Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Nov. 2, 1961, edition 1 / Page 21
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1961 The pilot—southern Pines, North Carolina CLASSIFIED ADS BLACKWELDER WELL COM PANY: Boring and drilling. In quire at Frank Talbert’s Shell Station between Aberdeen and Southern Pines, ask for Mr. Tal bert. Night phone Sanford spring 775-2421. jl3tf GRAND PIANOS ARE BEST, Get the Best. Get a Grand. Lester, Knabe; Kimball, Fis cher. Cash or time. BELL PI ANO CO., CARTHAGE. ol9,26,n2c FOUR ROOM FURNISHED, HEATED APARTMENT, AVAILABLE NOW. 140 W. VERMONT AVE. ol9c FOR SALE: Completely equipped 1961 Olds Fiesta (station wag on). For information, call Black’s Garage, 0X2-7551. ol9tz FOR RENT: 3-BEDROOM UN- FURNISHED HOUSE IN NI AGARA. CALL 692-3779. ol9tf FOR SALE: Beautiful miniature poodle puppies. Black and Browns. Excellent pedigreed champion lines. Six weeks old. Mrs. W. H. Fitts, Denada Path, Sanford, N. C. ol9,n9inc FOR RENT 2-bedrm turn, house Two 2-bedrm unfurnished houses. Seveijal small apartments New listings in bigger homes for sale. Margie Nanopoulos 565 N. May St. OX 2-3851 FOR RENT: 4-room furnished cottage on North Ridge Street. Dr. L. M. Daniels, 0X2-6382. • ol9tf FOR RENT: Cloia in, furnished three room apartment. 125 E. Vermont Avenue. 0X5-6565. ol9tf FOR RENT: 2-BEDROOM, COM PLETELY FURNISHED HOUSE. PHONE 0X2-8901. ol9tf FOR RENT: Small house nicely furnished. Suitable for couple. Call Mrs. Daniels, 0X5-6541 or inquire 660 North Ridge Street. ol9tfc FOR RENT: Small 2-bedroom house. Close in. Reasonable rent. Call 0X5-5144 after 6 p. m. ol^ft W. O. Moss Sells Woodland Tract To Hunting People A land sale of particular inter est to hunting people is that of a tract sold by W. O. Moss to Mr and Mrs. William Goff of Wayne Pa. The tract is extensive, 54 acres in all, and is part of the former Notre Dame Acadeipy property. It is adjacent to that bought last year by Mr. and Mrs. Douglas. The land is extensively wooded end the stream which fills the Douglas lake also flows through the Goff property. It is the plan of the new landholders also to make a small lake, and work has already been started clearing the land and getting ready to build the dam. The Goffs expect to get the place in order and start build - ing their stable in the near fu ture, with house plans still in the lOffing. Mr. and Mrs. Goff come from a hunting country and have been hunting with the Moore County Hounds here for the past two winters. FOR RENT: Furnished 3-room apartment and bath. Screened porch. Air conditioner. Yard with shade. Quiet. Short walk to business center. Reasonable rent. Garage optional. Phone 0X5-7075. ■ ol9c Braimen Cabinet Shop Reopening Brannen’s Cabinet Shop on the Aberdeen-Pinehurst highway has opened for the season with the return of Lindsay Going, owner and manager, from Kennebunk- port, Maine, where he operates a shop during the summer. Mr. Going’s wife and two chil dren, who attend school in the Sandhills, have been here since August. The Goings have a new home off the highway and a new shop and display room is being built near the home, with com pletion expected within .two weeks. Charles Emery and Robert Knight, who wefe with Mr. Go ing at the shop last season, have Mrs. Page, Mr. Blue are Trustees of Institute At the annual meeting of the board of trustees of the North Carolina Cancer Institute held at the Institute near Lumberton, H. Clifton Blue of Aberdeen was elected as a member of the board of trustees. Mrs. Henry Page, Jr., of Abar- deen has been a member of the board for some time. returned with him. In addition to furniture refin ishing and making antique repro ductions, the shop has a line of boats and this year will also fea ture a display of antique paint ings. In addition, the shop will sell pianos and has old-fashioned player pianos, with a large col lection of music rolls for them. INJURES FINGER Mrs. Robert S. Ewing Monday middle finger of her left hand m a metal fire door at toe Village Printers in Pinehurst. Ihe bone was crushed in the ac cident, but the effervescent Ann wife of the publisher of the Moore County News, was on the job as sisting her husband Tuesday Page TWENTY-ONE € • ON THE TRAIL — Refuge manager Jimmy Goodson follows a bloodhound straining at the leash on a trail through Santeetlah Cooperative Wildlife Management Area. The heavy dog actually pulls his handler along when moving uphill or through dense brush. Wildlife Commission photo by Jim Lee Wildlife Protectors Use Bloodhounds To Enforce Laws, Find Lost Hunters Southern Pines Recorders Court We Have Added To Our Special Surgical Fitting Service arte f < p mm ®[F a mmm m ueiicate as its namesake in appearance, yet utterly determined to give you a glorious figure! Corde de Parie’s leno elastic Butterfly Corselette in “Ban-Lon”® lace works its magic via unique butterfly front panel design assuring a magnificent shape front thigh to up high. And you’ll enjoy perfect comfort. You’ll love the exclusive patented "Give & Take” feature...elastic inserts under the cups adjust perfectly to your every motion. Style 2880. White only. E, C and D Cups, Sizes 34 to''40. $20.00. CULBRETH'S Southern Pines Pharmacy ox 5-5321 A number of traffic cases, most of them involving exceeding the s^eed limit in 35-miles-per-hour zones were heard in Southern Pines Recorder’s Court by Judge W. Harry Fullenwider yesterday when a fairly long docket of cases was handled by the court. An appeal to Superior Court was entered by the defendant who received the stiffest sentence of the day, Raymond Ritter of Manly, who was sentenced to a year on the roads for assault on a female, the sentence to run con currently with another which had been suspended in a former case and which the judge ordered to be executed immediately. Appeal bond was set at $750 which Ritter was unable tp make Wednesday. Paying $10 and costs for speed ing 45 in a 35 zone were: Aplram H. Playforth, Hope Mills; Albert R. Wall, Pinehurst; Aileen W. fane language, $5 and costs; Al bert G. Crissman, Jr., Vass, pub lic drunk, indecent exposure, $10 and costs; Robert McCollum, as sault with deadly weapon, nol pros with leave, prosecuting wit ness taxed with court costs. In last week’s session of the court,, a 25-year-old Route 1, Cameron man was given a sen tence of two years on the roads, suspended for -five years, for three flagrant traffic offenses— speeding over 75 in a 35 zone, careless and reckless driving and failure tp stop at the signal of officers’ red light and siren. He also was confined to the town jail until 6jp. m. on the day of his trial. Conditions of the suspended sentence were: that he not vio late any motor vehicle law or any law involving alcohol, that he Stroman, Southern Pines; John take the state’s driver training E. Smith, Fort Bragg; and Buster D. Jessup, Vass. Paying $15 and costs for speed ing 50 in a 35 zone were Robert L. Alston, Route 2, Vass, and Ed win J. Pickier, Route 3, Raeford. Charles Roundtree and Mrs. Mary Tate Greene each paid $11 fine and costs for speeding 46 in a 35 zone. Charged with 45 miles per hour in a 35 zone also was Gerald 'E. Ruckert of Warren, Mich., but he was not fined and was taxed with the court costs. Violation of restricted driver’s license, as well as speeding 46 in a 35 zone was charged against Maude D. Frye of Pinehurst. The judgment: $25 and costs. For speeding 49 in a 35 zone, Ralph E. Steele of Route 1, Jackson Springs, paid $14 and 'the costs.. Other cases yesterday: L. C. Hill, Jr., public, drunk, $5 and costs, carrying concealed weapon, not guilt’ ; James Har old Brown, Route 2, Carthage, public drunk, possession of seal- broken alcoholic beverage $5 and costs; J. W. Black, Eastwood, pos session ' of alcoholic beverage with seal broken, $5 and costs; Ernest Turbeville, Red Springs, drunken driving, $100 and costs, stay in town jail until 6 p. m., surrender driver’s license for re vocation, appeal to Superior Court entered, bond set at $100, also charged with possession of pyrotechnics, not guilty. Frederic W. Reihold, Jr., speed ing 70 in 60 zone, plea of guilty to exceeding the speed limit ac cepted, pay the costs; Will Adams, Olivia, disregarding stop light, $5 and costs; William Jas per Black, Route 1, West End, public nuisance and public drunk (separate cases consolidated for trial) $5 and costs; Renee Dell Guffey, failure to report for med ical examination, nol pros with leave, pay the court costs, same defendant, breaking and entering, nol pros with leave, prosecuting withness taxed with court costs; Rush McLaughlin, assault on fe male, nol pros with leave, prose cuting witness taxed with court costs. Ellis Garner, Robbins, public drunk, possession of alcoholic beverage with seal broken, one month in prison, suspended for six months on payment of the costs, not to be found in an es tablishment selling alcoholic bev erages, except grocery stores, for six months, whiskey to be confis cated and destroyed; James D course within six months and re port back to the court; and that he pay a $100 fine and court costs. The sentence was in line with Judge Fullenwider’s custom of meting out stiff sentences in fla grant , violations of traffic laws Bloodhounds on North Car olina’s wildlife refuges have been used for such varied tasks as ^ tracking down escaped convicts | and finding lost hikers, according i to an article appearing in the' November issue of “Wildlife in! North Carolina.” John Oberheu, a wildlife refuge supervisor for the N. C. Wildlife Resources Commission, reveals the keen nosed hound’s importance in wildlife law enforcement in the , commission’s monthly magazine.! Oberheu, who lives in Asheville, relates the story of Susie, a blood hound who tredled a suspected angler back to where he had hid den 53 trout in a ditch. Daily limit is 10, and the fisherman was convicted of- exceeding the creel limit because of Susie’s canine detective ability. The refuge supervisor writes that the bloodhound is the only dog whose testimony is accepted in court. Bloodhounds originated in England, he says, but were de veloped to greatest usefulness in the United States. The commission’s bloodhounds are used for more than law en forcement. An elderly hiker, lost from his car for more than half a day, was found at midnight more than nine miles from his starting point. A car window had been broken to give the dog a good scent, after worried rela- including jail sentences, if only, scent, \ after womed rela- for a few hours, j fives contacted a neaitby protec tor a few hours. Other cases heard last week: Dwight Terry, assault on fe male, nol pros with leave, prose cuting witness taxed ij^ith costs; Hurshell Robson, disregarding stop sign, $5 and costs; Virgil R. Hardy, Aberdeen, public drunk, possession of pyrotechnics, $25 and costs, confined to jail until 6 p. m. on day of trial; Patricia B. Rose, Greenville, S. C., pos session of seal-broken whiskey, $10 and costs; Peggy L. Johnson, Route 1, Camerbn, running red light, $5 and costs; Faye M. Reid, running red light, pay costs, Gary W. Hayes, Fort Bragg, drunken driving, $100 fine and costs,. surrender driver’s license for revocation confine self to bar racks in off-time for 30 days; James W. Cole, Cameron, careless and reckless driving, nol pros with leave,' prosecuting witness taxed with costs; Lee D. Monroe, West End, careless and reckless driving, $25 and costs, confined to jail until 6 p. m. on day of trial; .Robert B.'Baldwin, Route 1, West End, careless and reckless driv ing, $25 and costs, confined to jail until 6 p. m. on day of trial; Charlie J, Davis, Route 1, Cam eron, improper equipment, im proper turn signal, accident, . $10 and costs. tor. On other occasions Wildlife I Commission personnel and their dogs have assisted in capturing bank robbers and other criminals. Some of the dogs are owned joint ly by the Wildlife Commission and local law enforcement agen cies. Oberheu says that the blood hounds are harmless and friendly unless their quarry attempts to ^flee, hut then they’ll run down and attack a person if necessary to hold him. VASS NEWS Women Conduct Service Women of the Presbyterian Church conducted the 'Sunday morning worship service in the absence of the pastor, th.i Rev, A, C. Trivette. Mrs. Paul Deane Cameron was leader and Mrs. Coy Blue, Sr., brought a message on stewardship. Others takihg part were. Mrs. Ben H. Wood, who gave the Scriptur.s reading, and Mrs. P. A. Wilson and Mrs. H. D. Jackson who offered pray ers. Sizes 7-14 Sizes 3-6X * The most exciting Christmas dresses under the tree' are Miss B’s! Party-pretty details: full skirts that whirl as she twirls, tiniest-ever collars, bright dashes of embroidery, dainty applique. Holiday- minded cottons that call for traditional block patent party pumps, white anklets . . . and your favorite bright-eyed little girl to adore it all! a. Alice in Wonderland jumper. White blouse, touches of embroidery, applique. b. Solloped detail, outlined with fine lace, velveteen ribbon. ^ , ... -s.sC.. BELK’S for better selections! BELK’S for certified better value's! FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE BELK’S WILL REMAIN OPEN ALL DAY ON WEDNESDAY. BelfcHensdale F FIRST • • • ond Aberdeen’s Leading Department Store School Cafeteria Menus For Week November 6-10 Moixday—wiener with bun, French fries, cole slaw, straw berry jello with whip topping, butter, milk Tuesday—ham and navy beans, chilled canned tomatoes, buttered beets, crisp carrot sticks, corn bread, butter, apple crisp, milk. Wednesday — toasted cheese sandwich, beef vegetable soup, crackers, butter, chocolate cake, white frosting, milk. Thursday—oven fried cliicken, rice and gravy, tossed salad, hot biscuit, butter, orange half, milk. Friday—Salmon Salad, potato chips. Clarendon Gardens Linden Road, Pinehurst, N. C. ScUcd Rhododfendrons Azaleas 350 varieties 200 varieties — -... _. green peas, white bread, Michael, Carthage, vile and pro-butter, cherry cobbler, milk.- We grow over 200,000 plants a year 100 varieties Camellias 225 varieties Hollies . Many other evergreens You will find in our “Horticulture Center” many rard and unusual plants Stop by and visit our Sales area & Gardens
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 2, 1961, edition 1
21
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