JUNIOR JUMP TOWER - .4 kiddie parachute jump will be one of the attractions at Armed Forces Day at Ft. Bragg Saturday. Other activities will include parachute jumps by the 82nd Div. and HALO (high altitude low opening) jumps by members of Special Forces; rappelling from helicopters, and demonstrations of an inflatable field hospital, portable bakery, with samples and weapons such as the 20mm Vulcan weapons system. Free passes permitting overseas telephone calls to military personnel through the MARS system will be dispensed also. I -? Farm Items By W. S. Young and David Bodenheimer According to latest reports 191,752 allotment acres of cotton from 13,006 farms have been signed in the program in North Carolina for the 1971 Library Notes A beautiful new King James version of the Bible has been placed in the library. Memorials are being accepted for it. One has been given in memory of Dr. Willis Hood. Our new building fund which was started by the Woman's Club's gift of 5500.00 has been increased to S615.00. NEW BOOKS Fiction 1. The Throne of Saturn - Allen Drury 2. The Antagonists * Ernest Gann 3. QB VII ? Leon Uris 4. The Passions of the Mind ? Irving Stone 5. Hijacked - David Harper Nonfiction 1. Greening of America ? Charles A. Reich 2. Tale of a Tarheel Town - Edghillentry Meade Seawell 3. Adventure of Being A Wife ? Mrs. Norman Vincent Peale 4. The Story of Weight Watchers ? Jean Nidetch 5. Give Your Child A Superior Mind ? Siegfried & Theresa Englemann Pato, a popular sport in Argentina, combines the rough practices of polo, basketball, and tug - of ? war -? all rolled into one. year. These figures do not include any extra cotton planted above the farm allotment. The figures indicate an increase of about 15,000 planted acres over 1970. About 80% of the State's cotton crop was planted by the end of April. Seed rot and other problems will necessitate between IS to 25 percent replant. Before plowing up the cotton there are several points to remember. These are: four plants per foot of row will give maximum yields, one plant per foot per acre can produce a profitable crop and a 65% stand in late planting season is better than the risk of replanting. Demand for cotton has increased and prices have increased. Contracts have been offered by shippers to producers for crop lots of 1971 North Carolina and South Carolina cotton at 25M cents. Some Memphis cotton has been contracted at 26 cents. A study of the marketing situation can make you some money from cotton. ? ? ? A number of new herbicides have been cleared for soybeans and corn recently. Most of these are mixtures of chemicals. It is being recognized that it takes these combinations to do a complete weed control job. For pre - emerge use in soybeans Lasso and Preemerge is recommended at 2 to 3 lbs. plus 1.5 to 2.0. For early preemerge, the same product at 1.5 to 3 lbs. plus .75 to 1.12 lbs. is recommended. Corn pre ? emerge is Aatrex and Princep at I to 1.5 lbs. per acre. Post emergence is a chemical called EV1K at the rates of 0.6 to 2.0 lbs. used as a directed spray. Of course there are several of the older chemicals that still do a good job. There is not much excuse for a weekly corn crop today. BONANZA TOBACCO SPECIAL 6-12-18 GOLDEN WEED TOBACCO TOP DRESSER 8-0-24 K-NITE 13.75-0-44.50 NITRATE of SODA 16% AQUA HUMUS TRANSPLANT WATER STUlf 4-12-24 with 1% MANGANESE BAG or BULK TOP DRESSER-CORN andCOTTON 30% NITROGEN SOLUTION AN 33 1/2%-ANL 20 1/2% ioSSSj Couiploto Lint of Agricultural Chtmlcals Htrbiddtt and Insocticidoi Royster Company RAEFORD WAREHOUSE Jimmie Warner, Manager. Phono: Office 875-4148 Rot. 875-2033 Now your child can have the advantages of private tutoring. 1 I I I I I I I I Being tutored isn'i just for the rich. Not since Learning Foundations came to town. V\e're America's largest system of programmed learning centers and we've dramatically lowered the cost of tutoring for students from first grade through college. Good news. Because at one time and another. every student needs tutoring: To boost grades. To sharpen skills To catch up. To get ahead To learn faster. To get ready for college boards. ? We'll tutor your child in all basic subjects and study skills. He'll work in his own study area... at his own pace ... with his own private electronic tutor... taking lessons prepared by professors from Purdue. Northwestern. UCLA and so on. All for a fraction of the cost of a conventional private tutor. ! We'd like to tell you more, and we will ?if you'll mail the coupon or give us a call. Thank you. SUITE 209 MoNAIRY BLDG. EUTAW SHOPPING CENTER 485 8881 | FAYETTE VILLE 28303 NAME PHONE. STREET CITY STATE ZIP. Learning Foundations Vfe make it easier to learn. -rr.-r-r? ? ? 1 Rockfish News By Mrs. A. A. Mclnnis There will b? a cleanup at Rockfish Community House Saturday, May IS, to work on the grounds around the building. The Ho me makers Club, the 4-H Clubs and all who are willing to work are asked to come and bring tools to work with at 10 o'clock a.m. Saturday, May IS. Wayside Grange will meet at the Community House Saturday night. May 22, at 7:30. All are asked to bring food for a covered dish supper and every member please be present. Circles of Galatia Church meeting in this area this week are Circle No. S with Mrs. B.B. Bostic Monday night and Circle No. 6 with Mrs. Harold Monroe Tuesday night. The Youth Who Care met Saturday at 7 p.m. at the R.A. Hut behind the church. There were 8 present. Don Wood presided and Tim Stickland read the minutes of the last meeting. After the meeting was adjourned, refreshments were served and enjoyed by all. The Revival at Parker Church last week was reported as a very successful meeting. There were no new members added to the church but the preaching was powerful and the singing was good with a trio of boys from Laurinburg assisting with the instrumental and vocal music. The members of the church feel that they have been spiritually revived. The Rev. B.F. Ferguson of Antioch preached at Philippi Church Sunday. There was no news this week from Tabernacle or Pittman Grove Churches except the regular services. The Rev. Russell Flemming and Thomas Mclnnis of Galatia Church attended Presbytery at First Presbyterian Church in Fayetteville Tuesday. Mrs. A.W. Wood spent the weekend with her son and daughter ? in ? law, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Wood of Fayetteville. Mrs. Marvin English and children Sandra and Michael of Clarksville, Va. spent Saturday p.m. and Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. P.C. English. Mrs. Ruth Willis, her mother, who came with them, spent Saturday night with Mrs. Floyd Monroe. They visited Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Willis of Raeford Sunday and Mrs. Ruth Willis went back to Clarksville with them Sunday p.m. Mrs. A.A. Ray and Mrs. Marshall Newton of Wayside visited Mrs. John Patterson and Miss Sarah Patterson last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Everett spent Mothers Day at home but they were not alone all day. Their daughters from FayetteviUe and others came to see them, Mrs. Alex McBryde and son Terry, Mr. and Mrs. C.W. Boone and Mrs. W.B. Hatcher. Mr. Everett's sister and her husband. Mr. and Mrs J.H. McPhail of FayetteviUe were also guests. Mrs. Jesse Lee and residents of the Tillman Rest Home gave a birthday dinner for Miss Dolly Smith at the home last Sunday. There were fifteen present. Miss Smith received many nice gifts and may she have many more happy birthdays. Mr. and Mrs. W.B. Barefoot and Mr and Mrs. Ernest Barefoot and children attended a singing at St. Pauls Baptist Church last Sunday. Jo Ann Register, daughter of Mr. and Mn. Omer Register, attended the Sandhills Horse Show at Carthage last Saturday and enjoyed it very much. Mrs. Robert Peritt of Ft. Gordan, Ga., who is spending this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Wood of Fayetteville, spent Monday night with Mrs. A.W. Wood. Her grandchildren, Don and Becky Wood, also spent the night with her. Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Hare and daughters of Charlotte were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Webb of Rt. 3, Raeford Friday night and Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Berry's children, who visited them on Mothers Day, were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Currie and children Ralph, Johnny and Peggy Cecil and William Curne of Blue Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Berry and daughter Paula Kay of Raeford, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sajka of Fayetteville. All the children presented their mother with gifts, including Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Berry and daughter Denise of Fayetteville, who were not present Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C.M. Chason celebrated Mothers Day with a family supper at their home. Those present were his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.M. Chason, Mr. and Mrs. Demont Long, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Chason and children Chuck and Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. Chason and son Larry. Representing three generations of Chasons were the mothers, Mrs. L.M. Chason, Mrs. C.M. Chason and Mrs. Earl Chason. Mr. and Mrs. Will Monroe had all their children and most of their grandchildren with them on Mothers Day. They were Mr. and Mrs. Minor McGougan of St. Pauls, Mrs. Tracy Monroe and children Nancy, Pamela and Jeffrey, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Monroe and children Lynn and Chuck, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wood of Fayetteville and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Monroe and children Jennie, Wayne and Sheila of Rt. 2, Raeford. They all came with gifts for mother. The Rev. and Mrs. Robert McColl and son Brendan of Chapel Hill visited his mother, Mrs. S.N. McColl Sunday. Her son, Worth McColl of McBee, S.C. also visited her Sunday. Mrs. Clinton Robertson of Swannanoa and Mrs. James Crawford of Hendersonville were both sick and could not come to see their mother, Mrs. S.N. McColl for Mothers Day. Mr. and Mrs. Angus C. Mclnnis of Wagram, Mr. and Mrs. Smith Mclnnis and Mrs. Jim Maxwell of Raeford visited Mrs. Mary Mclnnis and son Thomas Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hare and daughters Elizabeth, Emily and Nancy of Charlotte spent Saturday night and Sunday with them. Guests of Mrs. Donne Barefoot this past Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Edwards and Mrs. Woodrow Smith of New Bern and the Edwards' daughters, Mary Esther, Lynn, Marilyn. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Morgan of Laurel Hill and a friend from Laurinburg stopped in Rockfish for a few minutes last week on their way home from Hope Mills to exchange greetings with Mrs. Alfred Berry, Mrs. Mary Mclnnis and son Thomas Mclnnii. Mr. Morgan is well known in Hoke County as he represented the Laurinburg Production Credit Association here some years ago. Mr. and Mrs. J.W. Caddell of Raeford were Mothers Day dinner guests of her sister, Mrs. Alfred Quick and Homer Quick and son Ray. Jimmy Hendren, who has been a patient at Womack Army Hospital for several weeks with a broken leg and other injuries received in an automobile wreck, got home last week but his leg was still in a cast. Mrs. R.H. Edge and son Malburn had as their dinner guests Mothers Day, Mr. and Mrs. Cronzia Edge of FayetteviUe. Mrs. Will Monroe's sister, Mrs. Garnet Emory and her daughter Mrs. Ruth Keith of Durham, spent last Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Monroe. Mr. and Mrs. L.B. Bundy had most of their children and grandchildren and great grandchildren visit them on Mothers Day at different times. Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Bundy an; children and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bundy and children were their dinner guests. Others who came were Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Bundy and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Beasley and children. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bundy and children, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bundy and children, Mrs. Johnny Shepley, the children of Mrs. Betty Bundy, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wright and family. Mrs. Bundy received lots of gifts from her children. Mrs. Ethel D. Gibson and her daughter ? in ? law, Mrs. MS. Gibson, Jr. accompanied Mrs. Virginia Bounds to Duke Hospital in Durham for surgery and tests last Wednesday. BIRTHDAY The children and grandchildren of Mrs. Ethel D Gibson celebrated her birthday on Mothers Day. They were nearly all present. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kelly of Wilmington, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Sumner and children Pamela and Johnny of Lumber Bridge, Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Gibson and son Randy of Stedman and his girl friend Miss White of Fayetteville, Mr. and Mrs. A.J. Freeman, Jr., Steve and Debbie and Arvin and his girl friend of Fayetteville and Mrs. W.B. McDiarmid of Raeford. Instead of many little gifts, Mrs. Gibson's children gave her an electric sewing machine. May she have many more happy birthdays and Mothers Days with all of her children and grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. E.R. Brown of Raleigh visited Mr. and Mrs. E.T. Brock last Friday. They spent the night with Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Bundy and returned home Saturday. Mr and Mrs. E.T. Brock had all their children and granchildren visit them on Mothers Day. They were Mr. and Mrs. E.T. Brock, Jr. and sons Howard and Leonard, Mr. and Mrs. James Culp and son Gary, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brock and daughter Donna Marie. Like all the mothers, Mrs. E.T. Brock received many nice gifts and a happy Mothers Day. Mr. and Mrs. George Dees were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Dees on Mothers Day. Most of the other children and grandchildren came to ice them at their home in the afternoon and brought greetings and gifts to their mother and grandmother and on the whole it was a happy day for her. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lovette of Wayside, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Simpson and son Lester III and Mrs. Lester Simpson Sr. of Jacksonville met at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Vamik Bombatepe and sons Halis and John of Wilson to celebrate Mothers Day last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E.B. Newton and children Cathy and Marshall, Mr. and Mrs. Robert McNeill and daughters Susan and Nancy, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hebling and children Cathy and John spent the weekend at Lake Waccamaw. Mrs. Cleveland Barefoot of Confederate Woman's Home in Fayetteville is spending a few days the first of this week with her daughter, Miss Donnie Barefoot. Mr. and Mrs. Davis Parker and children Karen and Kirkland spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McPherson and children Tom, Jr. Davis and Elizabeth of Yanceyville. Mrs. Parker and Mrs. McPherson attended the Furniture Show at High Point Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Parker of Wayside were dinner guests of Misses Allie and Katie Black Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Will Hair had most all their children and grandchildren with them on Mothers Day. They were Mr. and Mrs. Lacy Hair and daughter, Geraldine of Winston ? Salem, Mr. and Mrs. B.B. Cole, Jr. and children Buddy and Linda of Columbia, S.C. and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sanders and children Donna and Albert of Rt. 2, Raeford. They presented their mother with gifts and all enjoyed the day. Mrs. W.B. Guin of Carthage spent the weekend with her sister, Mrs. David Koonce and Mr. Koonce. Mr. and Mrs. Stacy Hobson of Wayside spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hobson of Mexico Beach, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Hobson's children and grandchildren who were with them on Mothers Day were Mr. and Mrs. Linwood Huffman and children Chris and Kim of * Raeford, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hobson and son David of Coats, Rob Hobson of Hemmingway, SC. also visited them on Mothers Day. Mrs. Hobson received many nice gifts. Mrs. Leroy Freeman and son Joe of Raleigh were guests of Mrs. Jim Maxwell and Mr. and Mrs. Smith Mclnnis Sunday p.m. Mrs. Joe Lovette talked with her sister, Mrs. Mary Shewbridge, who is a hospital patient at Pompano Beach, Fla. Sunday. Mrs. Shewbridge is much better now but still will be in the hospital for the rest of this week. She had been cheered up so much by the many lovely cards received from relatives and friends in North Carolina. She wants all of them to know how much she appreciates the cards and the dear folks back home who sent them. The heart of a blue whale is so large that the main blood vessel is big enough for a child to crawl throueh ROBERT LOWDERMILK APPOINTED Special Representative PILOT LIFE Pilot Life Insurance Company it pleated to announce the appointment oif Robert Lowdermilk at Special Representative for the Pilot in this area. He it well qualified to serve you with your financial planning at it relates to life and health insurance. Phone 876-3053 Raeford, N. C. J. H. OLIVER, CLU. A. C PARKER, CLU. General Aganta 1333 Morganton Road Payattevtle, North Carolina Phone 4M-S102 ?k NOW OPEN Hoke TV Service 408 Harris Ave. (OLD LIPSCOMB GROCERY) ALL TYPES OF ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT Repairs on COLOR T.V. & BLACK & WHITE HOURS 9-5 I DAYS A WEEK Hoke TV SERVICE Tihpiw ITMW