PTV’ RAEPORD, NORTH CAROLINA; ^Am URSDAY. JULY 28, 1927. $L50P^ The Board of Directors of The North Carolina Satmtoriuai at their last quarterly meeting passed on the permanent im provement program for the in stitution during the coming two vears. A building to be erected on the ^opposite side from the present maiu building- of the din ing roon^.ltiteben and auditorium on the grounds, to accommodate ono hundred women patients, will'be tbe. outstanding perma nent improvements. The fitting at an early date of steel casement windows in.?the two wards already erected, which at the time of building were only screened in, will make the institution a thoroughly'mod ern building in accord with the best-Sanatorium building prac- ticevot today.' ’ ' The old building now used for women, will prot)ably be used for ambulatory men patients when the new building is completed. New Insect Pest Destroys berries. Raleigh, N. C , July -The strawberry growing industry of eastern North Carolina is thraat- ened with destruction by a root louse. This is the startling informa tion brought to State College by C. H. Brannon, extension ento mologisj;, who recently made a trip through the strawberry sec- adjacent to Chadbourn. ^rpot North GarolinaMPiys Mr, Bran non. "The pee^s one of the plant lice .which feeds on the roots of certain plants and this particular species feeds only on the strawberry plant. It passes the winter on the leaves and stems in the egg stage after hatching out. the aphids or lice are placed down on the roots by ants which feed on the honey dew secreted by the lice." Scotland County News. The Scotland Cantaloupe Ex change had loaded 62 cars up to Wednesday night.. ^ The total number of cars'loaded ' this sea son cannot be accurately esti mated. Shipments at Johns have been very heavy, and some say that more cantaloupes have been loaded there this season than at any other place in the county. VUednesday morning, July 20. at lO o’clock Miss Eugenia San ford and Mr. James Allan Dunn, tff Salisbury, were married at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr and Mrs. B. F. Sanford, in North Laurinburg. Rev. Mr. Porcher, pastor of the Episcopal church at Bennettsville, S. C., officiated. Scotland county through the local Red Cross chapter, has con tributed a total of $564.19 to .the Mississippi Relief funds of the American Redrj^oss. Mr. R. J. Hatcher, brother of T. D. Hatcher, of Fayetteville, will open a nevv jewelry store Jin the Wilkinson store room in Laurinburg about August 1st Little Josie Buchanan, daugh ter of Dr. and Mrs. L. T. Buch anan, Jr., of Laurinbuag,passed awav on Thursday, July 14th, at th^. Wrightsville Baby Hospital, Wfimington, following a brief illness. —Laurinburg Exchange. The Sheriff advertises land for j "Tlj "teale for taxes next week. ! used " t voar. 96 new doctors were licensed )y the State board last we^. It is stited that oij. .-has beep discovered in SampSon county.- Battery’F goes into .summer training at Fort Moultrie, S. C., Son Aug. 7th. ce Uil'& Fertilizer Co. baRs for meal last eh Drabam spent last .^esteru North Caro His many friends are glad to see Mr. J. W. Barnard out again after a serious illness. The State Agricultural depart ment figures the wheat crop at 75 per cent of an average. / ' i' The early molting hens should be culled and sold. Kee]^*' the late molters for bonding, v #4r. • fiue i Mr. George McFadven left Friday for Miami, he will work. Fla , where is the' Btoise^ bn^c n^he GetBu^y, You All. The members of Philippi church are to meef there today, Tbur^ay, to clean off the Get hm^ you . and graveyard. # Silk Industry to Be Restored. Some time ago when the equip ment of the silk mills was sold, the public was led to believe that this enterprise was lost to Fav Fayetteville It will be news to many people of Cumberland county to know that through the Gbamber of Commerce it has been fully restored and prospec tively on a mucb more elaborule basis. The property has l)een pur chased by Messrs. Press and Brawer, of Patterson, New Jer sey, prominent in the silk manu factunug business and itjs their expectation to operate the plant to its full capacity which will mean a payroll of $6,000 a week most of which will be spent and Aperdeen, July 19.—Sunday afternoon the Fayetteville and Greensbororo bus hit a Ford touring car containining a man and woman and young baby just at the Blue Fertilizer Co. The w )man’s head went through the windshield causing severe cuts about her face. Her hip was shattered and she was otherwise hurl The baby was thrown through the windshield and land ed in the road but miraculously escaped injury. The man who was driving also escaped injury. Messrs. Lee Page and Neil Me Keithan passed along immediate ly afterward anu brought the woman to Aberdeen where she received treatment and then was taken to the hospital at Hamlet where she is not expected to re cover. The man in the Ford was on the inside of the road coming toward Aberdeen and did not see the bus. It is understood that uo blame is attached to the driver of the bus. / A shortage of approximately $21,000 in the accounts of the Robeson road board is alleged to have occurred on account of ^ circulated in Fayetteville.—Peo-1 overcharges in the price of ma pie’s Advocate. | terial and supplies sold to the road board by the Carolina Philadelphus. July 20.-Rev. ^0., with which it has William Black of Charlotte con traded for the past 2 or 3 years, ducted a series of meetings last week at Philadelphus Presby 1 Ped for which the board paid, Ir u terian church. 4 Notice to Taxpayers. On Monday, August Ist, 1927, 1 shall proceed to advertise all lands in Hoke county on which the taxes fur the year 1926 have 1^' not been paid. Please come to the office and settle these taxes before that date, so 1 will not have to perform this very 4 pleasant duty. > ’ EDOARHALL, ' Sheriff. regularities in the accounts were discovered by the Richmond branch of Dfnst & Ernst, audi tors. who are making the first complete^audit of the books of Robeson county. Nets of Thanks. ^ We wish to express our heart felt thanks tu our neighbors and friends for the kindness and un- ] sympathy extended to us in our recent bereavement, the sudden death of our brother. John McGoogan and Sisters. Sheep will turn?the waste on the farm into a cash product, say the best growers in North Caro lina. Mr. Lawrence McNeill of Thomasville spent the week end with his father, Mr. E. B Me Neill. Thanks to Cary Peterkin, col ored, for a very fine cabbage. Cary is a great gardner and gooc farmer. Mrs. D, S. McKeithan has re turned from Highsmith hospital, and we are sorry to hear is not improved The material for the enlarge ment of Raeiord graded and high school is citing placed ori the ground. A total of 2.500 hea l of hogs hkve been vaccinated against cholera in.Pitt county by County Agent E. F. Arnold ward, and it is hoped a Car of porkers may be shipped from Raeford in September. Wheat is turning out very poorly for the most part. Occa sionally there is a good crop. Rust and smut nearly ruined it. Quite a lot of cantaloupes art being loaded on the L. & 8. rail road here That shed they have protects from both rain and sun lit;'eson county was canvass ed Uy the Cotton co’ops last week, and Hoke will be soon We do not look for the organiza tioo to stand. Trie Mexican bean beetle has gone eastward as far as Cumber and county. Wherever the pesL have spread the garden beans are,seriously damaged The rains have not been gen erai;'there are places where the weather has been too wet, and in other places crops have been burned up by the drouth all sum mer. McLauchlin Co. bad Mr. D. M Moses of iheKahnn Tailoring Co of Baltimore with them Friday and Saturday, and he booked number of orders for winter suits Mr C. K. Jackson of Stone wall left a sample of the first curing of this year’s tobacco at Page Trust Company .bank and it is real pretty. The members of Raeford Lodge No. 306 A. F. & A. M. and their families enjoyed a picnic and a social hour at the Club House Tuesday evening. Mr. W. E. Freeman spent sev eral days in Washington, D. C., last week. He is learning what there is to know about the heatrola, anew and very efficient hpacer he is selling. Observers say there is not as many cotton blooms as there should be, that cotton is not fruiting as it should, and they predict a short crop in Hoke this year; others are more hhpeful. i.^cQueen was taken 3t Thursday night, we to hear. Batjcom and family |ng sotne days in the mountains iirah Hall 'o( Lincolnton ractive guest of Miss iFadyen this tyeek “ V ^pund this towift take )le’8 watermelons/ and mm are being indicted larceny. jaiy Currie Martin and ifourof Smithfield who ted relatives here recent i returned to their home. L i |len base ball team de- liaeford 6 to 1 in a game jinesday afternoon. Ouf notin' the humor of day- iyetteville road now de Turnpike road and idom church while the tween this town and ' creek is being built. Hall, Messrs. McLean Ryan McBryde and rrie attended a Men’s ice in Asheville last returning Tuesday. )le were to use cotton Ths editor, Mrs. D S. Misses Maude and Mary Mrs. Ina Bethune and daughters, Peggy and Poole, Poole, little aaiignters, i/eggy ana Isabel, RlV- and Mrs. A K. Currie and little daughter. I.,eonora, Mrs. Anna McD. Covington and Miss Jennie McNeill Clark ^ent over to Ellerbe Springs last Thursday for the day, That was the scene of the most intetesting part of our lives of the older member^of the group, and so the trip. Ev erything has changed. Vt-ry little of that we used to see is to be seen now. But we enjoyed a day exceedingly well. RUPTURE EXPERT HERE Mrs. P. H. flSYrteht tUm-: Messrs. Hall sod daughters. Miwee Qntfr Wilta. spent the Wrightsvilfe Beaeb. At four o’clock Tnea&f tng Mrs. R. L. Momy dii oned a party of girls oil it iiil^ to the Hoke County Ciub Houii^ Breakfast was preparedin camp style and after breakfast elite ming and boat riding was tuajof ed. T he party included Mrs. B. L. MurrayT Louise Blue. Eiiidew iJampbell, 8arah Catbeciae Cromartie, Mar^erite Freehoil^. Josephine Bali. Bennie MeFsd yen, Lucile McLeod, Bblcfred Gliver, Margaret Peele. Mai7 Lee Seate. Dundamck Itc tbe fai F. H. .Seelev of Chicago and Philadelphia, the noted expert, will personally be at the Prince Charles hotel, and will remain in Fayetteville this Monday only, August 1st, from 9 A. M. till 5 P. M. Mr. Seeley says; "The Spermatic Shield will not only retain any case of rupture perfectly, but contracts the open ing in 10 days on the average case Being a vast advancement over all former methods—exem- plyfying instantaneous effects immediately appreciable and withstanding any strain or posi- sackfiji^ cotton seed rneal, and jtion no matter the size or loca- use only cotton bag-jtion. Large or difficult cases, or I price wo (lid be better j iucigonal ruptures (following rep .+Why buy jute bag I^^Qperatiqns) apecially solicited M the ■ -Y -^'VihariL^ ‘ The finish is lifting, or some Spain, producing results with- one has been picking holes ;n the out surgef-y injections, medica top dressing on the Red Springs 1 treatments or prescriptions road But of course they will go back over it and repair it, but people shou d be made to stay off it until it dries out or hardens. Col. Alex. McMillan of Dun darrach was in town Friday, and was remarking that there was one word in the English language that everybody always pro nounced wrong, and when ask ed what word that was, or is, he said it was WRONG. The harvesting of the peach crop is a rush for the time it is on. At. the Manice orchard the manager told the writer a few' days ago, one hundred and fifty car leads would be shipped in two w’eeks. They run 8 trucks, about that many mule teams, and work 250 men during the time. The crop will bring near ly $150,000, and it lakes one third of all the fruit brings to pay the freight. , J. M. Truelove’s home was robbed, bis safe broken open and $14,200 taken last Friday while he was awav from home, and his wife in the garden gath ering vegetables for dinner. Truelove lives near Dunn. His home burned some years ago and $1,000 in cash with it. He never would put his money in a bank. Mr. Henry Monroe is recover iiig from a snake bite. He was loading corn in the shuck in barn up near the cotton mill some days ago, and a pilot bit him on the hand. Something stung him, and he didn’t know what, and worked on, and in short time saw the snaked coiled in the corn and was just in the act of biting him a second time. As it was he suffered greatly from the bite The pilot is very poisonous, and when one bites you. you will think yoii have had a coal of fire applied, tho8e''“who have been bit say. ^ I . G A.U TION —All cases $houl be cautioned against the use of any elastic or web truss with understraps, as same rest where the lump is an( not where the opening is, producing complications necessitating surgical operations. Mr. Seelev has aocu menie from the United States Government. Washington, D. , for inspection. He will be glad to demonstrate without charge nr fit them if desired. Businea,s demands prevent stop ping at any other place in this section. N. B — Every statement in this no lice has been verified before the Fed eral and State Courts.—F. H- SEE LEY. Home Office, 117 N. Dearborn Street, Chicago P. S.—Fraud Warning—Beware of transient imposters who irni tate and pirate the wording of mv ads. and otherwise attempt to impersonate me and deceive the public. in the first Mce, are all smil^for they have tbdh; finest cr0{is and are generally & fine fi_xA Miite Afie Hall js on a visit tD her sister. Mrs Evans, who lives in Philadcfphia. She is expected to return in a few days. Mrs Margaret MclnnisCianton who has been spending a monl with her parents. Mr. and L A!% Mclnnis. returned to her home in Jacksonville, Fla. She w as accompanied by her sister. Miss Lucy, and brother, rence. They will returd the last of this week. Mr. and Mrs. A. B- McMillad, two babies and Miss Norma Lee McMillan spent last week visit ing friends in Portsmouth and Norfolk, Va. They report a very enjoyable trip, having gone by motor thri they turning We silt tance is about Similes.’ ^ Miss Lois Sumner of Lumber Bridge is spending time with her auot, Mry Alex. McMillan. Rev. A. D. Carswell filled his regular appointment at the Presbyterian church here Sun day, and v^e will not have any other service until the second Sunday in September as Carswell will have his and will be away during. The meeting at Ephe^ last night. The servU ing conducted by Rev. Al Wagratn. Mr. Hoyle oi ford is expected to be then the middle of the week aud are expecting a good meetin|||^ AL -J'.M Mrs. Sexton Entertains. Mrs. F. B. Sexton gave a love ly bridge party-Tuesday morn ing, July 19, in honor of Mis.-; Bettie Tarpley of Spartanburg, S. C., who is the guest of Mrs. John Walker. Miss Mary Blue received top score prize, a beautiful bud vase, while Miss Tarpley was present ed with a dainty hand mono- gramed handkerchief. A delicious two course lunch eon was served, consisting of fried chicken, hot rolls, stuffed tomatoes, potato salad and devil ed eggs, followed by a fruit ice. > Mrs- Sexton was assisted in serving by Mrs. Walker and Miss Martitia Hodgin. FOR SALE—20 Duroo Jersey pigs. Fine. Get yours before they are picked over J H. CAMPBELL.^ NEW I'LJKNlP SEED^tJvrti^" 100 popuiuls, several varie^ea. f Raeford Hardware Ckx LAKE WACOAMAW. N. C. F urnished cottages rented tv the week. Write, wire or phone Oscar High, WbiteviUe* N. C. Sandy Grove Charch. Preaching at Sandy Qrove Presbyterian church Sunday. I July 3l8t at 11 A. M. Paint your shoes. We have the paint. Read our ad. Raeford Hardware Go- Good Chicken Feed is paid lor i more eggs, and Good Coi F’eed increases both milk andy butter. None better than mln^ McLeanr Campbell. Fishing Poles, Hooks and linee and other tackle. Raeford Hardware Co. Expert Hemstitching and Dxeaa making. Satisfaction gnarmn- MRS. E. R. WILLIAM80N.\ In The Kash Store. Phone 223 Raeford, N. C. EYES EXAK Glasses Ground Same DR. JUUUS Phone Fhyettevi