N HOKE COUNTY'S BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM HOKE COUNTY'S ONLY NEWSPAPER The Hoke County News The Hoke County . rnal VOLUME XLI NO. 9 THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1946 RAEFORD, N. C. $2.90 PER YEAR T! Personals Miss Bell Graham and sis ter, Mrs. Adams, of Hamlet are visiting in Charlotte this week and will later go to the mountains. Israel Mann returned from Baltimore last Friday. He went to buy men's mer chandise for his store but says things are harder to get than ever. He thinks people in small towns like Raeford fare much better than those in the cities. Rev. H. K. Holland and family left this week for their vacation. They went to Conyers, Ga.. which was Mr. Holland's first pastorate. Before returning to Raeford they will visit other places in Georgia. The family of C. J. Ben ner spent Sunday in Ral eigh with relatives. Mrs. Benner remained there for a visit and went to Greens boro Tuesday as a delegate from the Raeford Baptist church to the special session of the Baptist State Con vention. Other relatives of the Benners visiting in Ral eigh Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Corbett of De Land, Fla. The Corbetts are now visiting Mr. and Mrs. Benner in Raeford. Dr. and Mrs .K. B. Brim spent Monday in Asheboro, going especially to see Mrs. E. C. Smith, who is a sis ter of Mrs. Grim. Mrs. Guy Taylor of Kin ston, Mrs. Walter Freeman of Aberdeen, Mrs. Arah Gat lin Stuart and Mrs. R. B. Gatlin were luncheon guests of Mrs. Eli Wishart in Lum berton last Thursday. That afternoon Mrs. Wishart en tertained for them with a very lovely tea. Mrs. Angus Keith will give a formal tea Thursday after noon honoring Mrs. Harold Keith, a recent bride, who was before her marriage. Miss Margaret Register of Wadesboro. Miss Ina Mae Benner spent several days this week at Buie's Creek. She was re cently elected Y. W. A. presi dent of Campbell college and went there at this time to make plans for the coming year's work. She will visit her aunt, Mrs. C. M. Gattis, in Raleigh. Mrs. Charles Gordon of Philadelphia joined his wife, the former Miss Ruth Looper last night for a months visit with' Mrs. Gordon's mother, Mrs. J. P. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Mc Keithan and little daughter, Patricia and Mrs. Neill A. McKeithan were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Frank Wright Friday. Mr. McKeithan is a brother of Mrs. Wright and has re cently returned from over seas where he spent 10 months in Manila. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Dixon and their house guest, Miss Dorothy Dixon of Oxford, are spending several days of Mr. Dixon's vacation at White Lake this wtek. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Green and daughter, are leaving this week for a visit to Mr. Green's brother in Atlanta. Light Session Of Recorder's Court In recorder's court Tues day a dozen defendants faced Judge McDiarmid on charges which were all minor ex cept one which was carried over to Superior court. Garth Wade, colored boy about 16 years of age, was charged with breaking and entering and larceny. Prob able cause was found and the defendant was released un der a bond of $100 to await trial in Superior court. Walter Sinclair, colored, paid the costs for driving without a license. Charles King, colored of Shannon, paid the costs for speeding. Pittman Bullard, indian, got a 30-day sentence sus pended on payment of $10 and the costs for assault. Murdoch Shaw, colored, got the same sentence for violating the prohibition laws. William Love, colored, paid the costs for being drunk and disorderly. Henry McRae, colored, paid the costs for violating the prohibition laws. Robert Bernard, white of South Carolina, was found guilty of driving under the influence of liquor. Sentence was 60 days to be suspended on payment of the costs and a $50 fine. John Hardy, colored, paid the costs for being drunk and disorderly. Irvin Campbell and James E. Love, both colored, each paid paid the costs for vio lating the road laws. Vernon Malone, white of Alabama, paid the costs for speeding. POOLE'S BY D. SCOTT POOLE In June, 1890, Dunk and Alex Campbell contracted with John Currie, John Blue and John Thompson to build a hotel at Jackson Springs. They began hauling material for the building the 1st of June, and a few days after the 4th of July they began the erection of the building. I do not know how many men they employed, possibly ten or a dozen carpenters, brick masons and others. They built a thirty-six room hotel, and four or five cot tages for different ones who had bought lots at the Spring. They also built a large barn, a six room cot tage for D. F. McKenzie, three miles west of the Springs, and a like cottage for A. W. Brown three miles South of the Springs, and September 1st Alex Camp bell was staying nights in the new hotel to keep their insurance contract. In the first months of 1891 I was teaching the three months free school at Jack son Springs, and the measles stopped my school for two weeks, and John Graham, who was chairman of the school committee said that he would pay me the same amount per week to go over near West End and help build barns and shantys for his small sawmill people, and I did that for two weeks. When I arrived at the saw mill location Monday mor - BASEBALL - RED SPRINGS TEAM WINS EASTERN TITLE The Red Springs entry in the American Legion junior baseball competition won the championship of eastern North Carolina this week when Wilmington bowed out of the fight after losing 4-2 on Monday afternoon and 9-0 on Tuesday after noon. There was to have been a game in Red Springs yesterday afternoon, which would have been the third game in a three out of five series but when it was can celled because of rain Wil mington withdrew. By eliminating Wilming ton the Red Springs team won the right to meet Kan- napohs in a series for the state championship next week. The Red Springs club eli minated the Durham juniors in Sanford last Thursday to get to play Wilmington. They defeated Durham in Red Springs Tuesday, 9-8, lost in Durham Wednesday, and wen in Sanford Thursday, 9-6. In the game at Wilming ton Tuesday the Red Springs team was led in batting by Currie, first baseman, who got two safeties in three trips to the plate, and by Beck, catcher, who hit a double with three abroad. Coleman, the winning pitch er, alowed only one hit. Raeford boys on the Red Springs team are Malcolm McKeithan, third baseman, and pitcher, and Jimmie Conoly, second baseman, and John Scott Poole, right fiel der. MEDLEY ning Daniel Patterson, fore man, and another man had started to lay the foundation ! for a feed barn fifty by forty feet. Sometimes that other man worked with Patterson and myself, and sometimes he didn't. But we built that barn, and ten mule stalls around it. land three shaniies cut to .measure, that is, we cut the 'upright boards all the same ; length and built box chim neys with sick and dirt fun ,nets, a door and two win 'dows in each shanty. I Men were in and out on that job, sometimes there were four of us, sometimes three and sometimes only two. But all of us worked only 19 days and I heard that the man complained because the men did so little. Robeson Democrat: "I was a grown man and married before I saw a Republican." His mother-in-law: "Well, you didn't miss much. Men and women used to try to see how much work they could do in a day, now they try hard to see if they can miss doing anything at all. I heard of a young man in a nearby town, who wan ted to go to work at 12. rest an hour, then knock off till the next day. He was an average man. (Continued on page 6) Wake Forest College To Winston Salem The Rev. J. D. Whisnant, H. L. Gatlin, Jr., and Rev. Troy Jones, of Red Springs, attended the North Carolina Baptist State Convention in Greensboro Tuesday at the auditorium of Woman's Col lege. The convention voted over whelmingly to accept the Z. Smith Reynolds foundation offer of a $10,750,000 endow ment of Wake Forest college and remove the institution from its present location near Raleigh to Winston Salem. The convention's action came in a rising vote that was not close, following a' bout two hours of floor dis cussion of the proposition. An estimated 2500 mes sengers, representing the State's 600,000 Baptists, de cided the issue at the audr torium where the afternoon meeting was held following a morning session that over flowed Greensboro's First Baptist church. Left for action at a later date by the convention were such matters as disposal of the present Wake Forest properties, acceptance of an offer to establish the cor lege on an portion of the showplace Reynolds estate, and a date for the actual start of the removal opera tions. The Reynolds foundation offer, made last spring, as signed in perpetuity the in come from its fund, up to $350,000 annually, provided the college were removed to Winston Salem where the Wake Forest medical school is already situated. MRS. McPHAUL BUYS BLUEMONT SHOP Mrs. Katie McBryde Mc Phaul has purchased the Bluemont Beauty Shop from Mrs. Harry Greene and will take over Saturday, August 3. The shop will be closed Monday and Tuesday and Wednesday of next week for repairs and redecorating. Mrs. Fulford McMillan will be in the shop next week and Mrs. Greene will work part of the time after she returns from her vacation. CLINIC IN LUMBERTON An orthopaedic clinic will be held Friday, August 2 in the basement of the Agri cultural building in Lum- berton. This clinic is free to all indigent children under 21 years of age. Dr. O. L. Miller of Charlotte will be the surgeon in charge. Re gistration between nine and eleven o'clock. SATURDAY NIGHT WRECK NEAR BILL'S At approximately 11:30 last Saturday night A. B. Parks of this county drove up the hili this side of Bill's Place on the Fayetteville road and cut left, starting into the parking area there. As he cut he was hit by a Chevrolet driven in the other direction by John Hart. Occupants of neither car were hospitalized but Parks suffered severe lacerations a SJut the head and was trea ted by a local physician. Damage to vehicles was slight, as both appeared to be going very slowly. No arrests have been made. AGRONOMIST INSPECT CORN DEMONSTRATIONS YESTERDAY BASEBALL TODAY An official report was received at press time last night to the effect that the first two games for the N. C. Junior legion baseball cham pionship would be played this afternoon and tomor row afternoon in Red Spr ings between Red Springs and the Kannapolis Juniors, Western N. C. champions. o WRECK THURSDAY At 11:30 P. M. last Thurs day two cars sideswiped each other on the Fayetteville road just 50 feet west of the county line with no person al injuries but considerable property damage resulting. The eastbound car was a 1946 Ford driven by Claude Jaquier of Harrisonburg, Va. and the other car was a 1940 Plymouth being operated by John A. McFadyen of Hoke county. Damages were settled by the persons involved and no arrests were made. WRECK ON N. C. 211 Last Sunday morning J. Luther Wood entered the highway near Timberland in his pickup and turned east toward Raeford. As he turned his truck was struck by a 1939 Nash driven by H. D. Hartley of Winston Salem. There were no per sonal injuries and damages to vehicles were settled by parties involved. No arrests were made. TOBACCO MARKETS OFF GOOD START IN SOUTH Raleigh, July 30. First hour sales at the opening of Georgia-Florida flue-cured tobacco markets averaged an estimated price of be tween 42 to 46 cents for the bulk of the sales with ex treme range from seven to 50 cents, according to J. A. Win- field, market newsman with the N. C. Department of Ag riculture who released US DA figu.res in Raleigh. Principal olferings were low to fair leaf, good to fair lugs and low cutter grades. The demand was strong for all good offerings with poor est demand tor small pro portion of non-descript, Winfield stated. General quality of tobac co was much improved over last year and condition was good. Growers appeared well pleased and there were but few rejections. FARM NOTES By A. S. Knowles Farmers have a vital stake in promoting and observing National Farm Safety Week. This week, July 21-27, has been set aside to observe all safety .rules. Accidents on the farm out number those of all other type of workers. Of all deaths from accidents, 25 per cent take place on the farm. In 1944, 15,800 per sons on the farm died from major accidents that might have been avoided. Let's stop this tragic loss. Let's make every week a farm safety week and be alert to day so we can live tomorrow. ) Group Spends Day Visiting Farms In County 50 agronomists from experi ment stations and extension services from eleven south ern states and Pennsylvania, along with representatives of several interested fertilizer companies, inspected corn demonstrations in Hoke county yesterday on the farms of John Parker, W. T. Covington, Ryan McBryde, and Mrs. J. S. Johnson . The tests are being con ducted by Dr. B. A. Krantz, soils and fertilizer research specialist with the North Ca rolina experiment station. The main purpose of the tests is to determine the amounts of nitrogen, phosphorus, po tash, needed on the various soil types for maximum corn production. On the Covington farm the available nitrogen var ied in amount from none to 160 pounds per acre. All plots received 50 pounds each of available potash and phosphate at planting time and all except one plot re ceived 20 pounds of available nitrogen per acre. When the corn was knee high some plots received additional ni trogen varying from none to 140 pounds per acre. When the corn was about ready to tassel the other plots receiv ed additional nitrogen. The inspection yesterday show ed that early application ot nitrogen was the best. At Ryan McBryde's and John Parker's farms the tests were planned to show the value of cover crops in corn production. Winter legumes showed that they can in crease yields equivalent to 40 pounds of nitrogen. On Mrs. Johnson's farm the test showed results of varied spacing as well as varied amounts of nitrogen. Several local farmers in cluding D. H. Yarborough, J. D. Tapp, Buddy Black and E. A. Wright were pre sent at the different stops and told how they were ap plying the latest scientific information to their own farms. They were all in high praise for the work being done to increase corn produc tion in Hoke county. During the morning the group enjoyed a watermelon slicing at the Covington farm. In the afternoon they witnessed a cotton dusting by air operation at the T. B. Upchurch farm. The group commended the experiment station, exten sion service, and other agen cies in putting on a fine corn program in Hoke coun ty. Those that were on a similar tour last year ex pressed delight in the im provement since that time. This group started on the tour Monday from Raleigh, going to Rocky Mount. Gold sboro, and Fayetteville be fore coming to this county, where the tour ended. Harry Greene, local ferti lizer representative, made the entire inspection tour from Monday through Wednesday. r r