I V m. 'tv ital Importaiice To Yot HBCOBniNG HOKE GODNTYfS: PRESENT WITH . JUSTICE' LOOKING TO HOKE COUNITS FUTURE WITH confidence THE HOKE COON'Uy: NEWS THE HOKE COUNTY JOURNAL t^LUMB xxyn—Number 28 RAEFORD, N. C. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16. 1931 $1.50 YEAR IN ADVANCE w Four Local Scdute Receive Badges Itf lApressiye ^remony J. H. Auftin, Jr Thomas Cjaiyiercm,/ -Nat^n ■ami Paitl Dksksoiif Jr*» Eagle BadRes;^^ Scout Exccu tive e. |>. Brothers Presides# ,0' ,Obe bit the prettiest ceremofiles ever pulled bff In the Town ot Bae- fbrd. County of "Hoke, and State of North vCaJblina^f jiinqe Hebk was a pup, or • his ihiifimy, for ’That matter; was the awarding’ of - Eagle Scout badges to' four'Raeford hOyS Tues day evening in-the churt house, wtth * goodiy attendatico' of “ hoft Uien and womSn ' of • Raeford and other Vaees, The Aeeting Was opened by Mr. e. C> 'Blake," of Lumberton, who^ called oh Col^^f^-^Lewln* ot this place, one o^ th> ^st friends and sitaundhest bacSere scout , work ,tto be found anywheTe/"°to Introduce Scout Exequtive . C." D. Brothers, of Wilmington, who is in active charge, of all seoUt work in fte Cape Pear Council, embracing a 'number Of counties in this part of the stale Mr. Brothersi has beeh to Raeford be fore this time and has many friends here who valule his friendship' and ‘ admire his loyalty and, devotion td , ;hl8 work. All of the hoys .who .attend ed Camp CMcagami at Lake Wacca- maw last summer fell In love with him and are proud to. be in his ‘boun'- fcil. • , ' -iv . l»jlr. Brothers made a number of interesting remUrTis and outlined the program for the evening. He called on Scout Master F. B. Sexton to take charge of a large part of the program and Mr, Sexton in turn put on a demonstration of first aid work, demonstrating with three of his boys PoPmcpr Biavidsbu ftiui Wash- ingtoU and President to be .kt ,” Homecoming of Old Churcb Sunday. « i BETHEA BAEfm WINS OVERiSEnEMBERlBAtCOiSIIAIIt ABVANCE IN OPENEB raU AVERAGE LOWl IN fm FBICE J.urof i bevelops High Blood Pressure and'Unable to Continue; Many Witnesses From' Raeford. ■ , Sea)M>n''8 First Game Results Sales Summary by Department in 13-6 Victory For Local | of Agriculture Shows Sea- Sr. Henry Louis Smith* , pr^ident- einferttus of ^avldfon Coilegl' and Washinjgton i^hd Lee Unlversltv. will .■be!,;the mjorp’ng nreacher at tbe home- .«binjiug>...celebration at^.'jOId,. Bp.thesda ♦'Ihrirch on S’m-iUv, October^ l8th, the Uav,‘A L. '.Barber announced ^ this webk.‘^^‘W-afternoon preacher will be Tudge Thomas J. "Shaw ,ol Gr^ns boro, a son" of the oTd church and a brother'of Mrs. .Robert N. Page of .^ibprdeen. His brother. Dr.- Angus •Shhw of Charlbttei -preached at last year’s hbtae coming. • • .Special music will be furnished -^y the Glee Clu'b' t^ Junior Presbyterian College, Maxtqn, .N. C. , v , An all-day program^ is be^ng ar ranged for the big home coming, at ^oore county’s^ historije e^fice oh- tlie heights overlooking Aberdeen. , As is the custom, dinner, picnic fashion, will be served,on the grounds, and thp public is cordiaTy , invited to attend and bVing baskets of food. ® _ Bethesda’s home timing is qne of the events of the irear looked for ward to by residents of this' section to whom the old^t^nrch has meant so much, pot only tq themselves, but to their forebears..' . No cbtii'ch has After the state had finished its case against H.' C. Bethea, St. Pauls chief of Police, charged with second 'degree murder or manslaughter, growing out of the killing of JudsoU Dean, , in St. Pauls last ApHl, Judge Garland B. Mydelte, presiding- at coui't in Luinberton, declared a mis trial on Tuesday morning because one “of the Jurors, J.iM. Hall, ot Red Springs, had become.-too sick to con tinue on the- jury, after developln.? high blood pressure. The cade .,was jset for trial a,f * term of court to begin November 9 Two grand juries/had thrown out the case, hut a. third grand jury when new evidence, was brought up, foun'l a true bill against Bethea. Bethea" ip a former chief of police of Raeford; and Is well known here. A 'huniber ot Raeford, people attend ed the trial a? witnesses for him Among the'm. were: Rdgar Hall, A. K. Stevepa, DT. W M. Fairley. E. B. McNeill,.T. p. Upchurch, A. P. Stubbs, Dave Hodgin andi W. B. McLauchlin. Team; Gam6 Played New Field. on sonal Sales and PricM Low er Than Last Year. Agreement to Hold 7,000,009 Bales, Off Mhrk^ CreditedT For Boutyancy of the Msur— ket. ' played a greater part in the life of the community" than this century-old society, and it is deaT to the hearts th^"actuUl, '%ijferation.' of splinting of hundreds of famllie|!.fin| Moore and 1 1 v^ntirfail IrnoB n.Tld Ton- afl-incfiTlt cminties. ■ ' * ^ MANY MEMBERS JOIN CO-OPS, FAXIIIBUIIDINGS V a broken or tinctured knee and ren- adjacent counties, dering aid, until the patient could be. carried to a doctor. Another dem onstration was the resuscitation of one wlvo is about drowned, the boys going through with the entire oper-a tion and answering mlnjute questions ,by Mr, Brothers as tp the work. Both of these, demonstrations were loudly, applauded by the audience. Mr. Sexton then»spoke briefly of the immense 'amount of work that was necessary for a .'boy^ to become an Eagle Scout, going into some de rail ot the work required and show ing its value throughout the life of the boy., He introduced,.the tour boys who were ,to receive the award and spoke, intimately of the work each had done. As they were called;i each boy made a speech In the order and Oh the following subjects: Na than Epstein spoke on the subject, “What a Week at Camp Chlcdgami Means to a Scout.” Jake Austin, spoke on the subject, “.My Impres sions ot the Cape Pear Council Jam boree Last May.” Paul Dickson, Jr., spoke on “High Lights of Scouting . to Me From My Tenderfoot Days to Eagle* Scout Rank.” Thomas Cam eron conclnded the speaking with “What Scout -Training Has Meant to Me.” All of the speeches, were' vigorously applauded hy the a.udi- ence and all of the boys acquitted ’ themselves admirably. At this juncture Mr. Brothers had twelve of t^ Rdeford Scouts to go to a table ra which were a number of candles and light a candle each and repeat a Scout Law. The chaps doing this' were Alvis Dickson, whosO law to repeat was “Trustworthf.” Jack Morris, whose law ws “Loy alty,” Jahies Gordon Currie, whose law was “Helpfulness;” Kerr Steveqs, whose law was “Friendliness;” Hu bert Cameron, whose law was “Kind ness;” Bill Lentz, whose law was “Obedience;” Tom McBryde, whose law was “Cheerfulness;” Walter Barrington, whose law was “Thrift;” Ward Whitley, whose law was “Brav ery;" Clyde Upchurch, Jr., whose law was “Being Clean,” and Malloy Laniont, whose law was “Reverence.” Each of these hoy® said his piece .! well and their marching up one at a time and lighting a 'candle made a very impressive ceremony. After this paft of the performance, the four candidates for Eagle, awards 'were called, with all lights out save the candles, and as they entered the ■bar of the court room they were met by Mr. Blake and two of his Eagle Scouts from Lumberton who ques tioned the candidates as to their worthiness for the high honor. They were then admitted and faced Mr. Brothers, who went through a beau . tiful ceremony that will live in the plnds of the Scouts and everyone present. ^At the conclusion of the ceremony the ineeting was dismiss ed by Mr. Brothers who pronounced '!ii. “Cotton prices! below, ’'the cqst' of production ' are turjilng fannerh'mdre and more to cooperative* marketing as the solution,” .General Manager Blalock reniarked yesterday as he looked over a number of new metn bership agreements, ainqng which was one from a 300-bale prqwer. ‘One hundired and eighty-pine *iew members joined the association last we,ek and many of them have already started delivering cotton to the co operative under the liberal ■ adyance •pdthih „one cent'per pound of the average open market price anji which, in addition, jallows substantial grade and staple prem.iums on cotton above middling iseyen-eighths. . Among tpe new. members joining thfe association . last "week were two from Hoke county, G. C. Hales, of Raeford, R. P. D. 2, and Mrs. Anna V. Ray, of Raeford. CAPT. AUSTELL INSPECTS NAT; GlIARD PROPERTY The Raeford High School football Raleigh, Oct. 12.—North Carolina team dedicated its new field on Pros- tobacco warehouses marketed 113,- pect Avenue, last Friday afternoon, 647,569 pounds of producers tobacco with a 13-6 ■victory over the team of to October 1, 1931, at an average the Candor High School, In the first price of $10.07 per hundred pounds game of £he season. as compared with 130,286,810 pounds Candor received and Raeford pulled 1 sold to this date last year at an aver- nlce on-side Vklck to gain the ball age ot $11.70 per hundred pounds, at thC' outset. They marched down 1 The season average is 1.63 cents less the field to score' early in the first IP®*' pound than the average to date quarter. Big BUI Mclnnis did'most Hast year, of the toting, and finally carried the The September sales this year, ball over. 1 amounting to 93,35.5,452 (producers) Candor’s lone score came in the]*® per cent less than was sold second period, while Raeford added last September and the average price their next tally in the third period. Pf 59 56 per hundred is 2.28 cents pe.- Mclhnis and: Epstein did toost of Pound below last September’s aver- the 1)811 carrying for Raeford; Me- age- Tunis scored all of Raeford's thirteen Conditions in the tobacco produc points. Epstein made a ni.ee return ing counties have been somewhat of a punt in the third quarter. Davis more mvonihlqyfM crop production featured in the llfte for the locals. this season than was the case last Coach Padgett’s charges were very year. By September 1st, the ma happy in their victory since It was jority of the crop had been harvest the first game of the sdason and the ed. This was especially true in the first game on the new field. eastern section and in tie case of Score by quarters: *1^® Old Belt, most of the crop was 0— 6 harvested during the early part of 0—131 September. The situation in the Old Belt this year is almost the opposite from con ditions wqich^ occurred last year, Last year’s crop experienced drought condition during the growin Candor : P v ® Raeford 6 0 RAEFORD PLAYS AT LAURINBURG TODAY .(Captain Michael Austell, Assistant Slite Property and Disbursing Offi cet for the Federal Government, of Haleigh, Inspected the property , of tM local military outfits last week. The' equipment of Battery F was gone over on Friday, and that pf th,e Combat Train on Saturday. Everything was found to be in unusually good shape. These inspections are made twice each .year, and give the Federal Gov ernment a check-on- the equipment of the National Guard units of the state.. " ■ • Mrs. Allan McGee and children, of "Winston-Salem, are visiting 'Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Upchurch. MIDDLING COTTON Middling cotton was selling on, the streets of Raeford, Thursday, at from 6 1-4 to 6 3-4 cents a pound*' Coach Padgett’s Raeford , High team goes to Laurinburg Friday after noon (today), to play the football team oT Laurinburg High School, at 3: 30, The game is expwted to be a, very close one, and should prove very interesting. CARSON DAVIS LOSES FINGERS Carson Davis,- while working an an automobile part at the jpiner in the shop of C. L. Stevens, had the-mis fortune to lose the last two fingers Of h*8 leit hand, on Thursday of last weeh. - V - - Ground limestone used. under vetch and barley in Clay county paid profitableVields this season according to results of the present harvest. PaUTICS AND PERSONALITIES i What have women reaped in the political harvest of their November, 1928, sowing? Practically nothing, one is forced to, conclude,- after ex- .amining the record of the Hoover administration. The ladies, who proved such an electoral windfall to the President, have received his verbal - blesslngd---and just about one-tenth of one per ^ent of the ap pointments he has made since taking office. Even at the White House Confer- Home on Gary Parker Place ence on Child Welfare, a project in and Stables and Barn on which women would logically be ex pected to play leading roles, not one major section was steered by a A. K. Stevens’ stroyed. Farm De- Stables and a bam on the farm, of A. K. Stevens in McLauchlin town ship were destroyed by fire about two o’clock Sunday afternoon. The lire was discovered after it had made too much headway for efforts to ex tinguish it to have any effect, Mules in the stables were turned out, but the barn full of oats was a loss. The complete loss iB estimabid at $400 and is partially covered by insurance. A house on the U. B. Parker farm in McLauchlin township about nine miles east of Raeford, was destroy ed by fire Sunday morning about 10 o’clock. The colored people who lived in the house were away at church, and lost practically every thing. The house was nearly new. The loss is partially covered by in surance. A show of pure bred Guernsey cattle will he held at Morganton by Burke county daifymen on October 31. the Scout’s benediction. In attendance was Scoutmaster C- B. Tlllinghast and Assistant Scout master R. G. Smith of Fayetteville, accompanied by Troop One of thp-t city*' Mr. Blake was accompanied by Mrs. Blake, and- son Elrnest, and Eagles Crump Blake, Wilbur Phillips and Jennings Floyd. feminine .hand, ^rthermor/t, bu reaucracy chose that very occasion to stage an unsuccessful attempt to upset the Children’s Bureau which was under the efficient guidance of a woman, Grace Abbott. Miss Abbott, it will be remembered, is the most recent of a number of notable wo men put forward. for a place in the Cabinet which remains consistently) and traditionally masculine. - Various explanations of this situ ation are offered. ' Some people con tend that it is the fault of the wo men themselves: {hat when they won the right to vote they ^stopped fight ing for equality. Too "many women, it is felt, are content with minor places as aides to men politicians, and this self-effacement is engsuder- ing an inferiority complex aihong the rank and file of women. If so, the dissatisfaction now" .being voiced hy feminine organizations over the treatment accorded women is wholesome symptom. Another explauatfon is that Hoover won’t appoint a woman leader to a major post for fear of offending other women leaders who are ,not appoint ed. But this policy of "playing safe” is hardly soothing to women who logically expect soAe show of cour age from the Chief Executive. « « * The impending radio debate on the tariff between Senator Pat Harrison, Democrat, of Mississippi, and- Sena tor L. J. Dickinson, Republican, of Iowa, can be outlined in advance. The Mississippian, for instance, 'Will probably cite such facts as that our imports during August exceeded ex ports hy $1,000,000, thereby showing up the devastation of our foreign markets since passage of the 1930 Tariff Act. The Iowan will answer that the world-wide depression, not our tariff law, is responsible. He may add that this million-dollar ex cess of imports merely proves that the tariff has not cut our purchase from abroad. Whereupon Mr. Harri son will retort, “But does not the Senator believe in his party’s prom ise to preserve the American market for American producers?” And so on. Already, the odds are against the Senator from Iowa. Not only does Pat Harrison deal in a deadly satire language irresistible to the average radio- fan, but Mr. Dickinson's gun powder has been badly dampened hy events of the past year. On the day the Tariff Act was passed. Senator Jim Watson exuberantly prophesied that within 30 days, the country would “be on the upgrade, financial ly, econom.lcally and commercially.” Less than 30 days afterwards the depression canae to stay. Prices dropped, our foreign trade sank to almost unprecedented levels, and the ‘‘American standard of living” 'be came a thehie for wisecracking colomunists. One of the worst results of the Tariff Act which was intended, among other things, “to promote revenue,” is its effect on the Treas ury. Our returns from import duties dropped from $585,000,000 in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, to $206,000,000 for the fiscal year im mediately following passage of the tariff bill. The duty on sugar, wich provides approximately one-fourth of all our import revenue, was raised in 1930, and the tariff receipts from that commodity fell from $129,500,- 000 in 1929 to $95,000,000 in ,1930. How will Mr. Dickinson answer that argument against high tariff? season, followed in the latter part by a considerable amount of soil moisture. This condition caused a late growth of the plant and resulted in' later devolpment, poor quality and heavier leiaf.. This year, sufficient soil moisture was distributed through the season to obtain a better quality of tobacco, and the plants matured more nearly at the proper time for harvesting. These conditions pro duced a somewhat better grade of leaf but a lighter, weight. The fac tors mentioned above are true to some extent of other sections of the state, though the results of ctirings in some eastern coubties are not showing as good grades as was ex pected earlier in the season. Ware housemen in some sections report a smaller yield than they had antici pated. The United tates Crop Reporting Board estimated the condition of to? bacco in North Carolina on October 1 at 73 per cent of normal as com pared with 76 last' October and' a past ten year average of 75 per cent. This condition indicates a total , pro-, duction for the state of 496,760,000 pounds or 15 per cent less than was produced last year. The acreage cultivated this year was 7 per cent below that harvested in 1930. Atlanta. Ga., Oct. 14,—Southern cotton farmers, faced with low prices and over-production, saw, a ray of hope today in market advance* that followed the provisional plan to bold approximately 7,000,000 l^e* off the market for a year and law* restricting acreage. Price advances yesterday at New Yortt and New Orleans ranged a* high as 37 points. Exchange authorities attrihutetf the upturn to the alignment of the Federal Farm! Board, American Cot-*'-' ton Cooperative Association an£ Southern bankers behind the credit renewal and extension program to de'- lay marketing of the 7,000,000 bales until July 1932, and September tex tile statistics, showing sales 5.7 per cent above production. Governor Ross Sterling, of Texa^ however, said he believed the im proved market was due to the actioix ^ Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi hav® taken to restrict cotton acreage by approximately 50 peC;-, cent for tha? next two years. Meanwhile, from Atlanta, came atif ^ announcement by Haynes McFadden, secretary of the Georgia 'Banltersf Association, that a conference wpoiS. be held at Macon, Ga., October 2»,. to discuss the* delayed marketing» . plan. The plan, he said, if adopted - would result in an agreement by the Georgia bankers to finance on a more - or less permanent basis an amount-' of cotton equal to one-fourth of the Georgia crop. The rate of interest wquld be left to the individual hot?- - rower and banker. , The delayed marketing plan en tails approval by Southern bankera.'* and othel- factors. Governor Parnell, of Arkansas*-- commended the cot’on holding* plan ; while Harry Cordell, president of the'^• Oklahoma board of agriculture... S3i&- it would be a “great help.” Governor Theo. G. Bilbo, of Missi’s'- sippi yesterday signed the Mississippi acreage curtailment act making it a. law. It was praised late* by Carl Williams, cotton member of Gw farm board, in a sbeech before the. Mississippi legislatule. McFAYDEN MUSIC S^5RE ENTERED BY ROBBERS NEW COTTON PLAN If Approved by State Bankers of South T>lan Will Hold 7,000,000 Bales Off the Market. New Grleans. Oct. 12.—An agree ment to hold about 7,000.00 bales of cotton off the market until July 31. 1932, was reached by leading bank ers from cotton states. Chairman James C. Stone and Carl Williams of the Federal Farm Board, and offi cials of the American Cotton Co operative Association tonight after an all-day meeting, l^re. Pledges to this effect were given by about 40 bankers present, but the agreement is to go into effect after approval is given by the State Bank ers’ Associations, meetings of which have been called for October 20 in all cotton states. An additional 1,000,000 hales prob ably will be held from the market by other concerns, such as shippers, warehouses and merchants, making the total held about 8.000.000, it was stated by Nathan Adams, president of the First National Bank of Dallas, and author of the plan agreed upon ■today. The agreement provides that “the banks of the cotton producing states will make or renew loans to mature not earlier than July 31, 1932, se cured by cotton to the total amount of at least 3.500,000 hale^. The farm board agrees to renew A. C. C. A. loans so that the 2,000,000 bales it now has on hand can be car ried tor year and agrees to Fayetteville, Oct. 12.—Scaling th® wall of an adjoining building, tw® white ^ youths, one of them a one- legged boy, entered a skylight in the McFadyen Music House-- last and were caught by police as they sought to escape with a portable typewriter case filled with jewelry belonging to P.. O. Hoffer, who has a jewelry shop in the music com pany’s building. Both are in jail to day awaiting trial. Edwin Waddell left his crutches on the ground and went up the side of the low building next to Me- Fadyen’s, despite ' the handicap of having only one leg. When the police placed a ladder against the wall for their descend Wad^ll came down with the agility of a steeplejack. Zack Smith is the name of the other boy, who is apparently not over IT. Waddell is a little older. Policeman Edwards discovered that |omeone was in the building about 10:30. He summoned aid from headquarters, and the men were ar rested when they came out on the roof of the building. Articles taken were trade-in-watches, new IngersoQ watches and odds and ends. Every- thiirg was recov-ered- The maroud- ers are said to have done more dam age by. breakibg up things than by pilferii^. finance tbe cotton for an additi«Hial year if expected acreage redpetfons materialize over the South. The agreement provides for th® Farm Board automatically to centinu® carrying its present 1,300,000 bales of stabilized cotton for the sams periods it agrees to carry cotton now held by the A. A. C- A. The agree ment is to become effective immed^* ately upon approval by the State Bankers’ Associations at the Octo ber 20 meetings. The prediction that cotton would go up from one and one-half to two cents a pound immediatele aft^r the adoption of the ^agreement was nthde by Adams shortly before leayt$4t-tUf ^ Dallas. - - 'T,