the Auxiliary will | there had been major power fml- the church parlor. lures in some sections of the city. Commander Smiley said em.ergen- cy power was bein.g brought into Wilmington from Lumberton. af ter feeder lines' had snapped un der the heavy pressure of ice..'The |j' j coastal city reported freezing, rains i throughout Monday and up until 11, a,.m. Tuesday. Telephone com- muniefation inside the city was re ported-as “O. K.” Vealers also closed 1.00 to- 2.00 lower, while' stockers arid feeders averaged 25 to 50. lower. ’Curta^- ed receipts 00 the.'.Bal^ore mar ket held slahghtef-' steefoi mosUy steady: however, the undfiridn.e was weaker near the close, par ticularly on high-medium and grade steers. Heifers and; bulls were generally steady, while cows were 50 cents to 1.00 higher with most of the advance on lower quality grades- Calves also show ed sharp advances of from l.QO to'hoped to establish other circuits 2.00 ;in Baltimore. Slaughter lambs ■ shortly. Repairs were underway averaged generally 50 cents low- ^ on circuits from Lum'oerton and er oil the Chicago market but held ; Selma into Wilmington, nominally steady in Baltimore. ; E. -A.. Clement. Southern Bell’s 'district manager, sa'id that tele- Supplies of . fresh meat were damages in the Eastern area macerate to light but generally ^ expected to equal those in the ample for the slow demand on | 31. Southern BfeU Telephone crews i^ere work^pig- st*tadily in an at tempt tb bring 'Wilmingtoff into communication with the outsit world. Late Tuesday afternoon, company offcials said that one circuiit into .Wilmington from here had been restored, although its use; was being restricted to emer gencies. The company said it was Chicago’s wholesale dressed meat markets. Good and choice beef closed steady, while commercial and utility steer and heifer car casses were barely steady to 1.00 lower. Cow beef closed steady to Storm Coming? Meanwhile , the U. S. Weather Bureau was predicting increasing cloudiness and warmer tempera tures for last night and today» 50 cents higher and veal steady j but was eyeing a storm headed to 1.00 higher. Lamb and mutton! this way from the Rocky Moun- also closed steady, whiJe pork tain area. The disturbance mV loins advanced, in some instances, bring either snow or rain atwiwi around 1.00. Fresh hams, on the Thursday night, or may m«s Ww- other hand lost 2.00 to 3.00, while th Carolina entirely, « (Continued on Page 4) i said.