Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Nov. 29, 1956, edition 1 / Page 12
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Page TWELVE THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1956 The present three-cent rate for letters is the same as it was in 1851. At CHRISTMAS ON SEARCH FOR LIQUOR Two Aberdeen Officers Acquitted Of Entering House Without Warrant By MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF Entertain Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rettew and Mr. and Mrs. L. Paget Rigby en tertained at a cotktail psirty at Burney Sanders, Aberdeen po-j Jones. She said the officers had;^jjg Rettews’ cottage last Wed- PINEHURST NEWS lice officer, was fined $25 and costs “for using more force than necessary” in making an arrest at the home of a Berkley Negro October 6. At the same time Kieth Marks, Moore County ABC officer, was found not guilty, as was Sanders, on charges of breaking and en tering, assault and battery, curs ing, and conducting an unlawful search of the premises of Mary McCrimmon, the prosecuting witness. The case, which had been con tinued a number of times be cause all the principals could not be in court at the same time, grew out of several arrests that Marks, Sanders and Robert Yates, former police chief in Aberdeen, had made after vis iting the McCrimmon home to investigate a complaint broken the latch off the door and nesday. burst in, proclaiming they werejgjjjjj Announcement there to find liquor. |^j. Mrs. Robert Mathews Aldridge collaborated her tes- are the parents of a son, George timony. Jones, according to Mrs. j Edward, born November 20 at McCrimmon, is presently laid up ^ Mansfield, Ohio. They have two with ^ cast on his leg, caused in' little girls. Mrs. Mathews is the an accident since the arrests former Eva Fitzgerald, niece of were made. jv^rs. Edward G. Fitzgerald of Both Mrs. McCrimmon and Pinehurst. Aldridge were convicted in Briefs Aberdeen Recorder’s Court for -Mr. and Mrs. John M. Reeves gambling, but both have denied' leave this weekend for New York they were. Aldridge said money City where Mr. Reeves will re- and Mrs. George B. Doughihan of was there merely to pay off some ceive the 6th annual Textile New York City. ' Mr. and Mrs. James Cole and daughter, Diane, of Washington, D , daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. D. *K. Bullens, Jr., of Oyster Bay, L. she will cover for Golf World the, annual Goodwill Tournament. | “Sandy” Cook, a student at the Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. White I University of North Carolina, are at their Linden Road home for the season. Mr. and Mrs. ^BUly G. McKen zie and their sons, Donald and {Franklin, spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Church in Canton. Guests at Miss May Chapman’s last week were Bill O’Brien, son of former Pinehurst resident Pat O’Brien; Carl Rebalman and his son, Carl Rebalman, Jr., all of Lake Orian, Mich., and William Leer of Detroit, Mich. Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Parfitt were Mr. and his house guest, George Hart of Duke university, spent the holiday with Mrs. Galpin Cook at Garren HUl. “Mack” ‘Hamor of Davidson College and Anne Hamor, a stu dent at the Woman’s College in Greensboro, were the holiday guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Hamor. Faust Bisley of Huntington, L. I., arrived last weekend for a stay of several weeks with his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Wedlock. Certified seed supplies of su perior forage crop varieties are larger this year than ever before, according to agrpnomists in the U. S. Department of Agriculture. The 1957 acreage allotmeftt an nounced for North Carolina Vir ginia type peahuts is 168,813 acres says A. D. Stuart, Exten sion agronomy specialist at North Carolina State College. people for picking cotton. 'The Award of the New York Board cards that officers found, he said, belonged to the children. Marks said he was in the yard, searching for liquor, when San ders struck Jones. He did not see any fight, he testified, although th^ he did see Sanders try to forcibly whiskey was being sold there.. Three sharp differences in tes timony stood out. get Jones out of the house- Sanders admitted he struck Jones “because he was running Beautifully styled— Magnificently Mounted in yellow or white 14K. gold, • CONVENIENT TERMS Honeycutt’s CrecUt Jewelers W. Broad SL, Southern Pines why they were there. She charg ed that a search warrant had never been read to her. She also said that Sanders struck Henry Jones, a visitor in the house at the time, without provocation and was brutal in his attack.'And she denied that there was gambling going on in the house at theUime. The officers—Yates’ was not in the courtroom at the time, his trial having been continued to the first week in January—de nied they broke down the door, insisted they had a search war rant and had indeed read it to her in the prescribed manner, and said that Henry Jones was not brutally beaten. Mrs. McCrimmon, who was pri vately represented by Herbert Seawell, testified that the offi cers had surprised her and nine of her 12 children, together with two visitors, whom she identified as Will Aldridge and Henry Mrs. McCrimmon, said they his mouth the worst I’ve ever knocked down the door without heard” and because he resisted offering any explanation as to arrest. In asking for acquittal of Marks, attorney W. D. Sabiston said to the court: “If you believe that Marks had a warrant, there is no case here. He could go in the house. There is no statute against it.” Seawell countered with the statement that a search warrant was an instrument that was ba sic in one’s freedom and was something that kept law officers from searching when they want ed to. Judge Rowe, in finding both not guilty on the breaking and entering charges, said that San ders probably used more force than was necessary. Sanders ap pealed the conviction to Superior Court and was placed under $150 bond. The search warrant was never introduced as evidence. Melrose RARE According to marketing spe cialists in the U. S. Department of Agriculture, poultry and egg supplies will set new production records. Egg supplies will be two per cent or more above the 1955 high. of Trade, to be presented at luncheon'in his honor at the Wal dorf-Astoria on December 6., Mr. and Mrs. John R. Sibley left Sunday for a visit at their home in Spencer, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Lacey return this weekend from Bev erly HiUs, Calif., where they were guests at the wedding Sat urday of Mr. Lacey’s niece. Miss Charlene Lacey, to Charles Adel Piercey. Mrs. Audrey Allen Hutchings of Warren, Pa., was the guest this week of her aunt, Mrs. Sam uel G. Allen. Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Chap man and B^r. and Mrs. Frederick A. Landis leave tomorrow for Camden, S. C., where Mr. Chap man will participate in the two- day Best Ball of Pair tournament being held at‘the Camden Coun try Club. Mr. and IVIrs. Winthrop Wil liams returned Sunday to their cottage. Cedar Crest, after a visit of several weeks in Palm Beach, Fla- Mr. and Mrs. John von Schle- gell spent the Thanksgiving weekend in Baltimore, Md., where they took their son, Al fred, and Robin Tufts, both stu dents at St. James’ School, to dinner and to a pro football game. Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Sidway at their Linden Road cottage were Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Weinig of Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. ^ Mrs. Robert E. Harlow sails to morrow from New York City aboard the Ocean Monarch for a 10-day stay in Bermuda where C.^ and Miss Helen Ruth Cole and Richard Cole, both of Greensboro, spent Thanksgiving with Mrs. W. Hulon Cole. Mr. and Mrs. Denison K. Bul lens had as their weekend guests at Homewood their son and l^or, ROSE TO R I M.ADD.N. »LAW $‘ BLENDED WHISKEY. 86.8 PROOF. 40x STRAIGHT WHISKIES 7 YEARS OLD, 60X GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. MELROSE DISTILLERS CO.. N. Y. WinAFree.. o LEONARD FREEZER REFRIGERATOR - STOVE DRYER or PRESTO FRY PAN PLUS $1,000.00 In CASH Bonuses Enter The Blue Ribbon Sweepstakes Todayl Sponsored By Smith-Douglas Fertilizer Co. CONTEST ENDS DECEMBER 22nd FOR COMPLETE DETAILS, SEE ABERDEEN SUPPLY CO. Knight and Sycamore Streets Aberdeen, N. C. 2 Pounds $2.50 3 Pounds $3.75 5 Pounds - $6.00 Cut Fruit for fruit cakes, lb. 55c Candied Cherries, lb. - --85c Shelled Pecans, lb. $1.25 We package Fruit Cakes for Gift Shipping HOWARD’S BAKERY SOUTHERN PINES, N, C. Shop Sprott Bros. FURNITURE Co. r Sanford, N. C. For Quality Furniture and Carpet • Heritage-Henredon • Drexel • Continental • Mengel • Serta and Simmons Bedding • Craftique 0 Sprague & Carlton • Victorian • Kroehler • Lees Carpet (and all famous brands) • Chromcraft Dinettes SPROTT BROS. 1485 Moore St. Tel. 3-6261 Sanford. N. C. gjyofOB ’Jy ivmg; SOMETHING for CHRISTMAS For the LADIES and GIRLS —COATS —SUITS —SWEATERS —DRESSES —SKIRTS —BLOUSES -SLACKS -PANTIES —SLIPS -GOWNS -PAJAMAS -HOSE -SHOES —HOUSE SLIPPERS For the MEN and BOYS —SWEATERS .—JACKETS -PANTS —BELTS —HATS -GLOVES -ROBES —SHIRTS —-nES —CAPS —SHOES —SOCKS —PAJAMAS -HOUSE SLIPPERS —In Aberdeen Store Only— SPORT COATS and SUITS For MEN—Sizes 35 to 46 BOYS' Sizes 6 to 20 \ IVIelvim’s "Your Brand Stores" ABERDEEN and SOUTHERN PINES Listen To Rev. Tom.O'Neill over Station WFNC - 5000 watts AM & FM FAYETTEVILLE, N. C. AM FM THE TIME 7:15 P. M. Every Week Day Evening Monday Thru Friday 1390 on the Dial 98.1 on the Dial WENOWHAVE.^ the AU NEWI AU MODERN! Butterick PRINTED PATTERNS COME SEE... A Line of Pottefas that eikn you a wide selediea in ell categories irf Foshion COME SEE... Their fomeos Quick Q Eoqr Patterns with Dp-to-the-Mtaalo Styling THAT'S RIGHT! A PoHern and RArit for Every Need Every Taste Everyone likes “something to wear” or to dress up the home. We have materials in wide variety at pleasing prices. Assortment of ITALIAN FELTS and VELVETEENS DRESS LENGTHS for Holiday dresses CORDUROY—prints and plains WOOLENS and WOOLEN BLENDS SPECIAL GROUP OF ASSORTED MATERIALS at 49c — 69c Mill Outlet Store Across from A&P SOUTHERN PINES
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Nov. 29, 1956, edition 1
12
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