VOLUME XLVII; NUMBER 10 THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1952 RAEFORD, N. C. TEN CENTS PER COPY $3.00 PER YEAB c^dcUnda By the Editor Dean White, personnel man ager ot the Raeford Division of Robbins MiUs (N. C.) Inc, and treasiirer of the Aberdeen-Rae- ford Little league, wrote me a letter yesterday about how good he felt at the way the community had supported the league. Dean felt so good about it that I’m go ing to print the letter just as I got it. Here it is. Dear Paul: Tuesday, August 5, 1952 was truly a Red-Letter Day for the members of the Aberdeen-Raeford Little League, the Little League Officials and fans, and for all the people of both Aberdeen and Rae ford. That it was indeed a Red Letter Day is a fact beyond dis pute of even the most cynical in dividual. The success achieved with both the game program and the dinner program will long stand as a monument to the Town of Rae ford, its business houses, its peo ple, and its Chamber of Com merce, who sponsored and gave such a wonderful dinner to the teamv, and guests. To thank those who contributed, who participated, and who gave their cooperation in such full measure would be to make a roll call of the entire citizenry of Raeford, its business and profes- ’ sional men and, women, and its ministers. The entire affair is a ^ ' high tribute to the spontaneous t.. ,1,-'-''-'i^peratr.:! a;*d hosiJti^ty of the townspeople bonded together for a common purpose to present Raeford to all who attended as a y Soldiers Have To Pay Fiddler In Court Tuesday Three white soldiers, out for a good time with a car eind a bottle, got caught last we^ and appear ed before Judge Harry Greene in Hoke County recorder’s court Tuesday morning. Luster Mullins, the driver, pleaded guilty of driv ing drunk and got the usual six months sentence suspended on payment of $100 and the costs. Tommy Denny pleaded guilty of possessing the liquor and got 60 days suspended on payment of $25 and the costs. Lonza White- head pleaded guilty of being dnmk and disorderly and got 30 days suspended on payment of $10 and the costs. C. V. Gianittia, white transient charged with allowing an unli censed driver to operate his ve hicle, forfeited a $40 bond. The state dropped its case a- gainst Henry Shields, Jr., colored, for driving without a chauffeur’s license and against Willie Clifton Hurst for having no driver’s li cense. Robert M. McNeill, white, got 60 days suspended on payment of $10 and the costs and a year of good behavior for being drunk and disorderly. John Albert McNair, colored, pleaded guilty of careless and reckless driving and having no driver’s license. On the first charge he got six months to be suspended on payment of costs and $50 to the man he hit and 12 months good behaviop. On the second charge sentence as 60 days suspended on payment of $25 and the costs. David Cook, col- , ored, was found not^ an unlicensed License Examiner Changes Days Here L. M. McPherson, driver’s li cense examiner with the State department of motor vehicles, this week announced that he would be in Raeford at the courthouse from 8:30 to 5:30 on Thursday and Fri days in the future instead of on Wednesdays and Thursdays as he has been. The change is due to the fact that he now goes to Laurinburg for three days each week. McPherson said that licenses may be renewed up to 60 days before expiration dates now and cautioned drivers to watch their dates, as driving with an expired license is considered the same as driving without a license by the courts. W. A. McLEAN ILL and its citizens who can pause from the rush of today’s living to pay tribute to its boys, can look forward 4o the future with calmness and serenity. The. officials of the Aberdeen- Raeford Little League, Robbins Mills, (N. C.), Inc. and all your guests, join me in expressing to each of you, individually and col lectively, our warmest apprecia tion for your interest, your coon- eration, and your hospitality. The writer was never more proud of anything than to be a citizen of Raeford. Very cordially yours, Dean C. White, Treasurer Aberdeen-Raeford Little Lea gue. • Now Dean thanks just about everybody in this letter and. truly, the community turnout Tuesdav was a thing to be proud of. T would just like to add for the community that we all know Dean White has been the main- snring of the Little League fier'e this summer, the man who was always on hand to see that things w^hich had to be done were done. For the whole community and all who are intereste‘d in boys. I’d like to sincerely say “Thank y~«u’’ to Dean White. We all cer- y-mlv appreciate his untireing efforts. W. A. McLean, who had been ill since Saturday, was carried to a Fayetteville hospital Tues day night at about 10:00 o’clock and operated on for appendicitis. Operation disclosed that his ap pendix had ruptured. He was do ing as well as could be expected at last reports yesterday after noon, and his family felt fairly encouraged about his condition. 0 HOLLAND HERE SUNDAY Ginners Meeting Set For Friday The Central District meeting of the North Carolina Cotton Gin ners association will be held in the Hoke County High School audi torium tomorrow morning. After the morning session in the audi torium the giimers will be served luncheon in the school cafeteria, following which an ■ afternoon session will be held. The program will include ad dresses on the relation of harvest ing practices to good cotton gin ning and on other subjects of a technical nature of interest to those in the ginning business. Clifford H. Hardy, new secretary of the association, will discuss plans for its future activities. o Windstorm Wrecks Drive-In Theatre I neglected to mention' last week that two of Hoke County’s citizens who were representing the county on a state road gang had changed their residence. I refer to Edwin (Bud) Johnson and WiUie B. MoFadyen, who escaped about 10 days ago from a road gang in Halifax county. Johnson went up for 12 years last(fTear tor shooting Heston Rose in^ juke-joint affray near Raeford, and McFadyen went for the same time from Cumberland County, also for a shooting. Of ficers reported yesterday that neither had been Seen, In this county or elsewhere, to their knowledge. 0 Recent visitors in the homes of Mr, and Mrs. A. J. Freeman and Sgt. and Mrs. F. M. Pippinger were Mr. and Mrs. Morris Leon-^ ard. Miss Catherine Leonard, Mrs. W, M. Long and daughter, Anne, all of Chester, Pa. driver to drive his car Paying $10 and the costs were Moses Farmer, careless and reck less driving, Eugene Dobbins and Lester Johnson for improperly equipped cars. Harry McCloy James, white, got six months to be suspended on naymeht $100 and the costs for driving drunk. Glenn Evans, colored, was found guilty of having non-tax- naid liquor for sale and sentenced to a year on the roads to be su- snended on payment of $100 and the costs, 2 years good behavior. James Edwards, colored, paid the costs for assault. Weldon McDonald, colored, went to the roads for a year. He was found guilty* in one case of using profane and indecent lan guage and being drunk and dis orderly and in another with as sault with a deadly weapon. Arthur G. Clark, colored, was found guilty of assaulting his wife and sentenced to six months on the roads. He appealed and bond was set at $300. Ed Hollingsworth, colored, was found not guilty of stealing a watch. Willie Elton Barrow, white, paid $25 and the costs for care less and reckless driving. Duck McGoogan, colored, was charged by James and John But ler, White, with ' temporary lar ceny of a tractor. He charged them with assault. The three compro mised the matter and the cases were dropped on payment of the costs by each. Grady R. Setzer, white man whose car hit the McBryde house at the comer of Jackson street and Central avenue several weeks ago causing damage estimated bv one Raeford builder at $3500, was charged with violating the prohibition laws in one case and with driving drunk, careless and reckless driving and damage to real property In another. He was found guilty and paid $25 and the costs in the first case. In the second case he was foimd guilty as charged and fined $100 and the costs. He appealed this and posted a bond of $250. J. Quincy Wilkerson, colored, was foimd guilty of driving on his left, facing traffic, and fined $10 and costs. Dr. Harry K. Holland, pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Marietta, Ga., and former pas tor of the Raeford Presb3rterian church, will preach at the local church next Sunday while the Rev. W. B. Heyward is preaching a't his old home church in Raleigh. 0— BAPTIST REVIVAL SET ^fall revrrt Raeford Baptist Church will be held the first week of September according to Rev. Judson Lennon; A service each night throughout the week will be held beginning nightly at 8:00. Rev. John Law rence of Wilmington will present the messages. 0— BATTERY “F” REUNION A small windstorm of short duration virtually demolished the Drive-In theatre west of town last Wedensday afternoon. The storm struck between 4 and 5 o’clock from the soutwest and blew down the entire fence beside the high way, tore the screen from the pole supports and-Uprooted trees a- cross the highway. A large hickory tree about two feet in diameter was uprooted ,1^ the blast and a large pine al?diut three feet in diameter was twisted off about thirty feet from the ground. Sev eral smaller trees nearby had major branches and limbs torn loose. Damage to the theater was con siderable and it forced to close. County E&'k^ Has Routine Meeting White Schools Open September 4; Others On 22nd County Superintendent K. A. MacDonald announced this week that the board of education had set the dates for the opening of all the schools in the county at its meeting Monday night. The board set Thursday, Sep tember 4, as the opening date for the county-wide high school and aU other white schools in the county. The county-wide meet ing of principals will be held at the superintendent’s office on the afternoon of Monday, September 1, and the county-wide teachers meeting will be at the high school at 8:00 o’clock on Tuesday night, September 2. The board also Set September 22 as the date for the opening of the colored and Indian schools of the county. Dates for the pre school meetings of teachers in these schools will be announced later. 0 D. Scott Poole Has His 94th Birthday With his children and all his grandchildren but one around him, D. Scott Poole celebrated his 94th birthday in good jjealth and spirits at his home here last Sun day. His children present were W. L. Poole, Mrs. Luke Bethune and Mrs. A. K. Currie of Raeford, Miss Maude Poole and Mrs. Hugh Lowe from Charlotte. The miss ing grandchild, Mrs. Joe Dom- browski (nee Isabel Bethune) of Omaha, Nebraska, called her grandfather on the telephone dur- imiE LEAGUE TEAM MOVES UP BY DEFEATING NORWOOD 7 TO 6 League Leading Relwb Take 3 In Past Week A slow rolling single down the third base line in the bottom of the ninth drove the winning run across as the Raeford Rebels de- deated the Red Springs Robins, 4-3, Tuesday night at Armory Park. Winning two games straight over the Robins and one Monday night from St. Pauls to make it three in a row put the Rebels still further into the lead in the ECT league; In Tuesday night’s encounter the Rebels were able to get only five hits off the Robins pitcher but made them coimt to score all their runs. The Robins jumped off to a 3-0 lead in the 5th on two hits, a hit batsman and four errors. The Rebels fought right back and scored three runs in Play Durham In Aberdeen Tpmorrow For District Title The Aberdeen-Raeford Little League All-Stars performed like big leaguers here Tuesday after noon before a crowd estimated to be in excess of 1000 fans and de feated the all-star team from the Norwood league 7 to 6 in two extra innings. The victory gave the home team the right to meet the playoff winner from the three Durham leagues for the cham pionship of District five. This game will be played at the Aber deen Little League park at three- thirty Friday afternoon and will be followed by a game between the Norwood team and the sec ond-place team in the Durham playoffs. Winner of the gamA Friday will go to Wilmington to take part in the state playoffs. The game here Tuesday was well-attended—the town closed up for it—and all who attended seemed to be well pleased with j what they saw. The program was presided over by W. T. Gibson and the bottom of the same inning as , Poole, with two men on, blasted guests were welco^ a single into left field to drive Members of Battery “F” 252nd Coast Artillery after September, 1940, will gather at the William Lentz pond at noon Sunday (or their annual reunion. Members of the old unit are invited to come and bring their baskets, or to come after noon for some con versation, as they are expected to gather from far and wide, ac cording to Lentz. Reid Springs Mill Nears Safety Record In recognition of the outstand ing safety record of 6,000,000 manhours without a disabling ac cident the employees of the Red Springs Division of Robbins Mills (N. C.), Inc. were recently treated to a free chicken dinner. Through the cooperation of ev ery employee and assistance frbm the entire Safety Committee, Safety Chairman Tom Cope, and Plant Superintendent C. T. Mont- joy, there has not been a dis abling accident since March, 7, 1949. ’The employees of this plant are now striving to reach the World’s Record for a Textile Rayon Mill of 6,292,821 injury-free man hours so that they may ' then claim the title of “World’s Cham pionship Safety Team.” ' At the time of the celebration a Safety Flag with five stars de noting one million manhours each was presented by Liberty Mutual Ihsurance Company in re cognition of this safety record. Mr. Montjoy expressed his ap preciation to the employees by stating “continuing to work to gether we should break the world’s record for Safety in sim ilar Textile MHls. You will then be a member of the ‘World’s Championship Safety Team.* ” 0 —■ — Miss Irene Andrews is spending this week at Myrtle Beach. commissioners held their regular monthly meeting Monday, and transacted several matters of bus iness of the usual nature. Requests were made for “sta bilization” of three roads in the county, all in McLauchlln town ship. The term “stabilization” as used in road requests includes straightening and rebuilding but not paving. ’The roads to receive this work are from 15-A by the A. K. Stevens place to the Rae- ford-Rockfish road, from 15-A at Wayside bv the Benner pond to the Fort Bragg reservation, and from 15-A to the Fort Bragg re servation at the D. A. McDougald place. The board also approved the making of repairs to the Raeford armory. It appeared that the roof, windows and doors are in need of repair. It was decided that the county would furnish materials for re pairs to the Allendale community house and that the cojnmunity would do the work. The sale of a 20-foot alleyway back of the old Teal garage on the south side of West Prospect ave nue was approved. —0- ; TOWN BOARD MEETS; TO FIX FIRE ALARM The town board held its regular meeting this week and took one step the public will be glad to hear of. The board decided to spend about $200 getting the wires to the fire alarm fixed so that the alarm will not be sounded at random dtiring rains as it has been lately when there was no fire. Other action included the ap proval of the installation of book keeping improvements and the changing of some parking areas on Main street. 0 PAUL DEZERNE HURT in one run and then two more crossed the plate on an overthrow to third base. The score remain ed tied until the ninth when Bowen walked, Bill Upchurch bounced a double off the left field fence and J. McLeod then brought Bowen home with his slow rolling single. Taylor went all the way for the locals giving up only five ing the day. 4^it-s. striking out nine and walk- Paul Dezeme hurt his back in the A & R warehouse here last Saturday morning and was car ried to Moore Coxmty hospital in an ambulance where it was dis covered that he had a fractured vertebrae. As soon as other com plications, bruises, etc., are clear ed up he is to be put in a cast, which will probably have to stay on for about two months. to have supper with Mr. Poole. For the benefit of his many friends, acquaintances and read ers in these and other parts it may be stated that Mr. Poole is still quite active and is on Main street just about every day talk ing with his friends, and he loves to argue and talk politics just as much as he did when he repre sented this county in the legisla ture over a quarter of a century ago. h Mclnnis Clan Plans Reunion August 17 The annual Mclnnis Clan gath ering will be held at Dundarrach Presbyterian Church, Sunday, August 17, the president, ^Miss Irene Andrews, annoimced^ this week. An interesting program has been planned and will begin at 11 o’clock. Miss Andrews urges all members of the clan to attend. A picnic dinner will be spread on the grounds at noon. FOOTBALL MEETING TUESDAY NIGHT Coach Bob Rockljplz announced Wednesday that there would be a short meeting of all prospective junior varsity and varsity foot ball players next Tuesday night at the Hoke High gyjn at 7:30. Practice sessions, games, and oth er football subjects will be dis cussed, The possibility of a week’s training at M3rrtle Beach the last part of August will be discussed and all interested players are in vited to be at the meeting. 0 LIVE - SAVING CLASSES Charles Hostetler, chairman of the Hoke County Red Cross chapter, annoimced this week that the local chapter would sponsor a water safety program to teach swimming and lifesaving. Plans in , effect now indicate that be ginning swimming would be taught to non-swimmers as well as junior and senior lifesaving courses. All interested persons may meet Instructors in the base ment of the Raeford Presbyterian Church August 15 at 9:30 ajn. Certificates will be given to all who pass the life saving courses>. ihg five. The infield made several nice plays as time after time they trapped a Robins player in a run-down between bases. Monday night at the local park the Rebels got eight hits off the offerings of two St. Pauls pitchers to gain another 4-3 win. The Rebels jumped off to a two nm lead in the first inning on two singles and three bases on balls. They scored another in the 4th on a base on balls and a triple by Helms: and another single run in the seventh on two singles and one walk. St. Pauls came close but never held the lead as they scored one run in the fourth and two more in the seventh inning. Joe Upchurch lead the Rebel batters with 3 for 4. Base hits rattled off the fences of Robins park in Red Springs last Wednesday night like haii off a tin roof as the Raeford Rebels pounded out a 11-6 vic tory over the Red Springs Robins. The game was climaxed in the 6th inning as 12 Rebels paraded to the plate and blasted seven hits coupled with three walks to score seven runs. The big blow of the inning was Taylor’s triple that cleared the bases of runners. Leading the 16-blow attack for the 'locals were McMillan with 4 for 5 and Conoly with 3 for 4. Taylor got the only extra base blows, a triple and a double. 0 Mrs. Wood’s Mother Dies Here Tuesday Mrs. MoUie Baird, 73, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Kermit Wood, Tuesday mornii^. A native of Winston-Scilem, Mis. Baird had been visiting here in the home of Mrs, Wood for the past week. She became suddenly ill Sund2iy night and died Tues day morning due to a cerebral hemorrhage. Survivors include two daugh ters; Mrs. Nattie B. Decker of Winston-Salem and Mrs. Kamit Wood of Raeford; one son Sam B. Baird of Winston-Salem; seven grandchildren and 8 great-grand- diildren. Fimeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 2:00 at the home of the deceased at 643 West 4th St., Wlnston-Salan. Burial wiU follow at Sal^ Cemetery. . ! Neill .A. McDonald, president of the Raeford Chamber of Com merce. Players and officials were introduced by J. P. Bell for the Aberdeen-Raeford league and the Rev. H. D. Gorman for Norwood. The prayer of dedication was de livered by the Rev. Judson Len non. pastor of the Raeford Bap tist church. 'The flag was raised in center field by a color guard of Boy Scouts to the playing of the Star Spangled banner. First players to take the field were Mayors For rest Lockey and W. L. Poole of Raeford and Aberdeen and J. L. McNeill, "who did not stay long, and then the game began. ’ By toss-up the Norwood team was home team for the game, and they retired the Aberdeen-Rae ford boys without one getting past first base in the first inning. In the bottom of the first Thompson, Nortvood centerfielder stretched a single and an error into a score to nut his team in front, 1-0. In the, bottom of the second the Norwood team picked up four more runs before Captain Dickey Hendley was moved from the mound to the outfield and Jimmy Davies took over. In getting the four runs the Norwood boys got four hits and two base on balls. The Aberdeen-Raeford team picked up two in. the top of toe third on singles by Lewis, Wilson and McCasMll and one error by Norwood. Thev held the visitors scoreless in the bottom of the third and continued their scoring spree into the top of toe fourth, picking up four more runs on hits by Lewis, Teal, Caldwell and Hendley and one base m balls. This brought the loc^ into the lead 6 to 5, and pitcher Raymond Morton was relieved by Lany Boles. Norwood tied the game again in the fifth when Raymond Mor ton went all the way on a hit and an error in the outfield. It stayed tied until toe first of the eighth when Wilson Teal, left fielder for Aberdeen-Raeford got one by the left fielder for a fair home run and became the hero of the game. Norwood - got men on first and second in the last of the ei^th on a hit batter and a single, but could do no more and toe game ended Aberdeen-Ra®^ tord 7, Norwood 6. All toe Aberdeen - Raafwd players deserve full credit fo® playing an outstanding game wtttt phenomenal catches bring made all over the place vtoen toe go ing got tough but next to Tiaal Pitriier Jimmy Davies whooe steady and effective pitritlng dar ing toe last six innings hrid tke visitors to one run off hte> Llse-^ up for Aberdeen-Ratted ena . «