Saturday, July 18, 2026

Carl Leake Testifies He Helped Cranford Bury John Quincy's Body, July 18, 1926

Said He Helped Cranford Bury Body

Albemarle, N.C., July 16 (AP)—Another story of cruel deaths alleged to have occurred in the prison camp of Stanly County was painted before the jury trying N.C. Cranford, former “convict boss” in Superior Court here today.

Carl Leake, negro, who served under Cranford, testified that he had beaten another negro, John Quincy, until he fell to the ground exhausted, and that Cranford had administered further punishment. Leake said Quincy died during the night, and that on the following day he helped Cranford take the body into the woods an secretly bury it.

On cross examination Leake admitted he had offered to aid Cranford, who he liked, and had gone to work for him when he had served his sentence. He said he later became angered at the “foreman” and went to the state’s attorney with his story.

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, July 16, 1926

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Aberdeen Cannery to Focus on Peach Pie Filling this Year, July 18, 1926

Cannery at Aberdeen. . . Method of Packing Fruit Changed This Year; New Management

The Aberdeen Cannery will again be operated this year. The personnel of the concern has changed and new policies have been inaugurated which it is hoped will make the canning of peaches a possible and profitable industry in the Sandhills.

Heretofore the product has been limited entirely to table peaches put up in 2 ½-pound cans. It was found, though, that our fruit here could not be made to compete with the California product, and next to impossible to obtain a fair price for our kind of product.

The cannery this year will limit its output entirely to pie peaches putting these up in 1-gallon cans. No particular aim will be made at a fancy product. Only good wholesome fruit will be packed and the cans well filled.

This style of can will enable the cannery to eliminate a great deal of labor and other expenses required in the packing of the fancier product, and it hopes to gain a margin of profit thereby which will make its existence and continuation possible.

There is an increasing demand for the hotel and restaurant size in all canned commodities and no difficulty is anticipated in marketing the product through established brokers the country over.

The plant is assembled and now ready to begin operations. However, no canning will be done until the yellow varieties begin to ripen as the trade demands a yellow peach. The old equipment has been completely overhauled and electric power installed to ensure steady operation. The season for the plant to operate in is very short, especially as only yellow peaches can be canned, but the management has set a goal of 15,000 cases for this year’s operation.

From page 3 of The Pilot, Vass, N.C., July 16, 1926

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Watch Tower at Cameron Hill to Locate Forest Fires, July 18, 1926

Watch Tower at Cameron Hill . . . Commands View of Large Area; To Locate Forest Fires

The first watch tower erected by the State Department of Conservation and Development is located at Cameron Hill in west Harnett, about 12 miles east of Vass. This tower will be in charge of a man for about six months of the year, whose duty it shall be to keep on the lookout for forest fires and give the alarm whenever one is located.

Camero Hill is the highest point in that section. Surmounted by a tower 65 feet in height, gives an unobstructed view of a vast area of territory. The tower will be equipped with telephones, so that the moment a fire is spotted, the keeper of the tower can communicate with someone it he threatened neighborhood and avert the great loss which would obtain if the fire were allowed to get under headway before being discovered.

Visitors are welcome to inspect the tower at any time, except during services at Camerion Hill Church. Six flights of stairs are provided, which can be negotiated comfortably to the top of the tower. However, notices are posted on the property to warn visitors that the State will not be responsible on account of any injuries sustained in connection with inspections of the tower. It is the plan of the State to triangulate this tower by the erection of similar equipment at Pinehurst and Carthage.

From the front page of The Pilot, Vass, N.C., July 16, 1926

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Community Correspondents at The Pilot, Vass, N.C., July 18, 1926

Our Corps of Correspondents. . . Capable Staff Ready to Cover Items of Interest to Readers

The Pilot is justly proud of the correspondents who contribute weekly the local news of their respective communities. For the information of our readers, we are giving a list of these workers, with the request that you co-operate with them in their effort to cover the news of your community.

Cameron—Mrs. J. McK. Harrington

Carthage—Dorothy Beckwith Tyson

Pinebluff—Margaret A. Kittrell

Aberdeen—Emma Page Wilder

Vass—Mrs. S.R. Smith

Lakeview—Johnsie Eastwood

Manley—Mary Allice Patterson

Pinehurst—Caroline M. Battley

Niagra—J.V. Snipes

Lobelia—A.C. Smith

It is not always possible for them to get over their territory each week. If you will telephone or write regarding items in which you and the community are interested, it will be of great assistance to them in their effort to make a good newspaper better.

We might also add that these representatives will be glad to relieve you of the detail of sending in your subscriptions. Thanks!

From the front page of The Pilot, Vass, N.C., July 16, 1926

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Dr. Rosser Urges Everyone to Get Free Vaccinations Against Diphtheria, Typhoid, July 18, 1926

Not Responding to Free Treatment

Elsewhere in this issue will be found an article written by Dr. R.G. Rosser, County Quarantine Officer, admonishing our people against the dangers of typhoid and diphtheria. The state furnishes materials free of charge and also pays the physicians who are making an effort to meet the people of all sections of the county for vaccination against these diseases. Dr. Rossier states that it would cost more to combat one case of either of these very malignant maladies that it would to immunize the entire community against them.

From the front page of The Pilot, Vass, N.C., July 16, 1926

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J.V. Snipes Shares Niagara, N.C. News in Pilot, July 16, 1926

Niagara

By J.V. Snipes

Master Jack Weatherly is spending a week or two on a visit to relatives in Greensboro.

Little Mary Alice Weatherly is visiting her cousin, Mary Lucy Kelly in Jonesboro.

Colon Caddell and wife of Cognac visited friends in these parts the past week.

Mrs. Evie L. Burns and two sons, Emory and Lacy, of Pittsboro, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.V. Snipes Sunday.

George McDermott went to Carthage on business Monday.

H.S. Stanyan has returned from a hurried trip up in the state of Pennsylvania.

C.W. Marston and W.R. Wilson left the first of the week for a tour into the New England states possibility to Canada. They plan to take in the exposition at Philadelphia while enroute to the north.

W.F. Smith, after spending his 10-day vacation with relatives in these parts, has returned to Raleigh, where he is manager of one of the stores there.

From page 2 of The Pilot, Vass, N.C., July 16, 1926

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Emma Page Wilder Shares News from Aberdeen, July 18, 1926

Aberdeen

By Emma Page Wilder

On Tuesday, June 29, Miss Clara Martin Page, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Page, was married to Dr. Edward Harrison of Littleton, N.C. The wedding was performed at her home in Aberdeen and was throughout one of simplicity and dignity. An altar was formed at the end of the living room by palms and ferns, against which were banked white phlox and gladiola. At the sound of the wedding march, played by Miss Mary Page Wilder, the bride came down the steps and was met at the foot of the stairs by her father; the groom entered with his brother, John Harrison. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. W. V. McRae, the pastor of the Aberdeen Methodist church. The bride wore a dress of white satin, trimmed with metal embroidery and pearls, with Duchess lace.

Mrs. Harrison received her A.B. degree at Randolph Macon Women’s College, Lynchburg, Va., and did some graduate work at Columbia University. Dr. Harrison attended Duke University, where he received his bachelor’s degree, and studied medicine at Johns Hopkins University and the University of Virginia.

The out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Page Jr., of Asheville; Miss Inez Richrdson of Arkansas; Miss Elizabeth Lyne, Raleigh; John and Blake Harrison of Littleton; Mr. and Mrs. Ames of Raleigh; and Miss Elizabeth Morris, Oxford.

Mrs. Will Blue has announced the opening of an art class to be held in her studio, where oils, pastels, and china painting will be taught. The number of her pupils is limited. Aberdeen has needed a teacher of drawing and painting, and Mrs. Blue is to be thanked on filling this need.

Miss Jane McGraw spent last Friday afternoon and night at Fort Brage, where she went to the R.O.T.C. Game.

Edgar Bowman spent a few days last week at Roaring Gap. A large part of his time he spent playing golf.

The Aberdeen Boy Scouts went on a hike last Wednesday to Cook’s mill pond. William Purdy, the scout master, and about 24 scouts enjoyed swimming and cooking their supper. They returned home about bedtime, after an evening full of fun. John Blue, Edwin McKeithen, and William Carter are the patrol leaders, and they took the tenderfoots in hand. For some of them it was their first Scouting outing.

Miss Effie Leland and John Leland of Charleston, S.C., are visiting their sister, Mrs. Edwin McKeithen. Miss Leland is planning to go to Converse College this fall and is working up an extra credit in French with the help of Elizabeth Gaston. John Leland is planning to go to the University of Virginia this fall.

Miss Allene Mackay of Bennettsville, S.C. is visiting Miss Emma Page Wilder. Miss Mackay has visited in Aberdeen several times before.

Bill Wren of Siler City has been visiting his uncle, Max Folley. He returned home on Wednesday.

Last Tuesday Mrs. Tom Wilder, Allene MacKay and Emma Page Wilder took Alice Wilder to Blowing Rock to camp, where she will be most of the summer. The other members of the party stayed in Blowing Rock a day and returned home on Thursday by way of Charlotte, where they stopped for a few hours.

Miss Marty Page and Mrs. Jones have gone to the Piedmont section of Virginia in their car, hoping to escape the Moore County heat.

Mrs. Childrey of Sanford, Florida, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Ada Weaver, for the summer.

Miss Frances Pleasants has been visiting her aunt in Charlotte.

The Canning factory which has been closed since last season is ready to begin operation again. Mr. Washam will be in charge.

Mr. and Mrs. Talbot Johnson spent last week at Roaring Gap.

Mrs. Frank Mizzell of Tampa, Fla., is spending the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. McN. Johnson.

C.L. Read, the presiding elder of the Aberdeen district, preached in the Methodist church last Sunday morning. Mr. Reed was some years ago the pastor here and has many friends in Aberdeen. [Read or Reed? Was spelled both ways in newspaper.]

Mrs. H.E. Bowman and Billy Bowman left last Saturday for Beckley, W. Va., to visit at the home of Judge Hatcher. Mrs. Hatcher is Dr. Bowman’s sister. They motored with Jim McKeithen, who is also visiting in West Virginia, and with Mary McKeithen and Christine Allred, who are visiting a school friend in Pulaski, Va.

Miss Wheeler of Los Angeles, California, has been visiting her aunt, Mrs. martin, at the home of Mrs. Frank Page. Miss Wheeler is visiting other relatives in North Carolina, and after a stay in Washington will go to her old home in New York state on the Canadia border before returning to Los Angeles.

Mr. and Mrs. Reid Page announce the birth of a son, Reid Allison Page Jr.

Mrs. Bowman entertained at a swimming party at Johnson’s bridge. A delicious supper was served out under the trees. The guests were Mary Page Wilder, Flora May McKeithen, Beatrice Treyz, Emma Page Wilder, Margaret McKeithen, Neil McKeithen, Harold McKeithen, Jim McKeithen, Henry blue and Edgar Bowman.

Miss Beatrice Treyz of New York City has been visiting Miss Mary Page Wilder.

Mr. and Mrs. John Nichols announce the birth of a son, John Prayson Nichols Jr. on July 7 at Greensboro, N.C.

Harold McKeithen has returned from Boston, where he has been studying at Harvard Law school.

From page 3 of The Pilot, Vass, N.C., July 16, 1926

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