f.i' Bmvi ■ •• ".'■*’'r\’*‘^' ■' ♦ •V. ■i,-‘^J. .i V Vs' 7^ liF' uticiffr lUIDOM or IISMTV WOAl WWM* The News-Journal The Hoke County News The Hoke County Journal KOH VOLUME XLVII; NUMBER 1 THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1952 RAEFORD, N. C. TEN CENTS PER COPY HM PER YEAR ,c^clcUncla By the Editor H. W. B, Whitley, of the local bar, was telling me this week that ' he had suggested to the county commissioners that they try both candidates for judge of the re corder’s court on the bench for a week or two before the primary so th^ people could see them in action before voting on them. He said it wouldn’t make any difference to Judge Greene, as he’s- not seeking the office any way. At first this sounded like a pretty good notion to me, but on thinking it over I am inclined to agree with the commissioners who did not do it. I’m not thinking about I the spot Mr. Roper and Mr. Moses would be on, but the one the defendants during those few weeks of “tryout judging” would find themselves on. Some might feel, and rightly, that they were being dealt with a little more se verely in order for the “judge" to properly impress those ; who like a hard judge. It might be said of others that they got out light so their family and friends would vote right. I think both mSn would have done the job honestly under; these circ^- -stances, but tliege things still could and would have been said. Judging in a criminal court is a serious thin}, and qvute “fby keeps.” The people can pick th^ one .they want to do it for them- in the primary Saturday, and then he cati do it seriously and, with ho Raefo^d Wins Little League Opening Game Large Crowd Attends; Regular Games To Start Here Next Monday HONOR STUDENTS AT HOKE HIGH lets' ^ .thought of polities. Tl wonder if anyone efee ev® a full about-to-cry-for-no-good- reason feeling when they hear The Star Spangled Banner being played and wgtch the Stars and Stripes rise in the breeze? Same way you feel when you see a boy who has practically nothing offer if all to a friend he thinks needs it more ... or When you are in trouble and your friends come to you? I see by the “Rockfish News” that Hubert Olive, Sam McGougan and Knox Watson were Rockfish visitors Tuesday. I hear they were in Raeford the same day. They didn’t come by to see us here at the paper, but then I’m for Um- stead anyway, and yve wouldn’t have had much to talk about. A meeting was held at the coun ty office building Monday after noon on the program, “North Car olina Accepts the Challenge,” a concerted effort to improve the per capita income of farmers in North Carolina and thus . their standard of living. The County Farm and Home agents invited re- pre.sentatives of civic clubs and institutions in the county to attend, as being vitally interested in such a program. The response of- these organizations and individuals was mdst disappointing, the Ruritans being about the only ones to par ticipate. In 1944 a Frenchman was get ting ready to go to the liberation celebration his village was hold ing,' and his conscience was hurt ing him only the tiniest bit. You see, there was a big wine barrel in the village square into which everyone was to pour a bottle of wine to be used by all at. the fes tive occasion. The war had not left our particular Frenchman much, and he knew no one could possibly know that he had slip ped a bottle of plain water in for his share. And what difference would one bottle of water make in a whole barrel of wine? Imagine the surprise of the whole com munity when they came to draw wine and found the barrel full of water. To quote somebody, "If you don’t vote, dammit, you deserve what you get.” . . . And it may be plain water. (Now don’t any o my teetotaling readers get the notion Fm belittling good old clear cold water. ThaFs just the way I heard this parable . . . • and parable It is.) A crowd of from 400 to 500 people from Raeford and Aber deen attended the opening game of the Aberdeen-Raeford Little Baseball League at the Little Lea gue park in Robbins Heights here on 'Wednesday of last week and saw the Raeford Tigers, managed and coached by Alfred Cole, Law rence Poole and Willie Hodgin best the Aberdeen Cubs by-a score of eight to four. ' First game in Aberdeen wa.^; scheduled for yesterday afternoon with the Raefoi;d Indians imder Rowe Chapman meeting the A’o- erdeen Cards. Regularly scheduled play will get under way next Monday when the Raeford Tigers will play the Raeford Indians here. On Wednes day of next week the Tigers will play the Aberdeen Cards here. Games thereafter will be played on Mondays and Wednesdays through the months of June and July. Monday games rained out will be played the following Satur day and Wednesday games rained out will be played the following Thursday. There will be a home game here each Monday ahd Wed nesday starting next week with the exception that there will not be a game here July 2, but it will be played hpe on July 4 instead. Jtll games start at 5:30 p. m, iSSTemonies at the opening game included music Tty the Hoke County High school band under the direction of J. B. Renn, fol lowed by a few words of welcome by Younger Snead and a short talk by J. Pat Bell, president of the Aberdeen-Raeford Little Lea gue. This was followed by the playing of the National Anthem by the band and the raising of the flag on the new pole in center field by members of the local Boy Scout troop. Following a very short exhibition by Make McKcithan, Lawrence Poole and Lawrence McNeill play was turned over to the youngsters and the gime got under way. Umpires were Law rence McNeill, W. T. Gibson and Julius Jordan. The visitors went right to work and scored two runs in the first innin on Indian pitcher Bill Hod- gin. but the locals came back with four big ones in their half of the first and were never behind again, although the score was tied 4-4 in teh fourth. H. McCaskill re lieved Hodgin on the mound in the fourth and was the winning pitcher. He was also the leading hitter, getting a two-run homer in the first and one with two aboard in' the fifth. Six-inning games are played in Little League baseball. Lineup for the Raeford Indians was Hodgin, pitcher and Srd base; 'White, right field; Human, 1st base; Kelly, center field; Peek, catcher; H. McCaskill, 3rd base and. pitcher; Snead, shortstop; G. A. McCaskill, 2nd base; Snipes, left field. 1-0 JOBiN McLAUCHLIN ANNIE BLUE CAMERON John McLauchlin was valedictorian and Annie Blue Camer on salutatorian of the 1952 graduating class at |loke County High School. They delivered their addresses at graduation exercises at the school Tuesday night. John is the son of Mrs. H. C. McLauchlin and Annie Blue is the daughter of Mrs. Leon Cameron. . 7' Kiwanians Entertain High School Athletes The Raeford Kiwanis club had as its guest at a fried chicken sup per at ,the Upchurch airport last Thursday night all members of the basketball, baseball and football teams at Hoke High school and their coaches. About 70 guests were present. Speaker for the occasion was Head Football Coach Horace Hen drickson of N. C. State College. He was presented to the group by Aliimnu^,Clyde Upchurcbi Jr., .and made a most interesting talk of particular application to young people about to finish high school and to enter college. 0 National Guard Unit To Close Enlistments "ip Jaycees Cpfnplete Plans To Sjliect Hoke Beau^ Queen INSECTS GET SMART J. A. Baucom, local bird and flower fancier, brought a canna into the office this week which would appear to indicate that he has some pretty smart insects in his flower garden. This canna had been sewed up so that it could not unfurl as cannas do, and the young worm was inside, well pro tected, eating at his leisure. The mama had apparently sewed it up when she laid the egg. It was new to Baucom and to the printers to whom hg showed it. 0 CHOIRS TO SING 1st Lt. Edwin D. Newton, com mander of the local National Guard battery, said this week that the batfery would be unable to accept enlistments after next Mon day night, June 2, imtil after the battery returns from Camp Ste wart, Ga., on June 29. The unit now has a strength of about 100 men and officers and the step is being taken due to the administrative work necessary to get a man enlisted and equipped and that the unit leaves for Camp Stewart on June 15. 0 — Lumbee River REA Gets $670,000 Loan The State REA board of direc tors last Thursday approved loan requests totaling $1,468,823.71 for several REA cooperatives in the state. Among those listed was Lumbee River Electric Member ship Corporation of Red Springs. Lumbee River applied for $570,- 000 fcff system improvements and new lines to serve new members, and $100,000 to reloan to their members ,for installation, wiring and plumliing fixtures and equip- ^ment. Lumbee River serves approxi mately 7,000 members in the counties of Hoke, Robeson, Cum berland and Scotland. ^41. G. Y. NEWTON HERE The four children’s choirs of ^ the Raeford Presbyterian church 'Will present a musical program at the church Sunday evening at 7:00 o’clock. This wiU close the choir season for the children, and they will resume practice In the fall. Giles Y. Newton of Gibson, can didate for Congress from the 8th District, was a Raeford visitor yes terday. He wanted to get an ad in the News-Journal saying “Newton for Congress,” but was too iate. He is seeking the democratic no mination to the seat held by C. B. Deane of Rockingham. . 0— Mrs. Paul Dickson, Sr. attended the (?) reimion of her class at Converse CoUege, Spartanburg, and also attended commencement last week. She will visit Mrs. Har ry Lindeman for a week before she and Mm. Lindeman leave for Charleston, S. C. to visit Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Dickson. The Raeford ^^ior Chamber of Commerce in m semi-monthly meeting Tuesday^ght completed plans for the "lil^Hoke County” beauty pageant'i;«id allied festi vities which th^l^e to promote during the mon^iof June. Plans are for Ihe affair to be > ■ held in the Acnibiy on June 27. A dinner will l^'^efved by the Raeford WomanJ^laJ?. This will be fiSllow^pegetoF and talent show and selection of “Miss Hoke County,” who will represent the county in the state contest for “Miss North Carolina ’ to be held,in Winston-Salem in July. The evening will wind up with a dance to the mtisic of a popular archestra of this section. Rules for entrants in the con tests state that they must be not less than 18 years of age on Sep tember 1, 1952, and she be un married and never married. She must, of course, be a resident of Hoke County. The Jaycees are preparing a program for the affair which will contain the pictures of the en trants and facts about the pageant and the community. They are also arranging, an- array of gifts for the winner and for her participation in the “Miss North Carolina” con test. Hoke Mad Will Gel Degree From Duke Zane Grey Norton, son of Mrs. J. M. Norton and the late Mr. Norton of this county will be among the more than 1100 who will receive degrees at the 100th commencement of Duke Univers ity on Monday, June 2. He will receive the degree of Bachelor of Divinity. He is a graduate of Hoke High school and a World War II vete ran and received his B. A. degree in 1949. He will leave on June 3 for Shelby where he will become pastor of the Hoyle Memorial Methodist church. He will preach his first sermon in his new church on June 8. 0 Raeford Men Go To Kiwanis Banquet Marion Gatlin, J. B. Thomas, J. H. Blue and Charles Hostetler re presented the Raeford Kiwanis club at a testimonial dinner given at the Sir Walter Hotel in Ra leigh last Thursday night for Ki- w a n i s International President Claude Heilman of Baltimore. About 400 Kiwanians from four divisions of the Carolinas Kiwanis district were present. "Various gifts were carried the honor guest from the communi ties represented. Including pea nuts from down east, a mattress from Mebane and enon^ RobblM fabrics by the local men to make him a suit. Campaign Closing; Primary Saturday With the campaign for Governor between William B. Umstead and Hubert Olive being the only hot state-wide contest and with the only two-way local contest being that between T. O. Moses and W. L. Roper for recorder, a light vote is rather dismally expected by some of the political wise men. A factor not being considered which may make quite a difference is that there have been many new people moving to the coimty re cently and several huryired new names have been added to the reg- istartion books. The responsibili ties of citizens to vote has been forcefully brought to the cons ciousness of the voters this year by it being the first time in many a year that the presidential nomi nee is not a foregone conclusion. For County commissioner Mar shall Newton, N. H. G. Balfour, W. M. Thomas and Fulford Mc Millan of the old board are run ning along with Douglas McPhaul and William Stanley Crawley, j: Five will be nominated in the vot ing Saturday. For the county boaVd of educa tion N. L. McFadyen, Richard 1^. Neeley, David F. Lindsay and Robert H. Gatlin of the old board are running along with Joel D. Royal, D. R. Huff, Jr., and Alfred Long, Jr. There are state contests for the supreme court, lieutenant govern or, and insurance commissioner. The day for voting is Saturday, May 31. 57 SENIORS GEl DIPLOMAS AT HOKE HIGH ON lUESDAY NIGHT Dr. Mark Depp Speaks; Varioos Awards Made Reewder Hears Light Session Only a dozen cases were dispos- of in Hoke County recorder’s court Tuesday before Judge Harry Greene, several being continued luitil next week. Four colored men entered pleas of guilty of violating the prohibi tion laws by possessing non-tax- paid liquor. They were T. C. Artis, Edgar Watkins, Vander Smith and Frank Smith. Each had to pay $10 and the costs. On the same charge Sylvester Richardson was found not guilty. Jimmy Jackson, white, was fbxmd guilty of careless ahd reck less driving. Sentence was 60 day.': to be suspended on payment of $25 and the costs and 12 months good behavior. Jackson appealed and posted $250 bond. Grantham Clark, Indian, paid' $25 and the costs for driving with out a license and was found not guilty of parking on the highway. [ Lament, was presented by Charles The State dropped the cases in which Frances McNeill and Ger trude Ferguson were charged v/ith The annual commencement ex ercises for Hoke County Hi^ School were held Tuesday even ing May 27 in the hi^ school auditorium with the Reverend Dr. Mark Depp of Centenary Methodist Church of Winston- Salem making the address. The Rev. S. A. Ewart gave the invo cation after which Annie Blue Cameron delivered the salutatory. The High School Girls Sextet, ac companied by Miss Bradley, sang “Think on Me.” The Rev. P. O. Lee of Raeford Methodist Church introduced Dr. Depp, speaker of the evening. Dr. Depp’s address, interspersed with humor and wit, was informative as well as inter esting. W. J. Coates, representing the Farm Bureau, presented prizes to Wagland Fulk and James Blue : who tied for higher average in I .Agricultural Classes. 1 The Peace award, won by Pat Hostetler of the local bar associa tion. Harold Gillis of the Lions Club giving bad checks to Mrs. F. B. made awards for being best citi Churches Plan Bible SchobrS" Na^t^Week starting next Monday morning vacation Bible schools will be held in the Raeford Baptist, Meth odist and Presbyterian churches for periods varying from one to two weeks. The school at the Raeford Pres byterian church will start at 9:00 a. m. Monday and will last two weeks, the final day being Friday, June 13. Classes will be held from nine to twelve each morning with varied activities. Misses Jean Sea- grove and Betty Wardlaw, stu dents at Assembly’s Training School, will be the directors and all children aged from four to 12 are invi^d. The Raeford Methodist church will hold its school next week, meeting each morning from nine until 11:30. All children between the ages of four and 15 are in vited to come for mornings of music, worship, study, recreation and refreshments. Classes will be held in the Sunday School de partment of the church. The Raeford Baptist church will hold “Preparation Day” for. its school tomorrow afternoon be- t\vecn two and four o’clock. Dur ing this time the children will pa rade through the business district. The Bible school will be held next week from Monday through Fri day with classes daily from 3:30 to 11:30. Children aged from three to 16 are invited. 'The pastor will conduct the school, assisted by Miss Martha Pittman, educational director. 0 Army Is Rotating Teals To Korea Cpl. Samuel. E. Teal, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Teal of Raeford, is now serving on the mud-bogged eastern front in Korea with the 25th Infantry Division, a release from Korea said this week. His unit, with its attached Tur kish brigade, has been holding down a battle line northwest of the Punchbowl. Corporal Teal, a member of the 14th Infantry Regiment’s Head quarters company, arrived in Ko rea last month. He entered the Army in June, 1951. His brother. Cedi L. Teal, has been at home for the past few wedes, having just returned ftorn a year of service witti the Third Infantry Division In Korea. Harris. James Johnson, colored, got 60 days suspended on payment of $10 and the costs and 12 months good behavior for being drunk and dis orderly. Aubrey Thad Fussell, white, paid S5 and the costs fer being (Jrunk, and disorderly. ‘•wmife MdLaudilin, colored, pleaded guilty of careless and reckless driving. He got six months suspended on payment of $50 da mages and court costs and on con dition of 12 months good behavior 0 Raeford Rebels Ready To Play The Raeford Rebels, those an nual baseball enthusiasts, have been formed again and are going all out in an effort to give Raeford a winning baseball team this year. Approximately twenty players, former high school, college, and minor league men have been practicing for the last few weeks in an effort to weld together a strong team. One of the main obstructions in the reorganization so far is the problem of lighting the ball park. At last count close to one hrmdred bulbs' and reflectors needed re placing due to either blowing of their owm accord or to the vanda lism of persons known and un-. known. The Rebels plan to raise enough money through contributions of interested persons and firms to replace the lights, reflectors and also to pay a delinquent light bill. The ball park will be leased from the .American Legion and after the Rebels season is completed it will be turned over to the High School for ni.gh'i football and base ball games. A practice game was played yesterday afternoon with Lake- dale with no report on the out come available before press time. AIT interested persons who desire to play with the Rebels may come out and practice with the team any afternoon at 6-00. A list-of those contributing to the repairing of the fixhires and alsdt a complete schedule wall be published later. l(j POPPY DAY SATURDAY Officials of the American Ler gioh Auxiliary have announced that Saturday is ' “Poppy Day.” Ladies of the auxiliaiy will sell poppies on the streets that day and proceeds will be used for the Legion’s work with disabled vete rans: ^ J. P. T. B. Phinips and U. D. Yatea the wade end at Southport. zens in high school, grammar school, and primary grades to Mary McLean. Larry Upchurcu, and Gerry Guyer, respectively. The "Woman’s Club awards from the Literary Department were pre sented by Mrs. Hubert Cameron to Gerry Guyer, Shirley Leslie, Beftie'McKeirie and Hazel Lean for the best creative writS^ and to Betty Jane Ashbum for the best reading presentation. Hazel McLean received an award for, the highest average in Homemaking classes and outstanding work in the Future Homemakers club. Mrs. Arthur D. Gore, repre senting the Education Department of Raeford Woman’s Club, pre sented the valedictory medal to John McLauchlin. The American Legion pri*s for outstanding citizenship, ptesert- ed by Clyde Upchirrch, Jr., were received by Betty Jane Ashbum and John McLauchlin. The Kiwanis awards for best all around students were present ed by Marion Gatlin to Joan Sin clair. Suzanne Cameron and Larry Upchurch. K. A. MacDonald, superintend ent of public instniction. present ed certificates to the bus drivers for outstanding performance and safety records for the year. W. T. Gibson, Jr., princiyai of the high school, made a short talk to the seniors and presented di plomas' to: Gordon Adams, Bobby Alexander, Betty Jane Ash’oum, Jean Baxley, Margaret Beckwith, Frances Bobbitt, Bobby Bostic, Lewis Brock, Annie Blue Camewn, Betty Jean Clark. Herbert Clark, Tommy Clark, Ruby Cole, SarsUi Jane Cole, Sylvia Collins, Earl Conoley, Joyce Conoley, Marie Cothran, Betty Culbrettt, Carleen Davis, Eloise Daws, Doi^lass Dixon, James Edge, Venetia Fulk, Betty Garrison, Herman Gillis, Janet Hodgin, Eva Mae Jackson, Neil A. Jadtson, Betty Ellen Jones, W. R. King, Irene Lane, Betty Jo Lovette, George Lowney Billy McCormick, Betty McCrim-. mon, Carolyn McKenzie, John Me- , Lauchlin, Mary McLean, Bryan MiUer* Harold Monroe, Edwin Newton, Elizabeth Odom, Bruce Phillips, Jerome Pickier, Pat Rit ter, David Scull, John Scull, Char les Sessoms, Bobby Setjwr, Jane Sinclair, Joan Sinclair, June Stan ley, Betty Strother. Jlmnqr Webhk Lyda Williams, Robert WntA John McLauchlin delivered ft* Valedictory and die Bev,' tV Lee gave the Benedicth®. 0 ■»-. Mr. and Mn. Ctflilieilii jMy of Macon, Ga., vr gtiests of Mf.. nd U);>duirdk bsl aWtt. enrouteto'