HILLSBORO AND CHAPEL MILL, N. C., THURSDAY, MAY i3, 1954 Oronga County „ up with tho now* T,v#r tho county by , THE NEWS of County. NUMBER 19 Ea■* Ml |t«-L MOMUAil ■MMnllO » w» SfwlCKp Bwwll ^wlHPIW|t •oil. buy, ront or got a fob by min* tho cImIIM o4* on pago 9 of THE NEWS of Orango County. * TEN RAGES THIS WEEK KIDD BRFWFR 5 fa/e/qA flounc/up [races. . .Although Char of Rutherford has been as State Insurance Com er only a. short time, he in there long enough for | come to bat several times brtant issues. On each oe Lso far—he has been in Batting on the side of the we have nothing against sition, it seems doubtful |is particular fighf will ery interesting. Gold made If friends about the State was assistant to Con Ln ’A. L. Bulwinkle and, |s a member of the State ^ntally, Insurance Corn ier Gold is a first cousin Gold, great WF halfback early 30’s, former chief of In Winston - Salem, fo a |ine State director of pris now city manager of the Ity. Ite the fact that Joshua nfaking a lot of smoke campaign against Treasur In Gill, he doesn’t seem to ling much headway other certainly not much of a |m, Gill has, nevertheless, hefty following among the and there is nothing in rhich leads one to think has much chance against nes will get a good vote, sufficiently, good — and j Scott should go'to the U. |e -—you might find James for Governor two years as to the Congressional |from here it looks as if umbents will win out. (FACTS, , ,As we said here he time Lennon and Scott tot swigging many .weeks le people are entitled tn the facts about the ability, and honesty of the cand |and what the candidates pr. Once they have this in on, . their decision will in [lability be the proper one. although it was fine for Stevenson, and Eisenhower al their income tax state to the people — and we their honesty and forth for so doing — the bus letting the folks in on larnings has suddenly bc bld-fashioned. Why? [short years ago it was all i'hy was it not a “smoke then but is a snioxe now? not kid ourselves. Let’s lets. The cause of all this pout personal income and tax statements originated | campaign due to very se |nd ugly rumors reflecting | honesty of W. Kerr Scott. difficult to imagine that P are as bad as the rumors, cott, however, has certainly tnel to Hie flame by' refus make pubjic his financial Ms and his income tax re por the past five years. If fs not do this before May voters will have to go to Us and cast their votes with v'ng all the facts. |main issue in this campaig acter. The meat in the c s: did Keri^Scott — as tt have it—use the office < r ioe eo&stderable parsa and, if so is it reflect! income- tax returns? tainly do not know — and Propose to insinuate thal the case—but the rumon Ue- In fairness to both Mr [and to the public, it is tc *Ped that Mr. Scott will set [furnish thp public with th« [requested — namely, tht ation of his State and Fed come tax returns for th< five years. - . » this personal finance mal not a recent thing. It ha I the key in this campaigi [the beginning. It does loo! [hef6*|s though if Mr. Scol ’'his tax returns, and i that the ugly rumor [See ROUNDUP, page 2) Community Leaders In Drive Told Rural Progress Program For 1954 Well Underway HILLSBORO — Scores of white and Negro community leaders have been appointed to lead the 1954 Orange County Rural Prog ress Program and this year’s drive is well underway, agricultural authorities reported this week. A more elaborate list of prizes has been contributed for this year’s program in an effort to stimulate still more achievements than were generated last year in the successful effort which won for the county the coveted “Coun ty of the Year” award in Rural Progress. The community leaders are al ready active, giving out the bro chures on the program, contact ing their neighbors and explain ing the various phases and ad vantages of the program'. The leaders in the. various com munities are: 1954 COMMUNITY LEADERS Bethlehem: Mrs;'--Wiley Perry, Mrs. Raymond Thompson, Mrs. James Bradshaw, Mrs. John Ap pie, Mrs. S. I. McPherson, Mrs. Wilbur Lloyd. Buckhorn: Ollie F. Jones, Har vey Ray, W. A. Moore, M. M. Can ter. Caldwell: Henry Miller, J. G. Berry, G, C. Tillman, Samuel Mc Kee, Mrs. Louis Blaylock, Jesse Porterfield, C. B. Taylor, Clifton Parker, Irvin Roberson. Carr’s Store: Mrs. Knox Woods, Howard Compton, Marvin RogerS, Mrs. Draughn Rountree, Mrs. Rainey Foushee, Mrs. Paul Long, Lewis Dunn, Mrs. L. J. Rogers. Calvander: Lonnie Hogan, Mrs. GFeiih Whitfield, Mrs. Curtis Ho gan, Mrs. W. D. Neville, Jack Long, John H. Cate, Walter Everett. Cedar Grove: R. C. Compton, Wade Carruthers, Mrs. R. E. Hughes, Mrs. Ruby McDade, Don ald McDade, Mrs. Jack Wills. Chandler’s: Mr. & Mrs. Jule Al len, John Hawkins, Wilfred Phelps, Mrs. Zeb Burton, Mrs. Wy att Phelps. Crabtree’s Store: Mrs. N. N. Jordan. Mrs.. W. L. Horner, Mrs. ^ (See LEADERS, page 4) Dedication Rites Sunday At Cane Creek Dedication services for the n£W j church will.be held at Cane Creek Baptist Church, in the Orange Grove community, on the annual ■ homecoming day, Sunday, May 1C. j Dr. I. G. Greer will- conduct the dedicatory sermon in the morning : at 11 o’clock. Memorial services and .recognition of former pastors will be held in' the afternoon. Dinner will be on the grounds. All friends are invited to attend. un Here GARAGE MAN CALVIN RAY and Mayor Ran J ohnston of Hillsboro art in the picture above as the Mayor's car receives one of the green safety stick >rs after a safety inspection. Free Check Is Offered By Garage In cooperation with the Carolina Safety League and state officials, including Governor Umstead and , Motor Vehicles Commissioner Ed Scheidt whft have end- rsed the program, local officials and Ray O’Neal Motors in Hillsboro this week launched a voluntary car safety inspection program for the benefit of Orange County automo bile owners. The Carolina Safety League is a non-profit organization formed to combat the dangers of mechan ically unsafe motor....vehicles. It was formed by various individuals, business firms and organizations interested in safety. It'' program, already launched on a ;t"$te wide basis, includes the voluntary ve hicle safety check, designed to ac complish on a voluntary, basis the same results -as\ were attempted ! in this state* in the 1!H9. legisla 1 ive. program,'which w;u later re pealed. Hundreds ol. garages through out the State have bon signed' up as official inspection stations, 'offering ~-fpee-——i ns pec lions-of brakes; glazing, steering, lights, (See SAFETY, page 3) New Newspaper In Chapel Hill Area To Publishi Next Week CHAPEL HILL — A new ncws: paper to be called the Chapel Hill News Leader, will have its maug ural edition nexV Thursday,--Ma} 20, according to an announcement by the publishers today. Formal incorporation papers wil be filed in the office of Secretary of State Thad Eure in Raleigh tomorrow. The incorporators, who will use the firm nairfe of The News Lead er Company, Inc., are: Phillips Russell, president, ano editor of the paper; L. M. Polland er vi^e-prcsident and advertising director; Roland Giduz, secretary and news director; and Edwin J Hamlin, treasurer and business manager. . , Q "The News Leader will be 01 a standard size, eight cplumns by 21 and a quarter inches and will have its offices for the present time in the office of (The News, Incorpo rated, on Main Street in' Carrbo.ro, whete it will also be printed. It will be published oji Mondays and Thursday and home-delivered by carrier boys'on those days. versity, has been on its,Journalism faculty for 23 years. He has run a weekly newspaper in this state and I has worked on newspapers in New j -York, Philadelphia and London.j | Pollander, advertising teacher at | the University School of Journal-j j ism, has been on the advertisUr) ! staff of The Raleigh Times, the ; Richmond Times-Dispatch, and as | sistant advertising director of the j Herald-Sun papers in Durham. | Giduz is a graduate of Chapel Hill High School and the Univer sity of North Carolina and has been on the staff of the Chapel 'Hill We'ekly since January, 1B53. Hamlin resides in Hillsboro and | is editor and publisher pf The 1-News of Orange County and The ( Alamance News, both of which are j prinfed at his plant in Carrboro. Speed Watch Program, Politics Ban Credited In Safety Record. HILLSBORQ—"In three q?onths< after the speed check' program had been launched on North Car olina highways, the average speed of both cars and trucks had dropp ed 10 miles per hour”. Thus spoke Lieutenant William Hunt of the Fayetteville division of the North Carolina Highway, Patrol in an address to the Hills boro Lions club Tuesday night in which he described the various devices being employed in the psychological fight being waged on accidents on the highways by the State Highway Patrol. He was introduced by Patrolman T. P. Smith of the Hillsboro office who complimented ‘the Citizenry.and the etvie groups of Orange County J for their cooperation which has brought improvement, in the acci dent situation locally. In describing the various phas ' es of the scientific approach to the accident problem, Hunt said that '‘only ‘after Ed Scheidt came in were we allowed to do what we had wanted to do for years. That's the whole story in a nutshell. He has'fiilT eonfrol and politic^ has been eliminated from the patrol .” He told- lioftytotal arrests were high immediately after the inaug uration of the speed-watch pro gram while arrests last month were down to 10 per cent of what they were in the first month of the device’s use. Other phases of the psychological approach in clude the use of the whammy, the use of the special type camera to record violations, sajtuation coverage of a certain area by pa trolmen to make it appear they w more numerous than actually. (ary. safety check program' now underway locally and throughout (he Stale and poinled out that during the period of enforced in spection, North Carolina for the first time dropped below the na tional average in accidents. After that year of ^inspection the State rate began to climb and climbed continuously until October 1953 when the Schiedt program went into effect and they began to de crease.. ■’ TALENT SHOW _ ^ The West Hillsboro Parent Tcschpr^ Association is sponsoring 1 a talent show on Saturday night, May 15, at 7:30 o’clock in the 1 school auditorium. Voters To Hear Candidates At Event Tonight CHAPEL HILL Orange Coun ty voters will have a chance to night to hear candidates ftfor county offices who are affected by the May 20 primary when the Chapel Hill League of Women Voters holds its biennial candi date’s meeting. Tonight’s meeting will be held" at 8 o'clock at the Chapel Hill Elementary School auditorium ta accommodate the large crowd ex pected to attend. Candidates will he given a chance to discuss various questions and the audience will he given a question .and answer period to ask questions of the candidates. Ano-her candidate meeting is planned next Fall when voters will hear candidates of both the Demo cratic' and Republican parties. Suits Brought By Thompson Heirs Settled HILLSBORO — Compromise settlements have been made in three suits brought by, heirs of the late Will Ed Thompson of 'Efland against the executor of the estate, Attorney Clarence Ross of Gra ham. No settlement has yet been reached between another plaintiff and the executor. Attorney Victor S. Bryant of Durham in a docu ment filed with the Clerk of Court on March 9, also made himself a party to the litigation, which had as its purpose obtaining funds from the estate for services ren dered the deceased eccentric prior to his death. Bryant served as his attorney for many years, and in a previous will was a major bene ; ficiary of the estate. The three plaintiffs who took voluntary non suits were nieces and a nephew of Mr. Thompson. •All reside in the Efland area. Set tlements agreed lo'by the execu tor and the court according to or ders signed by Clerk of Court E. M. Lynch were $975 for Bertie C. j Moore, $2150 each for Pattye C. j Stanford and James Crptchfield. New Leaders Are Elected At Precincts Chairmen and other precinct officials were elected at meetings held last Saturday in the various voting precincts. In HHJsboro, R. O. Forrest was elected chairman of that precinct, Mrs. Lucille Ray was named vicc chairmdn and S. M! Gattls was made secretary. Elected as pre cinct committeemen wei^c O. S. Robertson, Ed Hamlin, Elmer Dowdy, Jerry B. Stone and George Smith. In five Chapel Hill pHecincts, the newly-elected chairmen are 'T b. Creel, Precinct No. 1; Charles Kodson, Precinct No. 2; Sandy Me Ciamroch, Precinct No. 3; L. J. Phipps, Precinct No. 4; and Wik liam Geer,, precinct No. 5. Names of other officers 'elected iF theTive~ Chapel Hill precincts or officials elected* at other places : throughout the county were not immediately available. « - fFhe chairmen will all be mem bers of the Orange Counjy Demo cratic Executive Committee which will meet in connection with the County Democratic convention Sat I urday afternoon at 2 o’clock at the I courthouse in Hillsboro and elect the county chairman, other party officials-afhd delegates to the State Democratic Convention in Raleigh ' May 20, - ■; - It's Typical May Story ... .* . " Patrolman Finally Gets Driver Stopped, But It Wasn't Easy HILLSBORO—students of the accident picture have no explana tion for it, but each year the acci dent rate takes at big jump during j 111,, .n ” The picture ir Orange County Highway patrolmen reported yesterday hiat seven persons were arrested in the Hilsboro area last week for drunken driving and there was an upswing also in other road offenses. One was caught after a race at 85 miles per hour, another after a race at 75 miles per hour. One of the alleged drunken driv ers wound up in an accident after trying to outrun Patrolman Mann Norris Jr.' from the Eno PoWer Plant to Efland on Highway 70 at speeds from 90 to 95 miles per hour A few other charges such as hit and run. speeding and reckless i driving were tossed in with the • drunken driving for good measure I alter the. Patrolman had to run him off the road to stop him. Ephrian Elijah Mack, 28, of Mc Cain was released under $1,000 bond and his three months old baby, tJfeonly, othgjoccupaiit of —UmIIflK when the driver was finally .stopped, was turned over to the I Welfare Department case workers fpr safe keeping until the mother cculd come up from Pinchurst to. get him. Before he was finally stopped, according to Norris, Mack hit the car of W. B. Holt Sr. of Durham and then glanced into a 1953 Trac tor-Trailer being driven by Fred O. Latta of Durham, and w'ent 2.2 miles after a blowout and whef. caught was driving at th'e rafe of 60 miles per hour on the rim. He, along with others in the two weeks roundup., frill be tried m Recorders Court Monday morning, j But for the Highway Patrol, it’s May in Orange County whether the 'temperature says it. is or not. Physician Reports Candidate's Progress Is Still Satisfactory CHAPEL HILL — Deputy Sher iff Prank Maddry, who suffered a series of heart attacks on Mon day and Tuesday of last week, will definitely continue in the race for Sheriff, it was learned here yesterday, campaigning if possible from his bed at Watts Hospital. * Since "Maddry’s illness there had been widespread speculation that he would withdraw from the rape but this possibility was discount ed by both Mrs. Maddry and Dr. Isaac Manning of Durham, the candidate's physician. Dr. Manning said Maddry might leave the hospital in two or three weeks. He called . Mad dry's progress since the attack as “quite satisfactory.” Continuing the discussion of the candidate’s future. Dr. Manning said three months is usually required follow ing such an attack for the patient to resume “moderate activities.” He added: “I believe he will be in qutte satisfactory condition to carry out the duties ©f a law en forcement officer.” , r Maddry is one of four candi dates in the race for Sheriff. Oth ers are Odell H. . Clayton, Hills boro, Charles Johnston, Chapel Hill, and Willie Laws of Hillsboro Route 3. Seniors Offer '7 Chances1 Wednesday HILLSBORO—The Senior Claas of the Hillsboro High School will preseat “?even Chances 1 «’Sam uel French production, on Wed nesday night, May 19 at 8 o’clock promptly. • This is described as a racy conv-._ edy with plenty of action and In terest. It is a story In which Jim my Shannon, played by Bobby Forest, has Inherited twelve mil lion dollars, but he must bp mir ried by -his next birthday or he won’t get a c^nt. Now this starts almost a panic, because withiB a limited time Shannon has to pro pose to seven different girls in seven different ways. By the help of his pal, played by Everette Rosemond, Shannon works the events up into a ciltnaa of suspense and hilarity. Things take place quickly and with what surprises and.complications! The entire cast of characters are: Van Kenybrt*, Bruce Rich mond, Douglas Woods. Paul Ca*r. \fav Enquire, Evere’fe R-srmond Bobby Forrest, Jean kfinrev T^>ls Prive'Ue,, Yvonne' McDade Edna Lloyd. Dathpne Snmmev .Tan Oak ley, Dorothy Moore. Varv El'za beth Kenyon, and Harry Wheeley, I soloist. Managers: Jimmy Dunn and | Richard Rigsbee. Ticket committee: Jimmy apd ‘ Johnny Reeves. General committee: Helen Wjid and Betty Rose Crabtree. Registration Books Close On Saturday Next Saturday. May 15, will be ration prior two weeks later. It will be the last chance for new residents and for new voters who will become 21 years of age before the General Election in November or have become of voting age since the last election, to get their names on the books before the Primary. By law the registration period | closes at sunset. The following Sat I urday. May 22, will be Challenge Day. - Reports from a number of pre cincts indicate that new registra tions have been relatively light during the two previous weeke. Precincts In Chapel ffitl reported variously from 20 to 60 new reg istrants thus far. Some 64 had registered in Hillsboro by Tues day of this week.