Subscription Rates The stingiest man we've heard about is the one who gave his little girl a nickel not to eat any supper, stole it from her while she was sleeping, and then refused her any breakfast for losing it. One Year Six Months $3.00 $1.75 $4.00 Outside county area Single Copies 7 Each. ROCKINGHAM, N. C, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 10, 1959 ISAAC S. LONDON, Editor VOL. 42 No. 44 8 Pages This Issue FIFTY JUnORS FOn OCTOBER 5TH Criminal Term With Also, A Civil Term DOUG HAMER'S GRAND JURY ALSO TO BE ON HAND There, are two terms of Super ior CoUrt for Richmond county for October a criminial term October 5th, and a civil term for October 12th. Judge Donald Phillips will preside at both terms. The Commissioners on ' Sept. 8th drew the two juries 50 to report for October 5th, and 40 for October 12th. The Six Months Grand Jury, selected July 20th, with Doug Hamer as Foreman, will of course be on hand October 5th. There is a very heavy crim inal docket, among the cases to be tried being that against a colored woman of Hamlet charged with setting her hus band's bed on fire and burning him up. Here are the two juries: October 5th Criminal Term Charles E. Hill, R'ham Nellie Howell, E. R'ham Lillie Mae Crump, R'ham Katherine Ramey, R'ham Ella Hayne, rt 2, Hamlet Ethel, Eason, rt 2, R'ha m Henry Hinson, rt 4, R'ham James W. Parsons, Norman Frazier Smith, rt 3, R'ham Ernest F. Saunders, E. R'ham James Spencer, rt 1, Marston Archie Thompson, Jr., EUerbe Marshal C. Webb, rt 2, R'ham Cora Mae Reddick, rt 4, R'ham Mrs. H. M. Covington, rt 2, R'ham Henry C. Reynolds, Roberdel Pate Parsons, Ellerbe Robert L. Dulin, R'ham W. W. Dutton, Cordova Edie L. Jenkins, R'ham Herman Smith, rt 1, Hamlet Earl W. King, rt 4, R'ham W. W. Swaim, Hamlet D. E. Reynolds, Ellerbe J. H. Spivey, Roberdel Ethelrine Cash, rt 4, R'ham S. I. Hopkins, R'ham Brooksie Hinson, rt 23. Spgs. Oar SmlthrE'. Rliam .-.' . Wm.B. Lassiter, Cordova. ' l Josie Player, E. R'ham v James R, Cash well, E. R'ham Melvin D. Griggs, R'ham Paul Brown, Sr., Hamlet Virginia H. Putman, Hamlet F. A. Smith, Hamlet Wilburn Lassiter, R'ham T. D. Swails, R'ham J. W. McKenzie, Jr., R'ham Vance Benoist, R'ham Elizabeth McCall, Hamlet Fred H. Avett, Hamlet Ethel Mae Saunders, rt 1, Hamlet A. E. Crump, rt 3, Mt. Gilead W. L. Gibson, Jr., rt 3, R'ham Ernest McLean, Ellerbe Oscar Stogner, E. R'ham Talmadge L. Gerald", rt 4, R'ham Samuel Young, E. R'ham Fred Allen, R. 1, Hamlet. OCTOBER 12 CIVIL TERM: George H. Covington, Rt. 3 W. G. Gibson, R. 2, Rham H. N. Ferguson, R. 1, Rham James L. Godfrey, R. 1, Ellerbe Wm. H. Brown, Rham F. B. Rogers, R. 1, Rham Jack D. Hearne, Rham Jennie R. Rhodes, Hamlet R. H. Thompson, Rham W. Clarence Parsons, Ellerbe Perry Pratt Gallimore, Candor Clyde Crepps, E. Rham Paul C. Covington, Rham Arthur M. Cobb, Jr., E. Rham Ethel Stogner, E. Rham James W. Black, Rham Paul V. Scholl, Sr., Rham A. B. Easterling, Hamlet Claude F. Smith, Jr., Marston H. O. Carriker, R. 2, Rham W. C. Myers, Hoffman A. W. Farris, R. 2, Rham C. H. Pope, Rham John J. Spivey, Rham S. W. Herndon, Rham James E. Bryant, R. 4 Rham Harry B. Meacham, R. 1, Rham James L. Gainey, E. Rham J. C. Grant, E. Rham Clyde Herrin, E. Rham W. L. Park, Rham Jim Williams, E. Rham Myers Waddell, R. 1, Rham Ben Terry, Jr., R. 2, Rham Robert Coble, Jr., Cordova Lee Broady, Rham C. F. Smith, Marston Harold L. Ivey, Rham Lovina Murphy, R. 1, Hamlet John William Porter, Rham MRS. P. T. SEALS DIED SEPT. 8, 1959 Mrs. P. T. Seals, 75, died Septr 8, 1959, in Marks Creek town ship. The funeral was held September 10th from the home near Gibson. She was the for mer Anne Prevatte, and is sur vived by her husband, a daugh ter Mrs. R. L. Morrison of Ham let, and a son Clarence Seals of Hamlet rf d 1. Judge Don Phillips. Set For Oct. 12th. Contract 4-Lane 74 In January The Highway Commission an nounces that the contract for making 74 between Rockingham and Hamlet (6 miles) a four lane road, will be let in Jan urary. A more detailjed story of this is on an insider page. By-passing Ashebojro with No. 220 will be let in fall of 1960. PEE DEE HOME COMING Pee Dee Methodist Church had an unusually large .Home Com ing Sept. 6th. Mrs. Jj. S. Swink, 78. was the oldest member pre sent, and the largest family Dresent went to the Claude Maske family. MT. AIRY VOTES DRY Out of 2756 registered in the town of Mt. Airy, 2041 went to the noils Sept. 5, 1959, and ex pressed themselves on the question of liquor stores. 876 voted for legal sale pf whiskey and 1165 voted against estab lishing ABC stores. B. F. MARKS TILL DAILY ON TH1 JOB September 8th wa the 78th birthday of Frank Marks and he celebrated it by being on his job in Ledbetter mill as usual. He has been there fpr over 50 years. B. F. was born on a Thursday, Sept. 8, 1881. He was married June 3, 191 to Mary Abigail (Mamie) McKay, and two they have two daughters. sons and COE WAS RE-CAPTURED John Samuel Coe, jof Hamlet, who escaped ,;f rom the prison camp at Carthage on! Aug. 27th, was re-captured August 31st at the home of ; his sister in Ham let, and reurned to J the camp at Carthage. This was a second escape, and for that ; previous aooinonju four monts or the , roudsVThe Carthage court this week Way give him still: more time for this second escape. DR. HAYWOOD TO ATLANTA Captain ; T. Ashley Haywood Jr. returned to his j home in Rockingham the latter part of August after two years at Eiel son Air Base In Alaska, in the dental department of the post. Dr. Haywood is now) associated with Dr. Raeford Parpe in At lanta in the practice jof his pro fession, for which he is so well trained. He left herejSeptember 6th. Ashley got his BS degree at Davidson in 1953, anjd his Doc tor of Dental Surgery at Emory University June 7, 1957. He in 1957 passed the Stte Dental Boards in North and South Carolina and Georgia. He re ported August 21, 1957, to Ft. Sam Houston for his ' JSAF duty, and got to Alaska in September 1957. Marshall Haywood, the other smart son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ashley Haywood, pass ed the State Bar August 5, 1959. and has joined the llegal staff of Judge Edwin Stanley at Greensboro, of this Middle Fed eral District. MASONS SEPT. 12TH 'inere win oe am emergent communication of Rockingham Lodge 495, A. F. & A. M. for the purpose of conferring the Master Mason's degree this Saturday night, Sept. 12th, at 7:30. Re freshments will be Served fol lowing the degree work. The membership and all visiting Master Masons are most wel come. Come and give these two initiates a cordial reception- they are Horace Steadman Jr. and John Blalock. FRANKLIN WILSON TO DUTY AT FT. DEVENS Franklin W. Wilson, of Cor dova, on June 19th J 1959, en listed in the Army, Security Agency, through Sgt. Milan Glumac, recruiting jofficer at Rockingham. He finished his boot training and was home for 13 days. He leaves Friday, Sept. 11th by plane for his new as signment at Fort Devens in Massachusetts. 4-LANE MARSH VILLE The Highway Commission has approved plans for making 74 a four-lane road from Monroe eastward to Marshville. It is already 4-lane Charlotte to Monroe. The work will iif the summer of 1960. start EVEN ATEAGHER CAN SPEED MAN TO ROADS FOR TWELVE MONTHS FOR DRIVING AFTER LICENSE PERM ANENTLY REVOKED The September 8, 1959, ses sion of County Couit was rather brief over by noon. Presiding was Judge Walter Lampley, and prosecuting was Solicitor John Pittman. Golden Vester McLean, color ed aged 36, was arrested by Patrolman Mitchel Arey on Aug. 23rd, in Mineral Springs township, and he charged with driving drunk.. He posted $150 cash bond, and forfeited it. He gave his address as Niagara Falls and Ellerbe. Jackie L. Sherman, 18, soldier of Ft. Bragg, was charged with operating his car in a reckless manner in Rockingham on Aug. 31st. Judge Lampley gave him 30 days suspended if he pays the costs. He appealed and Dewey Coleman signed his $100 bond to appear in Superior Court at Rockingham on October 5th. Ollie Davis McBride, colored aged 38, of Ellerbe, arrested by Patrolman Mitchel Arey on Sept. 5th for driving drunk. For this he gets four months on the roads. For driving 65 mph he gets 30 days additional. Com mitted to prison camp Sept. 8th. Malcolm Floyd Currie, 52, of Cordova, for driving a car Sept. 7th after his license had been permanently revoked, gets 12 months on the roads, and went to camp September 8th. Fred Sellars, 23, was tried July 14th for driving -while intoxica ted, and he was fined $100 and court costs. He has now paid in full the total of $134.06. James Bullard, 31, 'was ; cited by Patrolman Mitchel Arey for an affray on. Sept. 6th. He pays (Continued on Page five) FINANCIAL WORRIES IN TOWN OF TROY Ralph White,- mayor of Troyi has aJiriduncedtha James H. "Keaxns, 34; vown! clef k f orthe past eight years, had resigned as Of Sept. 3, 1959. Two water de partment employees have been dismissed. One was Wayne My rick, 43, who had been with the department for 13 years, and Oliver O. Gaddy, colored, who had worked with the water department for 18 years. Mayor White stated that an auditor, J. B. Watson of Wades boro, has been working on the books for the past six weeks. The Mayor made n6 comment as to why Kearns resigned, nor why the other two men had been dismissed. ANOTHER TOWN TROUBLE Embezzlement charges of $2964 from the town of St. Paul's in Robeson county have been filed against the town clerk John McCormick and his assistant, Mrs. Elsie Inman. The money has been repaid. Both resigned but they will face trial in Superior Court anyway.. THE LUMBERTON TRIAL In Superior Court at Lumber ton, J. P. Coleman, Jr., is this week being tried on a charge of embezzling $7290 from the Lum berton city schools. He was the former bookkeeper and school treasurer. I DR. HAM THE SPEAKER Dr. Clem Ham was the speak er Sept. 3rd night at the Civi- tan supper. He and his family moved August 25th from Mon roe to Laurinburg where they will live. He is the new Health officer for Scotland and Rich mond counties, dividing his time equally between the two counties. His salary is $13,200. Bloodbank Here Monday, Sept. 14 The Red Cross Bloodmo bile will be in Rockingham next Monday, Sept. 14, at the community building from 11 A. M. until 5 P. M. with the American Legion as sponsor, it was announced today by chairman Theo Webb. In an urgent appeal for ' cooperation, Webb said: "We enlist the help of every citi den around Rockingham. The blood is badly needed as we are using blood faster in the hospitals than we are collecting." The Bloodmobile has been sponsored for more than a year by the American Le gion, and is now seeking, a new sponsor, in fairness to the Legion. k ' if ? iv I KSmmJ ) H ( -fl Ben Wall, for Years the Rockingham Team's Water Boy, on Sept. 4th, 1959, Saw Rockets Beat Bennettsville 46-7 Ben Wall, for many years a familiar figure with the Rock ingham Rockets' football and baseball teams, was back again for a visit Friday night. Ben has been ill for some time and unable to perform his duty as helper with the team. Since June 6, 1957, he has been a patient in the excellent Chester Fisher Rest Home in Hamlet, following a severe stroke of May 26, . 1957. Faithful Ben had been Rockingham high school's "water-boy" j and friend of the players, ever since 1915. Some friends brought him from Hamlet to Rock ingham Sept. 4, 1959, for the Bennettsville game and of course Coach Eutsler had a seat for him on the "Bench." Naturally Ol' Ben was pleased that his boys won by a lop-sided 46-7. ZionvHome Coming -; Js This Sunday . -. T. VlilIOUANDN All Home' Comings are im portant and big to each church, but one of the largest and old est Home Comings is that at Zion Church, 3 miles west of Rockingham. This annual event will be this Sunday, Sept. 13th, it winding up the week's revival by Rev. Holland Hale. Service at 11, dinner on the grounds, and then at 2 the get-together and songfest. Many of the old-time singers will be on hand, among them Leo Warburton, Fairley Long, John Cole and some modern day singers such as the Pitt man twins, Perry Covington, Tommy Covington etc. The bell weather of all the singers for years was T. G. Thomas who on December 9th will be 89. In one of the hymns Sunday afternoon, John Cole will sing the verses "Softly and Tenderly" and the group come in with the refrain. "BUNKIE" BACK TO SCHOOL "Bunkie" Symmes leaves by bus Sept. 14th for Arden in the mountains, where he starts the 11th grade in Christ School. He is 16, and son of Mrs. Mary Blanche Palmer Symmes of East Washington Street, Extension. RESUMES SUNDAY SCHOOL The Sunday School of the Episcopal Church resumes its work this Sunday at 9:45, after the usual recess for the hot months. Services Sunday at 11 by Rev. Mr. Remcke from State College. POLICE REPORT FOR AUGUST Rockingham police in August handled five cases of shooting fire-crackers. There were 22 ar rests for drunk, as against 15 for August of 1958. No shoplift ing cases in August but in 1958 August had 3 such cases. 562 parking tickets issued in Aug ust. SILER CITY'S CHRISTMAS PARADE PLANS So far, Rockingham's Christ mas parade plans have not been announced. But other towns are busy on their pre Christmas planning. Siler City is to have their parade Nov. 30. Siler City stores will close Christmas Day . and the next day (Saturday) and New Year's Day. Their stores will remain open on Friday nights from Dec. 4 through Dec. 18, until nine o'clock; and open to 9 on Dec. 21, 22, 23. Regular closing time Christmas . Eve. Rockets Play At FayettevilleErday jBKATBENNEXTSVLLLE 46-3, Rohanen. in R'ham Park Friday Night at 7:30 The Rockets are going out of its league this Friday night by journeying to Fayette ville with that city's high class team. The game is at 8. Fayetteville beat Dunn Sent. 4th by 18-0, and Rockingham won over Bennetts ville that night by 46-7. On Sept. 5. 195, the Rockets won over Bennettsville by 74-6 Many fans believe this 1959 edition of the Rockets is even stronger than the 1958 Eastern champs. Certainly it is a strong er line. While Rockingham is playing at Fayetteville Sept. 11th, Bennettsville is playing at Ham let at 8, Greenwood is playing at Ellerbe at 8, and St. Pauls plays Rohanen in Rockingham park at, 7:30 Friday night. The Ellerbe game will be played Friday night under the lights their first game in a lighted park of which they have every right to be extremely proud. In the Sept. 4th game at Rockingham which our Rockets won by .46-7 over Bennettsville, the total attendance was 1,862. Of this number, '163 were on passes, band and others. The total paid was 890 students, and 809 adults, a total paid of 1699. This Thursday afternoon the Rockingham Juniors played Lumberton Juniors in Rock ingham park at 4. TEACHES 11TH ENGLISH Spending from Friday night until Monday morning here at her home at No. 39 Jefferson apartments was Mrs. I. S. Lon don. She teaches all 11th grade English classes in the Hender son city high school. The school opened September 2nd but gave a holiday for Labor Day. NEILLS TO BIG SPRING The First Methodist Church of Big Spring, in western Texas, has extended a call to George D. Neill Jr. to be an assistant to their Pastor. George and wife and two little daughters on September 5th moved from Abi lene to the Big Spring parson age, and has entered upon his new duties. Friends of George Sr. and Lois, and of course young George, are much interested in his decision to enter into the active Methodist work now at Big Spring. This is a city now of 25,000 with an Air Base close by. r...,. H017ELL SAYS HODGES IS NAIUE Hamlet Man Sets Situation Straight PACKED COURTHOUSE AT GREENSBORO 100 FOR ARKANSAS CONGRESSMAN Congressman Dale Alford made a speech September 8th in Greensboro to the Guilford county chapter of the N. C. Defenders of States Rights. The courthouse was completely fill ed with a 100 friendly audien ce. Rev. James Dees, able rector of the Episcopal Church at Statesville, introduced the Con gressman. . Congressman Alford is the man who by means of write-in votes defeated Congressman Brooks Hays in the Little Rock election in November 1958. Hays had been in Congress 16 years Alford ran on an out-and-out Segregation platform. The defeat of the brilliant and able Baptist leader (Brooks Hays) last November was a re markable evidence of the feel ings of the people of the Little Rock district. And they did it by WRITING IN the name of Dale Alford because he, stood for complete Segregation of the races in the schools. And what (Continued on Page five) William M. Lovin Died Sept, 9, 1959 Oldest Elder Of Church. Mr. William M. Lovin, aged 68, died at his home on Route 1, Ellerbe, Wednesday evening at 5:30, September 9, 1959, after several months of declining health. Funeral services will be con ducted Friday afternoon at 3 :00 P. M. from the McLean Presby terian Church, with Rev. ,A. T. Taylor officiating, burial will follow- ii the Church Cemetery.,, Mr Lovin. was born in Rich.- mond County November:. 3,: 1890, son of the late Frank and Mollie Pearson Lovin. He was a mem ber and oldest Elder of, the Mc Lean Presbyterian Church. Surviving are his wife, the former - Florence . McLean; one daughter, Mrs. Norman Rhyne of Ellerbe; three sons, Leonard, Vernon and Ralph Lovin, all of Ellerbe; one brother, Lee Lovin of Ellerbe; one sister Mrs. Mary Peele of Gibson; and fourteen grandchildren. Active pall-bearers will be as follows: Larry Lovin, Ronald Lovin, Vernon Lovin, Jr., these being grandsons, and Odell Raines, Lee Blakely, and Lynn McCaskill. Officers of the Church will serve as Honorary pall-bearers. Mr. Lovin will be taken to his home .Thursday afternoon from the Carter-Sedberry Funeral Home and to the Church an hour before the services. JOHN TO CULLOWHEE Jack and "Scottie" Cockman on September 6th carried John Jr. to Cullowhee to be admitted as a Freshman in Western Caro lina. John will be 18 Sept. 27th. They spent Saturday night at the Echo Inn in Hendersonville, operated by Mr. and Mrs. Dick Royall, formerly of Rockingham. Dick has twin daughters, one of them recently married, and a son. MRS. WAY IS CHAIRMAN Mrs. James Rhine of Dela ware, the new President of the National group of some 6000 VFW auxiliaries, last week ap pointed Mrs. George Way of Hamlet, as National Publicity Director for the VFW Auxiliaries. She had done an outstanding job as chief of staff of the N. C organization. The 1959 Census Coy S. Lewis Jr. of Robbins is the new field assistant for the 1959 agricultural census. He has 21 counties. He will di rect a force of 18 crew leaders and 289 census takers. He will be responsible for recruiting these crew leaders who start to, work Oct. 26th. The crew lead ers will in turn recruit the cen sus takers who start Nov. 18th. The 1959 Census of Agricul ture will collect information on the number and size of farms, acreage and harvest of crops, livestock production and in ventories, selected farm facili ties, selected farm expenditures. farm values, and mortgage debt. Khrushchev Coming PRESIDENT ON TV TONITE The Russian leader, Nikita Khrushchev will reach the U. S. Sept. 15th, 1959, on his tour. He was born April 17, 1894, is 5.5 tall, weighs 220. Bringing his family son and daughter by first wife, and his second wife. He is coming not to bring a message of Peace : but to make propaganda. He doesn't want to see the real America just to be seen and heard. President Eisenhower who looms bigger amL bigger in world's esteem as one of our greatest Americans, will : be on TV this Thursday night for 15 minutes starting at 7:30 EST. He will discuss his recent visit to Europe (Aug. 26-Sept. 7), and the approaching visit of the Russian premier. $34,400,000 Election A state-wide election on a $34,400,000 bond . issue will be held October 27th with voting from 6:30 a. m. to 6:30 p. m. It is " not a new registration, but the Registrars will be at each polling place Oct. 3, 10, and 17 from 9 a. m. to sunset to reg ister all who are eligible and whose names may not now be on the books. Of the big bond issue, $18,891, 000 will be used for capital im provements in the colleges, and $12,053,000 for new buildings for the mental institutions. $250,000 is for historical sites etc. and of this amount, a nice slice is ear-marked for the In dian Mound 10-acre project two miles north of the Richmond county line, in -Montgomery county. There are nine issues on the long ballot. You can vote for ALL or just any one of the nine that you may think wise. No Picture An Asheville newsman check ing out a fire alarm which sent trucks screaming to ' the same section - where he lives-, called his wife. - : - "Any - fexcitemtnt Out there?" w: 'J7U say there is " was the er cited reply. Trout daughter just pulled the -false alarm. 'And the little six-year-old Deborah is still wondering why the little red box didn't take her picture like her older play mate said it would. HARRY WEST GOES , TO FT. JACKSON Harry A. West, Jr., on Sept ember 9th enlisted in the regular Army, through Sgt. Milan Glu mac here. He left Wednesday by bus for Ft. Jackson for his boot training; and then will be assigned to the Army's Security Agency. Harry was born Sep. 25, 1939, a star on Rockingham's ath letic teams, and more recently was a student at the University. He is son of Harry and Virginia Wentz West. Federal Court Federal Court for the five counties of the Rockingham di vision of the Middle District, opens at Rockingham at 10 a. m. Sept. 14th. Judge Edwin Stanley presides. This paper on Sept. 3rd printed the list of for ty jurors summoned from the five counties of Richmond, Scotland, Hoke, Moore and Montgomery. But seldom does a jury have to pass on a criminal case in Federal Court. Very few defen dants fight their case. Federal officers generally have air-tight cases, and the defendants may tninK he will get off lighter by submitting and appealing to the mercy of the Judge. Marriage Licenses Sept. 4 Manley Harris Hayes 22 of Raleigh, Miss Blanche Carol Short 21 of Hamlet. Sept. A, James Clayton Benoist 21, Miss Christine Edwards 20. Sept. 8 Rufus Pinkney Glide well 23 of Ellerbe, Miss Nancy Cornelia Moore 21 of Cordova. Max Weill Stanley Faulk Mrs. L. A. Bird Mrs. P. T. Seals The Dunn infant William M. Lovin George H. Stogner Sgt. C D. Winbourne William Clark Querey James Benson Collins Mrs. Tom (Kath) Cooper DEATHS MYSTERY BEAT!! IN PITTSDUD6 QUEREY WENT TO MOTHER'S FUNERAL NEAR PITTSBURGH AND WAS KILLED RETURNING Mystery Surrounds Death. Two Have Been Arrested. Funeral Held Here Tuesday.' The death in the early hours of September 5th of William Clark Querey, 50, of Rocking ham, is surrounded in mystery. But the Pittsburg police are fol lowing several hot clues and the story may "DreaK" witn per haps some startling results momentarily. Mr. Querey, who has been with the State Employment office in Rockingham since April 1954 and his wife and son here since August 1957 was called to New Brighton, 20 miles from Pitts burg, Tuesday night, Sept. 1st, a cousin having phoned him that his mother, Nora McKenzie Querey, 72, had died at 9:15. Mr. and Mrs. Querey, and their son, aged 12, had driven to New Brighton about two weeks ago to visit his mother who had suf fered a fall, broken her hip and suffered a cerebral hemorrhage. She had regained consciousness and was so much improved that the family returned tp Rocking ham August 29th. And then scarcely three days later word came of her death. Mr. Querey went to Charlotte Sept. 2nd and caught a plane for New Brighton. The funeral was held there Friday afternoon, Sept. 4th. While away, Mr. Querey phoned his wife here three times, the last time on Sept. 4th stating that he was getting a plane early Sept. 5th bound for Charlotte. From that moment, the intervening time is shrouded in mystery. The night of Sept. 4th he got a room in the Motel at the air port in order to be ready to catch the plane early next morning for home. When he failed to answer his phone next morning, a maid investigated and. found him; dead. It -was at irom. natural causes, dui iuruier checking showed he died of an inter-cranial hemorrhage, with . " ' ' " A . 1 1 . contusions on tne tempie. The Pittsburg detective force have been on the cape constantly since finding him murdered Sept. 5th. Latest reports are that Mr. Querey was driven to the airport Motel by a man named John L. Hart, 26, another man, and z woman named Pat ricia Kister. Hart is a driver tor the Yellow Cab company v but the trip was made in his personal car. Both Hart ana the Kister woman were ar rested Sept. 9th by Pitts burg police, and are being held without bond. It is known that Mr. Querey withdrew several hundred dol lars from the New Brighton bank either Sept. 3rd or 4th but he had only $32 on his per son when found. It is reported that the phone call received the night of Sept. i "t of his mother's death came fro'n a cousin and not from his nie. In fact, there seems to be more than one angle to this case but it is tragic that such a fine gentleman as William Querey should have been mur dered. THE FUNERAL HERE The casket was shipped to Rockingham night of Sept. 7th, and the funeral held at 11 Sept. 8th morning from the Marks Funeral Home chapel. Conduct ing the service were Rev. James Lloyd of the Park Avenue Pres byterian Church, of which he was a, member, assisted by Rev. Mr. Hanks pastor of the Pres byterian Church of Rowland. A quartette of Rowland friends sang two hymns, with Mrs. Theo Smith at the piano. Friends from the Employment office were the pall -bearers, and the Office was closed for the service. After the funeral in the chapel, the funeral party drove to Rowland for burial in the town of Mrs. Querey's birth. She was the former Ann Adams, an RN who was on duty in Memorial hospital here for a year, but in recent months has been with the Mc Cain Sanatorium. Mr. Querey had been a mem ber of the Rockingham Civitan club, and a very genial and hon orable gentleman. It is tragic that such a man, in the prime of life, should be murdered all apparently for the sake of rob bery. He is survived by his wife and son Billy, aged 12 he a mem ber of the 8th grade of Rock ingham Junior High.