THE HOKE cibuNTY NE^ Hoke Cooiits^s iMy Newspaper the hoke goupoty journal ir
■ .
IrmilME XXVI.
.
NUNKR 16.
RAEEORD, N. €.. FRIDAY, JULY 18th, 1930.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE fl.5f PER YEAS, IN ADVAMCBt
THE CLXN MACINNIS
- JIBEtS AT RAEFORD
State’s Growth
Over 23 Per Gent
'Hj
The Madnnis Clan met at .the
home of Mr. J. C. Campbell, Rae-
Programme^,
1. Sohjp^V*eal and mstrumental,
led by IMr. N. Maclnnis, Pembroke,
N! Ck, with vioiih.
, 2. Devotions, led ’ by Rev. G. W.
Hanna, •Antioch*
Historical i^etch of the Madnnis
Clan b(y N. Maclnnis, Pembroke, N.
C., and Rev. N. Maclnnis, Red
Springs, N. C. .
4. Open for • remarks.
Increase In Population In Tot
HOlioa
dharlotte, July 12.—A consistent
growth in population during the past
ten years iSr aU sections. of North
Carolina is reveafed in the Associated'
Press’ tabulations Of the 1930 census
which show the State’s present popu
lation is .3,166,146.
(Short I Tte tabulations competed tod^
speeches). ' I when final reports were received, dis-
^6 Bu^feas-r-Election of officers dosed the State gained 606,023 in
fer next year. I habitants from 1920 to 1930 or an
6. Dinner. . increase of 23.68 per cent
The afternoon was spent in a WhUe the largest gains were legis-
aodal way, greet^g friends and mak- tered in the Piedmont section where
ing acquaintance. indn^ee have ground rapidly m re-
Tradng back ancestfy and sing-emit yeare, the farming counties also
ing Scotdv ballads. had a matbed gain.
One of the iMbt interesting things I Among the first ten counties tabu-
f to the writer w*s*«l(ring ui^ Alexilated by total population gained, are
wno is 86' yeprs old, Robeson and
quote Burris' and Scott. He says foremost aPfieultural coimtiM. Cleve-
that Burns is his favorite-poet and land has ^so seen a rapid industrial
the “Cottier’s iSatwrdny Nighf* is one advance. '
^ of his best ; 'The figures re^al Gufiford , as the
r. 74 • Mr. N. Maclnnia talked interesting-I prie-eminent county ^ the State.^
V ly of his corre^ndence rrith rela-| Reg^^ring ip gain of 53,717, Guil-
tives in Scotland. us ex-jfnrd thok first idace in total popula-
'tiracts from a nuraib^7 of ^lettersjtion •with a ^count of 182,989. Meek-^
[ , written from time to time, onejienburg, :which bad held the honor
■ said, I have heajrd nry faitb« sPYi after the 1920 census, g^ed 47,260
he regrretted not having crossed overland now ranks second with a popula
te America ydth his brothers I lion of 127,955.
In hn article in the Oban Times Other leaders in total population
• of June 28, 1930 we . get the follow-hgained are Pqrsuth, 34,426; Bun-
ing information athut the Maclnnis con)be, 33»751|^ Gaston, 26,807; Dur-
- family of Scotland. Wm, 24,960; Wake, 193-9; aeveland,
MnyiTnnifl is the English equivalent ig,033; Robeson, 12,004, aUd Rowan,
M of Macangus. 12JK>4. , . ^
Castle of KinlochaUve.-—:— The total population gain for the
The castle consisting of a .square ten counties was 282,291, ,o^r_ 46.5 per
tower, and situated on a very pic- cent .of tge entire. State’s gain. While
tures(^ aiglW over bangSng the the entisti State’s growth Was at the
estuary of GeaftAbhainn (short river) z;ate of 23,68 per cent, that of the
is supposed to, have been erected by j ten leaders wds 46.9 per cent.
A Dubh-Chal, a Indy of the Naclmdsj ^dudtrial growth of Rowan
tribe, who accord!]^ to tradition pnid Lj^^ DPriiidn counties aided them in
■her architect with the extraprdiUary county of
remuneration a£ a quanityTof but- pj^^. and ^anniug-manufai
ter isofficient to fill the castle,. B® [coqnty of Ib^kifti^l^am in^^the
-tbjit, 'ae.,it ~ ^
have^^ ® 1920 eenspia, i»nSei ;,Mif|b
in, the twdfth ctotnry, when tlie|ai^ RoddngMm tenth in popujatibn
whole of Mowen'was ocenpied by among the State’s IQO counties,
the clan Maclnnis, who had suffered' .1.
DIES AT HOSF^L
IN PijlYBTTEVlU.B
Last Thursday, Jody lOth,' at gix
o’clock p. m., in Highsmith hpspit^
in Fayetteville, William Kelly
ter an illness .of about ten dayd, hav
ing entered ihe hos^tal on Tues^y
of .the preceding week. His death Was
due to an abceas in hm side and
poison caused thereby. He anderwent
an operation for tiuB /trouWe bht
grew steadily worse until tl^ end;
His death came as a distinct •riiock
to friends in the county.
Mr. S®esoms was born, in Oanbel-
land County oh May 13th, 1881 and
was, therefore, 49 yeans of age. He
is survived by four sisters imd two
brothers as follows: Mrs. Arc^e Hol
mes, Mrs. Robeson Mcl^urin, and
Mrs. Dan Gulbreth, Mrs! Jane Davis
and Mr. Hugh Sessoms, all of Fay-,
etteville; Mrs. Josephine Wicker, of
Cheraw, S. C.; Mns. Hugh Bain,
Wade, N. C.; and Mr Walter Siss
somns, of Hoboken, N J. He is smrt
vived by his widow, who was Miks
Flora McGill ibrfore nwirriage (dau^-
ter of Mrl and ffltna. Neil McGill, of
Raeford) and the ftdlowing children:
Neil Sessoms, Canal Zone; WilBhJn
Sessoms, Newton, N. C., Mr8. iB. H.
Dixon, Charlotte, N. C., and Mrs. W.
M. Cockman, Greensboro, N. C. j
Funeral serfices were conducted
BIRS. W. J. CRANEY
DIED HERE SUNDAY
from the home on Friday at 4 p.m.
in withstanding the repeated at-
The prqsent;^ ten leaders are:
Guilford, i32,9P9.:- Mecklenburg:,
tempts of the Noraemen t® wd«c® 127.955. Fors^, 111,695; Buncombe,
them to entire subjection. , 97^99; iWake, 94,464; Gaston, 78,049;
Somerled leads the clan to ®*PeM Durham, 6T,199; Ro^teson, 66,678;
Jonhston, 5^608; Rowan, 56,066.
Plsdmont and foothill^ counties
the norsemen.
On learning
that Somerled was
taking refuge in their c6unt^ a j mjurldng up large increases included
Alaipance, 9,416; Burke, 6,977; Cabar
rus, 10,490; Catawba, 10,152; Dwrid*
deleghti'on was sent in search
him and after much discussion
with Dr. W. M. Fairley, pastor of
Hr. Sessoms, officiating, assisted by|
Rev. John R. Miller of the Raeford
Baptist Chiurch and Rev. A. D. Cars
well of the Bethel group of Presby
terian churches Interment was made
in Raeford ceimetery. Honary paU-
bearers were J. A. Wilson, 'Milton
Campbell, J. E. Conoly, J S. Poole,
Walter Maxwell,' and T. F. Cidbreth.
Active pallbearers were nephews of
Mr. Sessoms and flower girls were
his nieces. ' ^ ‘
marriage announcement
Mrs. Lawson Berry Sutton
annoahcei3 the marriage of her
daughter '
murriel
:S--' ■ ;tO
Atthur Mathesoir, jjrr,
Mrs. W. J. McCraney, one of the
l^oneer settlers of Raeford, passed
Aw-ay at her home ihere Sunday rngd^t,
' Jidy ISthf at^hffie Vclbdj^p".
jabomt two years of declining health
and two weeks of critical illness,
per death was the result of the in
firmities of age, she having been
bmi February 2nd, 1821, being past
dt^ghty-nine years of age. Before her
marriage she was Miss Melinda Ann
Jqhnson, daughter of Alexander John-
Si^ w!ho came to this country from
Sk^tland. She was borh in Robeson
Cqunty. Her husband, Mr. W. J. Mc-
Ctaney, who- survives her, is a Con
federate Veteran and was the first
treasurer of Hoke County, holding
the office from the formation of the
county in 1911 until DecemT-ier 1924
when he volunti^rily retired on ac;
obn^ of his age and health He serv
ed ^ county in a most acceptable
and was conspicious for his
fpl^fulness to 'his duties.
: MoCraney was a member of
Pie ^Presbyterian church and lived a
Ct^stent Christian life that endear
ed ^er to all who knew her. Fun-
Antt' services were conducted from
b hoine on Monday dFternoon at
* o’clock by her pastor, Dr. W. Mi
Fairley, assisted by Rev. A. D Cars
well and interment was made in Rae
ford cemetery Active pallbearers were
H. L. Gatlin, Edgar Hall, J. A.
MoGoogan, Dan Camp'^iell, Frank
Cameron, and J. E. Conoly.
D. A. McLEOD HOME
DESTROYED BY FIRE
Saturday afternoon a'^Out five-
tiurty tile home of Mr. D. A. Mc-
Leod. on , Notthr Main Bt.
covert to be on fire and the alanh
was turned in but despite the.best
efforts of the local company the
bouse and most of the furniture were
lost. The house was built of heart
material and with the excessive heat
and dry weather obtaining for ten
days prior, the fire spread rapidly
and 'Soon enveloped the building
wihich was a mass of flames when
v^ter was turned on it. It is not
known definitely how the fire orig
inated. ilut it is thought that it
started on the kitchen roof.
The house was partly coverediwith
insurance but there was none on the
furniture and Mr. and Mrs. McLeod’s
loss is consideraUe.
Highway Patrol *
Produces $10,000
Profit For State
Road Safety and Laws, Far
trol Pays‘In Money
LARGE SNAKE HAS
EXPERTS GUESSING
Would Not Know Just What
Kind of Snake Bite Core To
Use in Case it Would Bite
COLORED MAN PASSRS
Andrew Andrews, colored, who liv
ed 'on the Williford farm, now own
ed by Z. V. Pate, died last Friday,
JOly 11th, at 9 a. m., of cancer.
He was 57 years of age. His remains
were buried at East (Freedom on Sat
urday at two o'clock. Andrew was
held in high Osteem t'y both races
‘tthd was a good man and a siiccess-
ftfi farmer. He was fihusually polite'
'tO" everyone and had many friends
who regret .'his passing.
$700.25 RECEIVED FOR
V ; HUNTING UCENSES
Mr. R. L. Dixon brought to town
a large snake Mon^y that had snake
experts hereabouts guessing. It was
about five feet long, nearly 'Ifiack
with a dim white stripe in cross
sections over its body and had a
short, blunt tail. Mrs. Dixon found
it in her chicken house and came
very close to it before she discovered
it. Just what kind of snake it was
or whetiier or not it was of a deadly
variety, no one seemed to know.
MAY6r of MONROE
DIED LAST FRIDAY
becama thedi leader. By a series : 113^8*. ireddl* 8,717, and Rnth-
rapid attacks the clan succeeded m' gj.fori^ 9,023.
slaying two of their leadei^s, andl Leaders among eastern fanning
the Norsemen were expelled I counties, many of them also touche(
Mowen. aud Satmeried' made himself jjy state’s'industrial growth, were
master of the whole of Marven, r.iiifwherland, 10,138; Edgecombe,
Lochaher and North Argyll. 9,901; HaUfax, 0,636; Harnett, 9,706;
The Lord of the Isles and the Mac-3127; Pitt, 8,847; Richmond,
^Inneses Wilscn 8,099, (Wayne
Toard the end of the four- 9,692.
teenth century the family of the There were five counties which lost
'hsles bedame connected with the population. The counties and their
clan-MacLean, by a charter granted losses were:
at Ardtornish in 1390, Donald of the Alleghany, .216; Corittuck, 56S~
Isles conferred on the chief of that Perquimans, 269; Swain, 1,657, and
clan, MacLean of Duart, aatlong other Yansey, 68R
land, those of Morven. —— —-
Tradition has it that, after return- RAEFORD BOY SCOUTS
ing from an expedition, in which the| - AT CAMP BETHUNE
Maolimcees had borne themselires
Uravely, the Chief of the clan ad-| Scouts at Camp Bethune’this week
dressed thus by the Lord of the|f].g,jj ^jjg Raeford camp are Jake Aus-
Isl^: ' I tin, William Lentz, Clyde Meinnis,
“Mo bheannachd ort, Phir chinn e. Blue, Jr., Paul Dickson, Jr.,
Lochaluiun; vdho fad’s abhios Mac mgR jigjaes Blue and ,Jack Morris.
Dbohhnuill stigh, cha bW Mac j^Rg inake a three weeks
Aonghos a muigh (my bles^g on Ltay of it and act in the capacity
you, chief of Kinlocbline, while Mac- Lf helper succeeding Nathan Epstein
Donald is in power, Maclnnis shall I ^ho was thefe in that capacity for
be in fav'our)’’ ' Ithree weeks. Mr. W. P. Lentz car-
.When the Norvuegians wero trying! ]jgR the boys over to camp Sunday
to invade and plunder the -wiosternj afternoon.
Highlands and Islands MacDmihldl Those who have been to this camp
and Bis men were sent to clear them j are high in their praise of the fine
out. The chief of Einlochaline was l-^ork that is Being done there._Scout
•sent to a idaes'^ where the enemy I master Rivens is putting the ’hoys
was expected to secure ® position I tiiroiagh some real work and they are
•of advantage, moving at night he I learning wBat Bei^ a scout means,
came first t® t^® took!a carefully worked out schedule is
up a pimtion .with Ws men, he lay | followed which gives the’ boys a
down on a mossy Itank and . fell plenty tp do and learn, as well as a
-asleep; he tuiz^ in his sleep and I reasonable amount of recreation,
touched a nest of bees, wihich came Many of the Raeford boys ' have
out and stung him—he got up just pass^ tests that have been bother-
in ti"*" to hear the enemy advancing, j ing them for some time 'and are
He took the eijsmy ghite by sur- Wich more enthusiastic for having
prise, the onslaught was quick and gone.
-viotorv followed. TBey made a clean —
Sreepr of the invadters. This is way COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
the hie is sucking the thistle of] MEETING POSTPONED'
■tli3 cTdst of the clttOe Motto; Toil
yields delight.” j TT^ Board of County Commission-
'the met in the after- ers, who were scheduled to meet next
noon and re-elected the offiosrs that Monday iii special session, have posti
Bave served the past year: President, I poned the meeting until Monday
H. A. M^nnis; yice-iwesident, Make!July 28th, when they wiU meet to
Mdinnis, Red Springs; Historian, N. I'adopt a budget for the coming fiscal
McInnis, Pernbeoke and Secretary and year and sit as a bokrd of equaliz»>
Treasitiner,' Maggie J. McBryde. Ition.
A hduntiful dinner was served on
the mm to il4 of the dsn and 63 Dundarradi Church grounds: Time to,
vidtora. Place of npeting next yearjjhe, deddsd later.
twelfw' of '• July
' Nineteen Bundred thirty
Live Oak, Plorida
At Homs
aftor August the first
Raeford, North Carolina
The a'-kwO announcement is of
great interest to everybody in this
community, where Dr. Matjieson is
poBdar and well known. Mrs. ^ath-
esim formerly, Miss Sutton, was one
of the most popular teachers ever to
be in the Raeford school. She taught
^ first grade. It will be with gehuine
Ideasire tihat Raeford people will
Welcome Dr. Matheson and his bride
back hoine.
They are now spmding two weeks
at Fort Moultrie, S. C.
REPORT CMTC AS BEST
EVER CONDUCTED
Fort Bragg, N. C., July 11th.
The Citizens Military ’Braining Camp
which deinobolized Friday at Fort
Bragg is the bestiCMTC ever con
ducted at this ptOT in the opinion
of Major General Frank R. McCoy,
ithe commanding gsneral of the
Fourth Corps Area. In a letter re
ceived by Brigadier General L. R.
Holbrook, commanding Fort Bragg,
from Generdl McCoy the corps area
commander stated tiiat reports indi
cate that this year’s CMTC at Fort
Btagg is the brat one ever conducted
here, and that in previous years the
quota for Fort Bragg had been dif
ficult to (Mam,
the case lyriiB which the quota had
been filled indicated a good camp
last year.
Gmieral McCoy expressed the de
sire that the officers or officers re
sponsible for the g9^t success of
the 1930 Fort Bragg CMTC be ad
vised of his appreciaiton of the work.
Lieut. Colonel George R. . Allin,
17th Field Artillery, the commandant
of this yearis CMTC at Fort Bragg,
was also in command of the 1929
canrjp, and in forwarding General
McCoy’s letter to Colonel Allin, Gen
eral Holbrook expressed his personal
appreciation of the excellent results
obtained At this year’s camp and
complimented Colonel Allin on the
fact that the excellent results ob
tained last year have bean reflected
in this year’s addevement, and that
this year’s results will reflect them
selves in the camps of the future,
and samain a constant reminder and
an ideal of accomplishment for his
soeeeasor.
Today the candidates were busy
turning ■ in thdr eiquipment, and i-no
mediately after loealifast tomorrow
jvill atnrt f®* lunnes. A book,
the Onidon/ has been issued by
the*^ camp and wfil be given each
student as a souvenir as of tB®
1930 CMTC, / ,
"Acdoiding to jutt' pidbSidied
by" the Depsrtanlent of Conservation
and Diavelopnient there were three
non^^resident hunting licenses and 393
county licenses sold ,iR the county
during the same period. The income
derived from this source was $700.26.
In addition, there was one fur deal
er’s license sold in the county for
$10.00. ’
License receipts in the adjoining
counties wer^ Cumberland $2,609.50,
Harnett $2,448.00, Moore, $2,371.25,
Rbbsson $2910.25 and Scotland $472.
IN RECORDER’S COURT
In Recorder’s Court Ttaesday, Hazel
Taylor, colored man who farms on
the Gatlin farm about three miles
North «f Raeford, was charged with
the larceny of a pair of pants from
McLauchlin Co. last Saturday and
entered a plea of guilty to the
charge. He was sentenced to two
months on the roads. Cfirtiss Cornell,
young white iman, who plead gufity
to larceny last week .ttit who failed
to comply with the terms ®f a sus
pended judgment, as sent to ^ ^e
roads for two months. Mary Gilfis,
colored, charged with the larceny of
a knife and a watch from Dr. Brown,
entered a plea of gjuilty and was
sent to jail for one month, judger
MJant to be suspended upon payment
of the costs and the return-of the
stolen property.
COLORED MEN IN
AUTOMOBILE WRECK
Mrs. H. W. B. "Whitley w-as called
to Monroe last Thursday on account
of the critical illness of her tvother
Mr. Vann Funderburk, who died Fri
day of heart trouble at the age of
46. He was Tilayor of Monroe and a
prominent business mian of that
place. Mr. Whitley went to Monroe
early Saturday to attend the funeral^
rebun^g WhittejLt®^^:
day. .
Valor Of South
Highly Praised
It Presents Challenge To Ameri'
ca. Declares Speaker At
Gettysburg
Last Friday an automobile wreck
occured at the intersection of the
VaSS and old Turn Pike roads near
Jaas Dunlap’s when a car driven by
John Dunk McNeill, colored, collided
with one driven by Henry^ Huntor,
also colored. lM)cNeill suffered a
broken collor llone, shoulder blade,
some wounds about his head, and
elbow and was badly skinned up. He
also suffered somfe injury frem scald
ing. He is still unable to be up.
Leech Brown, colored, who was rid
ing with McNeill, suffered some in
ternal injuries, thouj^b it is not
thought that he was seriously ia*-
jured. Hunter suffered some tiad
cuts about the head which made
ugly wounds but which 8h®uld not
prove serious. The injured partes
were brought to town aud received
medical attention.
A. H. ADCOX DEAD
A. H. Adoox, who lived in Me-
Lauohlin township, diefi £|att»day,
July 12th at nine o’clock :at the ma
ture i«e of seventy-six," deatii be
ing caused by paxalysts^ Be is sur
vived by his widow imd twe sons.
Gettysburg,* Pa., July 12.—“The
bravery, courage and consecration to
a cause which the men of tl*®
federate army displayed in the Bat
tie of Gettysburg pa^sent a challenge
to America that it go forward as
resolutely and courageously as did
the Wearers of the Gray, 67 years
ago.”
That Ivas the keynote of an ad
dress by the Rev. Earl J. Bowman,
pastor of St. James Lutbsran church,
at exercises commenorating the sixty-
seventh anniversary of the Battle of
Gettysburg held by Gettysburg bat
tlefield guides at the new North
Carolina monument on West Confed
erate avenue, Thursday evening.
Fully 5,566 persons were present.
By a fortunate circumstance, the
committee in charge of the exer
cises secured Mrs. Kenneth R. Mil
ler, of Raleigh, North Carolina, who
was in Gettysburg at the time, to
place a wreath on the North Caro
lina moi^vmei^ '^Villiam Tttwney, a
battlefield guard, placed a similar
wreath on General Robert E. Lee s
momunent on West Confederate ‘ave
nue fmr the guides at the same time.
The , Rev., M. Rowman pointed out
that the men of the "South fought
with equal courage, 'patriotism and
consecration to a use which they
considered just as did the maen of
the North. He stressed the fact that
after the war the south joined witit
the north for tte good of the nation
at large.
A parade ftiom Gettys^-targ to the
monument in which^ the Gettysburg
Boys’ band participated, preceded
the exercises. Col. E. E. Davis, sur
perintendant of the national park,
presided and spoke briefly, express
ing the hope that similar . exercises
would be continued from year to
year.
Fred Huglies, Gettysburg, redted
“the Blue and the Gray” and his
father, George Hu^es, sounded as-
semUy and tiq».
At the same time, Thursday even
ing, the Albert J. Lentz Amarioan
Legion post held ^milar exercises at
the 44th New York momunnit - on
Little Round Top, with Atttomey
John P. Butt, owimandw, presidiBg.
Dean W. E. Tilberg, of Gettys
burg college, the prin^l spnato,
From a finartcial standpoint, the*
State Highway Patrol during the-
fiscal year itrought into the treasocy
of the State and its various nmto
approxnnately $10,000 more than the
State expended in operating the Pa
trol with its 37 members, aecoiding
to the annual report combed in the.
office of Csqtt. Chaites D. Parmer,
director.
Through activities of the Patrol,
drivers witBont license plsfes mid
with improper licenses were reqpired
to expend $86,323,47 with the State
ia securing new plates, *whfle
and costs accnnng to eonn^ or
courts from arrests made by file! Pa
trol amounted to $69,940,71, |B8k-
mg a total of $153,264.18 levfMe.
Operating costs for t^ year amSont-
ted to $144411.96, this being
from highway funds, derived
the gasoline tax and automotnte K-
cense plates. "
However, the chief duties of tiie
Patrol are not those of a coUecting
agency for the State. In carrying
out their work of enforcing highway
laws and pronMting education and
safety of the highways, the Patnd
warned 146,966 drivers of road vio
lations and arrested 4,437 offenders
without the regulation three lights
and bad drivers equip tiieir car with
the two headlights and rear li^it
required by law. They isstted 5,057
cards requiring brakes, mirrors’ or
ether equipment to be repaired, mwI
issued additional warnings to the fol
lowing: 19,094 for parking on travd-
ed section of highway, 5,463 for pass
ing on cur\«3s, 1,663 for passing on
hills, 3,600 for 'hogging road, 2,577
for driving so slowly as to impede
traffic, and 612 for overloaded trucks.
A total of 3,792 cars without li
cense plates were apprehended, while
an -ad^tional 3,196 had improper b-
-rtaaes, 422-IiBd lost and 2S5
ftealere tags were found on cars be
ing used for private business.
A total of 4,437 arrests were made
during the year, 539 being fmr reck
less driving, 454 for drunken driv
ing, 394 for failure to retqm cards
showing that faulty equiporent had
been repaired, 142 for not obsenrfiqg
signals, 133 9r minor cafoses, and
2,025 on mis^llaneoos charges. Se»>
tences totsdling 76 years and ■ 11-
months were givan offenders, as
well as fines aggregating $38,660.50
•and costs paid By offenders of $28,-
280.21.
Patrolmen investigated 937 acci
dents in which 187 'were killed -and
766 injured. Courtestes of the road
were extended to 9454 motorists hav
ing trouble on the road. Patndmea
traveled 1,172,724 miles in perfon^
ance of their duttes, spending llOjnb;
hours on duty, and operating ma-.
chines 39,425 hours.
Patrolmen were absent 498 days
with leave, and 49 days -without leave
Sickness was responsible for their
absence from duties 461 days.
The cost of equipment asA of ope- -
rating the training school wbirii pie-
eeded the organization on July 1,
1929, was $36,182.68, the repwls
stated.
SUPERIOR COURT TO
CONVENE IN RAEFIMU)
Following is a List of Jurors
Drawn For 'Ais Term
of Court
Sunday at four p. ox by his paster,
Eev. P. M. Baiue, and intsment ^
at Galatia dmreh.
Funeral services were eondnoted Mid that vridte much heroism was
displayed in the Cfiv& war, real he^
ism . lay te an upright Ufs
sad qffdiag by um laws of the cooB'
The August term of Hoke Superier
Court will convene in Raeford oik
Aqgust 18th with Jndg^ R. A. Nuan^'
presiding. The following have beau
drawn as jurors to serve at this tenn: .
Raeford-’-John. McK. Bbae, J. A>
dcNeiU, Angus Frevatt, D. L. GuIiib
and W. L. Royd. *
Rue Spring»r-J. M. -Noitai, 1.
W RusseU, Henry Cook, W H. Ellis,
Clarence McBryde, Hugh Parks, and
H. G. Autry.
Antioch—^I. L. Newton, L. W Cur
rie, E G. Hodgin and F. K. Watson.
Stonewall—Yf. I. Davis, and JT
McLauchlin—WsUie Scott, G. T.
Hobson, and Pet Moore.
Quewhiffle—A. Cook and H. C.
Benou
Little River—^A. C Baker
Few criminal eases are on thn
docket so far, for trial
Three thousand North CarediBS
[faiuteis and farm wommi are me- r
petted to attend the annual Con-.
vention at State Cidlege, July 28 t» ]
August 1.
try in peace tinax
A wreath eras placed at the New
Yoric moBommit by Conmnndnr
and Adjttant NeB If.
■Ml.'
XU