THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1945 THE NEWS-JOURNAL, RAEFORD, N. C. PAGE THREE POOLE'S MEDLEY (By D. Scott Poole) By last Wednesday's papers we learn that General Marshall favors and recommends compulsory military training. General Marshall is a great man, but in this .he is wrong. Just thi is the matter with both Ger many and Japan. TJjey thought and sought militaryism from g greed and selfish point of view. I object seriously "to allowing the greatest foes to human peace and happiness of all time to lay our pat tern, for national guard organiza tions will serve the same purpose at much less cost, serve as a recrea tional purpose and produce as ef ficient soldiers as those trained in military schools. The trend of the human mind, apart fromjhe Doctrine of Peace, is the destruction ol human life and peace and happiness. Trie coTifse now apparent in human atiairs snows everything except the "permanent peace you have been reading about. Say, neighbor, what kind of peace do 70U think you can Inoculate In the minds of men when you suspend over his head by a tar string sud den death and destruction? I am glad peace has come. I de sire peace above" all tings possiole, but I would not advise that peace be clothed in sandspur irritations and insinuating annoyance, greed grab bing device. There is principal-destroying pow er in legal liquor tax-raising to send this country to hell in train-loading numbers. At the moment this devil-invented business is making its greatest attack upon the womanhood of the land. All the stories, adver tising, the whole picture-screen of this nation is one of debouchery, virture-destroying anteroom ol Hades. "I lie in my bed and sleep, for Thou Lord maketh me to sleep inj safety." This is true because my neighbors have no desire to slay me, for they have no reason to think that I have designs on their lives or property. In other words one can be trained to hate or to love, to be peaceable or destructive and every one of Adam s descendants are peacemakers or hate distributors. Thoughts produce words, words pro- I duce action, actions form habits. Cry- stalized habits make crystalized forms mature." Wrong thoughts should be driven from the mindi and corrections made. To make the statement to the point: All wrong should be destroyed In It incipiency. It's more easily done then. In 1880 I helped a man in Moore eounty kill hogs one cold December morning. We had left the water boiling in two or three big pots, and NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND FOR TAXES Due Town of Raeford, N. C. As directed by statute on Tuesday, November 13th at the Town Hall in Raeford, N. C, nt twelve o'clock noon the undersigned will offer for sale at public auction for cash for the purpose of satisfying delinquent taxes due the Town of Raeford for the year 1944 the following real estate located in said town. This the 9th day of October 1945. N. L. McFADYEN. MAYOR L. M. Andrews est., Res, Harris Avenue $12.00 J. B. Barefoot 1 lot, Rockfish Avenue 2.00 Irene H. Bell 1 lot, Edinboro 2.00 John Mck. Blue 1 res., Edinboro 32.00 N. B. Blue 1 res., Edinboro 36.70 J. B. Bryant 1 lot, Rockfish Avenue 2.00 C. B. Buffkin 1 lot, Harris Avenue 6.07 Mrs. E. L. Cameron 1 lot, Rhodes 66 Mrs. J. A. & E. L. Cameron 6 lots, Rhodes 4.00 Mrs. N. W. Campbell est 1 lot, res., Stewart 14.66 Carson Davis 1 lot, res 13.40 Mrs. Paul Dickson 1 lot, res 64.27 Roena Dowling, est 1 lot, Leach 1.33 W. J. Gales 10 lots, Gales 4.00 J. D. Graham, est 1 lot, res 18.33 L. M. McKeithan, est. 1 lot, old res 30.00 J. C. McLean McLean est land 10.00 H. G. J. A. W. O. Record Tobacco Crop Forecast Raleigh, Oct. 23: A record-breaking flue-cured tobacco crop of 824, 325,000 pounds is forecast for North Carolina this year by the Federal State Crop Reporting Service. , The crop is expected to be 12 per cent larger than last year, 52 per cent larger than the 10-year average, and one per cent, or al most 11,000,000 pounds, larger than the previous record crop in 1939, when there were no Government restrictions on acreage. Production in the Middle and Old belts is estimated at 305,800,000 pounds 12 per cent more than was grown in 1944, and the largest crop ever produced in these belts. Eastern North Carolina tobacco (type 12) is estimated at 414,775,000 pounds 10 per cent larger than last year's crop, but still about 15 mil lion pounds short of the record crop grown in 1939. In the Border Belt, production is expected to total 103,750,000 pounds as was indicated in the September report. Burley growers expect to harvest a record crop of 19.600.000 pounds Townsend 1 lot, res 12.60 'this year. This is 18 per cent larger Walters 1 lot, Prospect 2.66 Wright 1 res, McLeod 20.00 COLORED Ernest Bethea 1 lot, Maxwell 7.33 Sam Brown 1 lot McLauchlin 1.33 Ernest Hines est. Old res 4.00 Daniel Love 1 lot, Maxwell 3.33 Lonnie Monroe 1 lot, McLauchlin 3.67 Albert McKinnon 1 lot, Oakdale road 6.P0 Matthew McRae 1 lot, McLauchlin 6.00 Emma Rogers Res., Oakdale road 5.33 than last year's crop and twice as large s any burley crop produced prior to 1943. fJil'lfff I A FEW DROPS TV Oistrtssif Ifssoeaftftopet prompt, effective WAliaf ftnm riitt treu of bead colds with Va-tro-nol I Works right where trouble Is to reduce congefttion soothe Irritation make breathing easier. Also helps prevent many colds from developing If used in time. Try it I Follow directions In folder. YICKSVAIRO-HOIi KSME KIT Bad) kit contain! 3 full oaocet of Saloo-typt olvtioa with KmriimMt 60 Curlers. 60 cad tissues, cttoa appli cator, fieurraltier and complete instruction. C& Taletontr2 to 3 Hows of Homo HEW SHIPMENT - Brick Siding for Building. FOR SALE: taker's Red Heart Wheat, Full Grain Oats and Abruzzi Rye, Cleaned, Germinated, Treated. ALSO: Cyanamid for Tobacco Beds. FEEDS OF ALL KINDS THE HOKE EXCHANGE FCX Dealer Agent Reaves Drug Store INSURANCE M ASK US about Insurance The Johnson Co. Phone 21M Raeford, N. C ItePMMMlnf THE TRAVELERS, Hsrfoid went up to his farm a half a mile a;tf5yrto Eiil hogs he had fattened on chufas, and they were still running in the chufa patch, and that patch was a small corner of a twelve acre field. The hogs should have been shut up in a close pen the nlgW tFeTSfS, "Snf the gentleman said it would be no trouble to get them into the stables on the edge of the chufa patch. All right, and when we arrived Se got some corn, and gooped awhile, but those four fat hogs said, "no thank you." We tried driving them into close fonfinement, but they liked their freedom as well as other Americans. He said, then, we will have to shoot them, 1 reckon. I had a double-barrel gun loaded with bucksTTol, andi we hesitated to shoot a slow fat hog with buckloads, but my boss went up to a dwelling unoccupied and got his rifle which had been left in the house, and loaded it. walked leisurely flown on the out- J side of the fence enclosing TKaT'tract '.of land, took rest on the fence, took deliberate aim and fired. I saw a liTTTe dirt fly up near the hog's head, and I think the hog saw It, too, because'he arose, (he was lying down resting when he was assaulted) so he kicked up his heels as Tilgh as a fat hog could kick, and trotted off down where there had never been any chufas. The gentleman arose on the far side of the fence, and saw that hog's behavior, and also his heeTS, looked at me and laughed. I thought it time to slay some hogs, so I thundered down with a charge of blue whistles, and the shof was effective, so I stuck and bled that swine, and soon came in sieht of another porker, and 'shot him dead, stuck him, andi re loaded my fowling piece. I found the other two hogs, and played havoc with their heads and I also bled those. We hooked a horse he had in the stable there by that chufa patch, and hauled the nogs down to his home by two o'clock in the after noon. The women folks had kept the hog tTres lsnrning, and by bed time that night we had those hogs salted down and we rested from hog-killing. About the middle of last week the representatives of the Big Five na tions, the United Stales, Russia, England, France andi China, decided to adjourn without a settlement of questions arising since fighting stop ped. But it seemed their governments ordered them to stay on until agree ment is reached. Russia wants to assist In con trol ing Japan, China claims to be the oldest and wisest of the cations, therefore, boss. I would not say that the conference had acted wisely, had those statements been 'agreed to, China is old in everything, except democracy an understanding of hu man rights. The United States is thonly country on earth which has any experimental knowledge of that subject and we are fresh. Had you thought, friend, that our Great Creator made man a free moral agent, and after man through transgression fell from ttie high and holy estate in which he was created lost all right of claim to life and happiness, was offered redemption from that lost estate with a take it or leave it. A Democracy is a country ruled by "a majority of Its free citizens." These citizens have never been in perfect agreement, 'but changes, when changes come by persuasive, peaceful methods, and not be force. Save Planting Seed For '46 Cotton Crop Good planting seed for the 1946 crop of cotton will be exceptionally hard to get, because of bad weather conditions existing this season. This particularly applies to the Coastal Plain counties of the state where the cotton plant has made rank growth and the crop has suf what steps must be taken to obtain 1V1 from considerate rotting of bol's J. A. Shanklin, Extension cotton specialist at State College, believes that cotton seed in the eastern part of North Carolina will show very low germination but that some of the seed from the western areas may be of good quality. "Now is the time to determine how much seed will be needed and supplies of good planting seed. "It is particularly important that growers in the western part of the cotton belt make every effort to protect their cotton and not allow it to suffer weather damage in the field. Conditions are very spotted but it is believed that ample sup plies of good seed may be obtained, if growers act promptly." Embargo Act. Stop doing business with England, Because oT Rer RatrgM ness rather than fight. President Monroe, and patriotic Americans were driven to fight later, however. England cannot get over being "Mistress of the Seas." They are a conceited folk, and want to boss the worlcr" now. TSey are America's mother though, and we should over look itheir big mindedness. Thomas Jefferson advocated an 1 277 tons. Only six states in the U. S. show an increase in egg production for the first 9 months of 1945 as compared with last year. North Carolina leads the league in gains. o North Carolina has broken all records on fertilizer sales. As of June 30, the annual sales were 1,466,' WANTED 1 Million Pounds Scrap Tobacco Highest Price Paid BIG 5 WAREHOUSE PERSON-GARRETT CO. Fairmont, N. C. Auction Sale SATURDAY OCTOBER 27-10A.M. at J. T. PARNELL FARM Three miles South of Ashley Heights on Improved dirt road leading to Laurinburg Highway. LIVESTOCK - FARM EQUIPMENT including Guano Distributor - Stalk Cutter Mowing Machine - 2-Horse Wagon Harness - 2 Mules - Milk Cow, Etc. Everything Will Be Sold to the Highest Bidder for Cash J. E. VANHOY R. F. D. No. 1 Aberdeen, N. C. Certified SUNRISE BARLEY FULL GRAIN OATS RED HEART WHEAT All Grains Have Been Recleaned And Treated With Ceresan-Ready To Plant T. B. UPCHURCH, INC. RaeforJ, N. C cUDY KILOWATT . . . What! No Reddy? . CAB 4SR NOODLE MAC BEEN TELLING UTTIE WIUIE WHAT AN AWFUL V0C1D fT WOULD BE WITHOUT CtOOY KIIOWATT, iprfkdKtowt fvxnj'i WILllfc WITHOUT Bt-CDV 0ni CuTf rnmu. jwv tsv crc, - i uv ( tyx) caw cvfcN ikten to I Tmf k tiVKta on the V WAfl AND TUATt MOT ALij 1 1 1 J -YOU COUIDNT EVEN GO TO THE MO VI E-S )J ( MAYBE THEY'D BECOME- JT wAx nat mikeums Jp E4rTr,,-'"'iLPl Id v" If i ea u i' i ( YETZIRI wiuie, THATi OF WHAT XXI O MKC- J BUT PONT WORBY; IM AiYf O TUB JO0I aXLV. REPOy KILOWATT ) IS A VERY VALUABLE. (ELECTRIC SERVANT, j. mN T HE. POP? i 1 7W n"U , : i t 1 1 ' I I I i ' i I ' i t i IP ft j il '! I : i i ! i s ' it- ! I '