CM ournai The Hoke County News- Established 1928 The Hoke County Journal - Established 1 905 RAEF0R0, HOKE COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA vSj ' 'IritH YEAR 10 FER COPY VOLUME LXII NUMBER 43 THl HM) Y. M VIM. II 7. I'Xill r North Of Town Shaded McDuffie Is Named Inspector Edwin McDuffie, Raeford con tractor! has been named build-' Ing Inspector for the town of Raeford following the resigna tion of Robert Gatlln. Gatlin, who teaches a draft ing class at Hoke High School, submitted his resignation by letter to the town board when It met here Monday night. Gat lln, who has been a surveyor and building Inspector for many years, explained to the board that his duties as teacher no longer leave him time to ful fill the duties of the building Inspector's job. The board accepted his res ignation "with regret" and di rected that a letter of appre ciation for his services be writ ten. Meanwhile, the board Monday night formally adopted an or dinance setting forth provisions of the upcoming $700,000 water sewer bond referendum. The vote will be conducted April 30. Town registration books will be opened four consecutive Sat urdays Immediately preceding the election. The first day of registration will be March 23, na on two succeeding Satur days. The fourth Saturday will be challenge day. see Mcduffie, Page u Hoke Budget Requests Must Be In March 28 BY LUCY CRAY PEEBLES The Board of Hoke County Commissioners set March 28 as budget request day at Its regular March meeting Mon day morning and selected April I at the day to alt as a board of equalization and re view. That action means that by March tl all agencies support ed by the cotaity must present tentative budget to the board for study. Tom McBryde, vice chair man, prealded at Monday'! ses sion In the absence of chairman T.C. Jones. The board voted to purchase two filing cabinets for the wel fare department at $63 each, an electric typewriter tor the tax collector's office at23S,and4S chairs, t desk and bookcase tor the courtroom and Jury room. The board also authorised Sheriff Dave Barrington to trade his 60-watt office base radio station for a 100 watt unit In order to have better recep tion. The equipment will be acquired along with a couple Area Indicates New Precinct Driver Loses Contest After Drinking Beer They swear on the Bible, but it's still hard to believe some witnesses who appear before the courts of the state. So in last week's District Court in Fayetteville, doubtful Judge Joe Dupree decided he would give a defendant a chance to prove his argument. At the close of the testimony Tuesday afternoon, Dupree an nounced that he would delay judgment for 48 hours in the drunken driving charge against Capt. Ward Stanley Thomas, 25. The delay, he disclosed, was to give the defendant a chance to prove three beers, which is all he claimed he had drunk before being arrested, would cause him to have a breathalizer reading of .16. Ken And Betsy McNeill Parents Of Baby Girl No question about It, Ken McNeill Is the happiest man In Hoke County this week. McNeill, a Raeford native, Is married to the former Betsy Ann Cole, daughter of former mayor Alfred Cole. Ken and Eetsy Ann have been married IB years. This week, Betsy Ann gave birth of a bouncing baby girl at Moore Me morial Hospital. It Is their first child. of two-way car radios at a coat to the county of $850 a year, plus $25 a month main tenance fee. After four years, however, the county will be eligible to purchase the unit and the money spent In rental fee may be applied to the principle. It was reported that four rec ommendations of the grand jury In February had been compiled with. They Included the Instal lation of a rail behind the jury box, repairs to the floors and windows of the county office building, and extermination of roaches therein. At the request of County At torney Charles Hostetler, the board gave approval to a spe cial term of Superior Court. Hostetler declared there Is a stockpile of cases which should be disposed of. Only three of 10 rases on last week's civil docket were disposed of, he said, and they had been on the docket since 1864. Bonds were approved as fol lows! M, A. Maxwell, county electrical Inspector, $500; Har vey S. Warllrk, treasurer. North The law presumes that a per son recording .10 or more Is under the influence of Intoxi cating liquor or beverage. ' Under supervision of die court and StateHlghway Patrol man B. H. LaRocke, the arrest ing officer, Thomas was treat ed to lunch and then allowed to consume not three, but six beers. Dupree said that if after that Thomas blew .16 on the breathalizer, he would find him not guilty. But if he blew less than that he would find him guilty as charged. Alter taking food and drink (not three beers but six) Thomas registered only .02 on the de vice for detection alcohol con tent of human blood. Raeford Fire Department, $3,000; Mrs. Lucille Posey, treasurer, Puppy Creek Fire Department, JL000; Kenneth Rltter, treasurer, Rockflsh Fire Department, $1,000. Maxwell requested and waa given permission to set the fee for Inspection of a normal house at $7.50 with an additional fee of $5 for inspection of a sealed heating system. The former fee was $3 plus 5 cents each for outlets exceeding a certain num ber. He also asked that Donald Burrow be named aaslstant county inspector because of the need for help In periodic In spection of schools. His re quest was also granted. During a short recess, board members J .A. Webb, McBryde, John Balfour and Ralph Barn hart went next door to Inspect progress on the new JalL They determined that the structure will not be completed by June L as waa recently reported by the architect. The delay has been caused by slow arrival of steel men. .New E stablished A new voting precinct has been established In Hoke County, bringing to 13 the electoral sub division. The new precinct, Rieford No. 5, wis formed from the northern portions of Rieford No. 1 and No. 2. J. Scott Poole, chairman of the board of elections, said the new precinct contains a poten tial registration of 600. 'The additional precinct was required because Raeford No. 1 an J Raeford No. 2 were getting so large, from the standpoint of registration, that It was hard to vote and tabulate returns," Poole said. The new precinct lopped off 250 to 300 possible registered voters In the two older pre Two Hurt In Auto Wreck Two men were hurt snd sev eral other persons escaped serious Injury Thursday after noon In a three-car crash three miles south of Raeford on N.C. 21i. State Highway Patrolman E.W. Coen listed the victims as Richard O'Henry Holland, 25, Shannon Rt. L and Elbert Randleman, 20, Shannon Rt. 1. Holland was driver of one of three cars Involved In the ac cident, which occurred at about 4:40 p.m. The highway hid been wet from rain and snow began to fall soon after the wreck. Coen said the car driven by Holland was going southward behind another vehicle operated by Delores Chavls, 19, of Pem broke. When the Chavls vehicle stopped behind a school bus, the Holland car swerved Into the left lane to avoid a colli sion, Coen said Holland told him. When he moved Into the op posite lane, he met a vehicle operated by Jerry Johnson, 16, of Raeford, Coen said. The Holland car attempted to fall back Into the right lane, and In doing so, skidded into the Chavls vehicle. The Holland and Johnson vehicles then crash ed almost headHjn. Holland was charged with passing In the face of oncoming traffic, Coen said. Injury to the two victims was not serious. They were taken to Scotland Memorial Hospital. Earlier Thursday, a car op erated by Henry Gazelle Mon roe, Red Springs Rt, 3, was Involved In a collision on the Antloch - Wagram road, Coen said. He said Investigation reveal ed that a pickup truck operated by Fletcher Cecil McFhauL 57, Red Springs Rt. 3, had run out of gaa and was parked partially on the highway because the shoulder was too narrow to ac commodate It. McPhaul was In the truck, which was parked on a straight stretch of Road, Coen said, and the vehicle operated by Monroe See WRECKS, Page 11 Hoke Elections Board Named John Scott Poole, Raeford, T.W. Jones, Shannon Rt. 1, both Democrats, and Charles Stro ther, Aberdeen Rt. 1, Republi can, were re-appointed to the Hoke County Board of Elections this week. Names of county elections board members for each of the state's 100 counties were re leased by the North Carolina Elections Board last week. Poole Is Hoke County chairman. Registration books are now being set in order under the new-set-up established by the Gen eral Assembly last year and first registrations will be taken Saturday. March 30. Voting cincts, Poole said, leaving them with a potential registration of 600 to 750. It Is general policy throughout North Carolina to keep precincts well below 1,000 voters if voting machines are not available. It la no real problem to accom modate 1,000 voters In a day, but when the majority arrive before their work day beglng at 8 a.m. and after it is over at 8 p.m., conditions can get crowded. Particularly Important is the matter of tabulating the results. Precincts with small numbers of voters generally can count the ballots In an hour or so, but In larger precincts, the Job sometimes extends far Into the night. Hoke Man Wounded Technical Sergeant Bobby D. Lundy, son of Mr. and Mrs. A J. Lundy of Raeford, has been wounded In action In Vietnam, according to members of his family here. Lundy, an airman with the United States Air Force, left Raeford February 16 after visit ing his parents before return ing for a second tour of duty in Vietnam, Information furnished toLun dy's parents here indicate he and seven other menwereasleep In their hut when the buildlnr took a direct hit. Four men were killed and four wounded. Lundy reportedly received shrapnel wounds of the back and legs and had a badly rut arm. Officers A rash of break-Ins here Saturday night resulted in the arrest of three Michigan men, all white, by local law enforce ment officers. A routine check of Hoke High School just before midnight Sat urday brought Officers Leonard (leke) Wigjins and JamesWest to the scene as one man alleged ly was coming out of the build ing. When officers suspected that he had one 01 more accomplices on the roof. Police Chief L. W. Stanton alerted state highway patrolmen, sheriffs officers, and Hoke Rescue Squad. These officers and men converged on the scene, went to the roof, but failed to find anybody. A short time later, State Highway Patrolmen E. W. Coen and E. M. Roberts picked up As a general rule, Raeford No. 1 and Raeford No. 2 are the last precincts to report. In addition to regular count, which Is more cumbersome, rechecks are complicated when large numbers of ballots are In volved. No special action outside Hoke County was required to establish the new precinct, Poole said. The board of elections has the responsibility of regulating pre cinct size. Officials for the new precinct will be selected within the next week or so, Poole said. To be named are a registrar and three Judges, two by the Democratic Party and one by the Republi cans. Poll holders will be se c Wrecked Cars Block Bill Senter Gets Morehead Award William Leon (Bill) Senter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Neil L. Senter of Raeford, has received a Morehead Award to study at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A senior basketball star at Hoke County High School, young Senter Is the first Hoke County student to win the award, estab lished by the late John Motley Morehead, industrialist, phil anthropist, and benefactor of UNC. The award is worth $3,000 (See SENTLR, Fare 11) Nab Burglary two men suspected of Involve ment in the high school break in. The men were afoot just east of Rockfish Creek on the road leading to Hillcrest. Jailed in lieu of $3,000 bond were Robert Nichols, 23, and Edwin Cribb, 23, both of Lake City. Mich., and Jerome Kevin Green. 17. of Cadillac, Mich. Chief ;tanton said Green was arrested at the high school by Officers Wiggins and West. They recovered several items allegedly taKen in the raid, in cluding two cameras, a radio, and a stopwatch. Stanton said a drink machine had been broken open and some $9 to $10 taken. While ofticers were investi gating the high school break in, another burglary was dis covered at Mack's 5 4 10 when Charles Barham, manager, en .Precinc In Hoke lected later on the basis of registration. Establishment of the precinct was advantageous at thispar ticular time, Poole said, be cause a complete new registra tion of all voters In the county Is being required this year. Since everybody has to regis ter anyway. It will be no addi tional burden on voters In the new precinct. Polling place for the new precinct will be at Upchurrh High School. In terms of potential regis tration, Raeford's five pre cincts are fairly close to equal, Poole said. Heretofore, Rae ford 1 and 2 were substantially the largest precincts In the N.C. 20 South Of Town BILL StM tit tered the store about 11:15 p. m. He found that the office had been ransacked and a rear door's lock smashed. A check revealed nothing missing, Chief Stanton said, leading him to believe the thieves were scared off. About 5 a. m. Sunday, Of ficers Wiggins and West were checking doors in the business district when they discovered someone had broken into West ern Auto Associate Store on Main Street. Taken in that b.r,;lary were several guns and watches, Stan ton said. Entry to Western Auto was gained through a ventilator, Stanton said; at Slacks, through a roof ventilator, a. id to Hole High School, through a window after an air conditioning unit county. The new re -istiatlon in Hoke County will U'tun Mareh 30 unci continue for four weeks, in stead of the custoniaiv three, Poole said. The filth Saturday will tie challenge day. In Hoke County and through out North Carolina, voter reg istration is tuMii changed, where necessary, to provide a uniform "looscitaf" lesistra tion system. I'ntil this year, many counties, including Hoke, still maintained registration "books," with a number of vo ters on the .same pace. Under the looseleaf system, there Is an Individual pau'e for each registrant. The pape can be removed without Uistuibin.' See VOTING, l'a.:e 11 Six Sent To Hospital Six people reportedly were taken to the hospital for emer gency treatment Tuesda at 2:30 a. rn. when an ammonia pipe burst and overcame a nurri ej of workers at the- K-u-ioid Turkey Farms, Inc. plant here according to a Hoke Kesrue Squad report. The rescue squad aveoxy,; n to several others at the plant and carried four ionn to .scot land Memorial hospital, where they were treated ant. i aliased, Bruton's Amtu'an e St rvice tranferred two others to Muore Memorial hospital, wheie they were kept over nithi and re leased. Suspect had been removed. T!ie Michigan trio w :n have been ;ive.. prvhniriauy hearing at yeterdav's ser.'-:o-; of District Court here. Early this week, Chief can ton praised te work of C'fliceri Wiggins a idWes! si.d expressed his appreciation to other of ficers and rescue iad mem ber? for tr.or asi ta- ce ir. the high schooi ta e. Meat-while, Sta "ton al5" re vealed th.it loi r me.. 1 a e -wn charged wit': hreaki-gintoRae-ford oalva,e fA, 1 c., ir. Jan uary and ta-i s'me TO! pounds of cupper. Stanton said the tapper was foui.d in SarferJ, wfere it had been so.d to a nther salvage firm. Iht. ccrper was rcrov- See OH1C1 Ks, I"4t- 1 IJ