tf 'jKSn S ° EBULON RECORD VOLUME 38. NUMBER II. ZEBULON. N. C.. MARCH 14. 1963 Wakelon Advances in Cage Tournament at Rocky Mount By Bill Quick ! The Wakelon Bulldogs, sporting a 14-7 season’s second, advanced to the quarter-finals of the Dis trict II tourney at Rocky Mount Thursday night. The Bulldogs will clash with Epsom at 7:00. Cnwned the Wake County Class A champs for the third consecu tive year, the Bulldogs meet the Franklin County representative by virtue of their defeat of Oxford Orphanage last Friday night 57-41. The Orphanage, Granville County champs, had a 17-4 record and were odds-on favorites to take the Bulldogs. Three of the Oxford Orphanage losses were to 3-A schools: Henderson and Chapel Hill. Their fourth defeat was at the hands of Stovall. Wakelon took the early lead against the Red Devils and coast ed on to victory. Led by the 25 point effort of Jimmy Hawkins, the Bulldogs played one of their best games of the season. Coach Maurice Chapman is not selling the Epsom Club short. There is a good ball club,” Chap man stated on Tuesday and “from now on in we’ll be hitting the best.” The winner of the Wakelon-Ep som game on Thursday night will advance to the semi-finals on Fri day night meeting the winner of the North Edgecombe-Youngsville game. 9-3 Conference Record ~ The Bulldogs‘ended the regu lar season with a 9-3 conference Hospital Receives Gift of Money Wendell-Zebulon Hospital was among institutions receiving allo cations from the Duke Endow ments. The local hospital received $890 this year compared to $675 last year. Allocations by the Endowments are made to institutions to help de fray charity costs. The Endowment, which was founded by the late James B. Duke in 1924, makes annual appropria x tions to assist non-profit hospitals and child care institutions in their charity programs. It is the nation’s third largest private philanthropic foundation and has assets of ap proximately $500 million. record. They soundly defeated the Wake County opposition with Bailey and Middlesex the peren nial formidable opposition. The Wakelon five defeated Middlesex 63-59 after an opening loss of 66 44 to the Nash County school. The locals did not fare as well against outside opposition. Losses were registered against Louisburg, Angier and Youngsville. Wakelon has averaged 64.5 points per game against the oppo sition’s 55.6 average. The three top scorers for the Bulldogs have been Tommy Wood, with a 20 point average; Jimmy Hawkins, whose 16.6 average has increased steadily in the last few games; and Thurston Debnam with a 12.5 av erage. Hawkins and Wood were named to the Tri-County Western Division All-Conference second team. Randy Creech and Freddie Ellington round out the starting five for Wakelon. The Bulldogs have scored a total of 1355 points in 21 games to their opponents 1159 points. Wood has hit for 421 points, Hawkins for 300 and Debnam has totaled 263. Coach Maurice Chapman is pi loting the Wakelon squad for the fourth consecutive year and has brought the Zebulon athletic for tunes to new heights of promi nence. The Wakelon gridiron eleven were Wake-Nash-Edge combe .champs in the fall after being runners-up for two years. Wakelon’s 1962-63 victories were recorded over the following teams: Wakelon 58 Wakelon 51 Wakelon 82 Wakelon 72 Wakelon 58 Wakelon 73 Wakelon 62 Wakelon 68 Wakelon 85 Wakelon 74 Wakelon 85 Wakelon 66 Wakelon 57 Wendell 38 Knightdale 29 Rolesville 42 Townsville 58 Townsville 57 Spring Hope 47 Middlesex 59 - Wendell 37 Knightdale 34 Rolesville 52 Spring Hope 44 Spring Hope 42 (tourney) Oxford Orphanage 41 (tourney) The Bulldogs seven defeats were at the hands of: Middlesex 66 Wakelon 44 Louisburg 70 Wakelon 54 Bailey 83 Wakelon 65 Angier 85 Wakelon 76 Youngsville 70 Wakelon 66 Bailey 80 Wakelon 44 Middlesex 54 Wakelon 47 (Western Div. tourney) Farmers Meet Congressmen For Talks on Weed Problems Thirty-nine members of the, Wake County chapter of the Flue Cured Tobacco Growers Associa tion met with North Carolina con , gressmen during the weekend to discuss the MH-30 treatment con troversary and poundage control measures. Walter Dean, president of the newly organized tobacco growers’ association, said the group was well pleased with the results of discussion with the congressmen. They met with Congressman Harold Cooley and had a question and answer session with him. They later met with Steve Wrather, U. S. Department of Agriculture grading sevice representative, and heard the proposed plan for a to bacco grading system. The group is to talk extensively with Wrather later on the subject. Henry E. Ferrell is president of the Wake County chapter of the organization. Attending the meeting were A. C. Faison, James R. Faison, Cary Clifton, Grady Douglas, H. Titus Painter, Bobby F. Horton, Ralph House, S. G. Anderson, T. S. Yan cey, A. R. Wall, Jr., James E. Pope, Henry E. Ferrell, Huey B. Allen, Joe Buchanan, L. Thomas Faison, Walter Dean; Willard White, J. C. Pearce, B. C. Roberts, Cecil Hopkins, B. A. Weathers, R. B. Hopkins, Kenneth House, Clifton House, J. N. Horton, i R. R. Robertson, L. B. Woodard, Milton E. Tart, H. R. Callahan, W. A. Wilborn, J. R. Ellis, Walter Massey, Clarence Wootton, A. B. Knott, R. S. Phipps, T. E. Bunch, I Joe W. Todd, Walter T. Painter, and C. B. Mitchell. Legal Action Considered to Stop High School Consolidation Plans Last Thursday night a large group of East Wake County citi zens approved plans for legal ac tion blocking Wake County Board of Education plans to consolidate four high schools on a site just northwest of Martin’s Center. The action came after a series of speak ers recounted numerous efforts to gain consideration for Wakelon in the scheduled consolidation of the Zebulon school with Wendell, Knightdale, and Rolesville. The meeting was supervised by Mayor Ed Hales. It was held in the Zebulon Recorder’s Court room. Ferd Davis, nominee to the Wake Board of Education, was first on the agenda. He related events during a visit by the Coun ty Board of Education to the Pat tie Lee property near Lizard Lick on Monday, March 4, and dur ing (his appearance before the County Board the following day. On Monday all members of the County Board of Education re garded the Pattie Lee property as an acceptable school site, he said. At the County Board’s request, he met with it in Raleigh Tuesday, presenting Zebulon’s proposal. During the meeting, he said, he was “treated worse than I’ve been treated before,” but the Board’s reaction before the end of the meeting caused him to think “we were going to get a little consid eration.” The County Board suggested that the Pattie Lee property could be acceptable provided the four local school boards concerned were agreeable to a consolidated high school there and provided the price Wendell Church Plans Revival Spring revival services will be held at the Covenant Presbyterian Church in Wendell beginning Sun day and continuing through March 22, the pastor has announced. The ReV. Russell B. Fleming of Raleigh will be the speaker. He is the son of a Presbyterian minister and was reared in Alamance Coun ty. He attended King College in Bristol, Tenn., and Union Semin ary in Richmond. The Rev. Mr. Fleming now serves Western Boulevard Presby terian Church in Raleigh. He came to Raleigh from Rocky Mount. He is president of the Raleigh Council of Churches and a member of the Subcommittee on Legislative Af fairs of the Christian Action Com mission of the North Carolina Council of Churches. A special service for youth will be part of the revival week, the pastor said. On Thursday night, March 21, the Rev. Mr. Fleming, who serves as chairman of senior high work for the presbytery of Granville, will speak to the youth concerning the challenge of Chris tianity. Covenant Presbyterian Church is located on Selma Road in Wen dell and serves Presbyterians in the Knightdale, Rolesville, Wen dell, and Zebulon areas. PTA Meeting ■* Wakelon PTA will meet Mon day, March 24, at 7:45 p.m. in the school auditorium. A study course will be held. of the property could be reduced sufficiently to prove the Board of Education could “save money, too.” Before the Zebulon attorney could return to Zebulon, however, Vaiden Whitley, County Board chairman, had placed a call to Davis to say he wanted the at torney to know that the Board members were joking about the possibility of the Pattie Lee site being selected. Pat Farmer, Mrs. Harold Green, and Mrs. Selma Davis also were present at the meeting. Farmer verified Davis’ story, saying, “Ferd Davis did a wonderful job and when we left I thought we had a chance and all others there thought we did. ... It didn’t sound like a joke to me and I’ve never been any more surprised than when Ferd said it was all off.” Mrs. Davis, president of the Wakelon PTA, reported she told the County Board of Education “the people from Zebulon were not strong for consolidation but were reconciled to it if Zebulon were considered.” Closing her remarks to the Board, she said, “A con solidated school would get Zebu Ion support if Zebulon were con sidered.” “We all felt encouraged when we started home (from the Coun ty Board meeting),” Mrs. Davis concluded. Foster Finch related the history of the proposed four-school con solidation. He told of local citi zens’ attempts to gain considera tion of Zebulon ideas. “No member of the (Wake) Board of Education has shown any interest in our presentation,” he said. “This indicates just a pre tense of being polite. . . . They are going to put us where they want us to go.” Noting that a short delay in approval of the site purchase caused a substantial savings in money, Vance Brown advised that “additional savings in money should be considered when choos ing the site. The (county) School Board is not taking the interest of the taxpayer at heart.” (Continued on Page 4) IN SPITE OF WARNING... Deeds Made Early In spite of warning from the Wake Board of Commissioners to “proceed with extreme caution,” deeds conveying 49.26 acres to the Wake County Board of Education for a consolidated school in eastern Wake County near Martin Center were signed and acknowledged from two to three days before the Board of Commissioners approved purchase of the site, records of the Wake County Register of Deeds office show. The Registry records further re cite that Clarence Kirk, Wendell attorney, prepared all four deeds for the parties conveying land to the Board of Education. Kirk told the county commis sioners on March 4, according to The Raleigh Times, that he was “not employed by any group repre sented” in the matter before the commissioners. A deed from R. L. Scarboro, Jr., and wife, Isabelle S. Scarboro, ex ecuted and notarized March 1, 1963, conveyed 9.52 acres to the Board of Education for a consid eration indicated by documentary tax stamps to be about $4,500.00. A deed from W. H. Collie and wife, Eula M. Collie, also executed and acknowledged March 1, 1963, conveyed 11.77 acres for an indi cated consideration of $5,500.00. The R. L. Scarboro and Collie The Zebulon Record at tempted to call Clarence Kirk to clarify his remark quoted in The Raleigh Times. He was reported out of his office until Friday. deeds were acknowledged before D. W. Thomas, a Wendell notary. A deed from B. A. Weathers and wife, Betty K. Weathers, conveyed 9.15 acres for an indicated consid eration of $4,500.00. This deed was executed March 1, 1963, and ac knowledged before Frank Parrott, a notary public, employed by C. N. Robertson, former county commis sioner. A deed from A. G. Scarborough and wife, Mavis R. Scarborough, attorneys in fact for A. G. Scarbor ough, Jr., and Robert Scarborough and their wives, conveyed 18.82 acres for an indicated considera tion of $8,500.00. This deed was dated and notarized March 2, 1963, and powers of attorney were no tarized February 25, 1963, and March 1, 1963. This deed was ac knowledged before Jane C. Bruce, a notary public working with a Raleigh hospital. The four deeds were recorded at B:30 a.m., Thursday, March 7, 1963, and are recorded in Book 1542, pages 138, 131^ 130, and 106, respectively. Hales Pastor Is Ordained In South Carolina Services Robert Lovell, Jr., pastor of Hales Chapel Baptist Church on Route 1, Zebulon, was ordained in the gospel ministry Sunday night, March 10, at 7:30 in the Mullins, S. C., First Baptist Church. Conducting the service were the Rev. Lewis C. McCormick, pastor of the church; the Rev. D. E. Can nady, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Mullins, and the R’v. George Lovell, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Conway, S. C., and uncle of the young minister. The Rev. Mr. Lovell served as assistant pastor and youth director of the Mullins church for two sum mers. He is presently a sophomore at Southeastern Baptist Theologi cal Seminary in Wake Forest. The 26-year-old Leesburg, Fla., native is married to the former Jewell Barnhill, daughter of Mrs. Maywood R. Barnhill and the late Mr. Barnhill of Mullins. He is the son of Mrs. C. R. Lovell, Sr., and the late Mr. Lovell. He is a graduate of Florida State University. About 25 members of the Hales congregation attended the ordina tion service.