Friday, February 1, 1935. THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Page Three ®he Ark l^outhrrn N. (E, Mrs. MilHcent A. Hayes, Principal A. COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL FOR BOYS AND GIRLS Kindergarten througii the 8th year MUSIC--ART—LANGUAGES Tutoring Arranged for Older Groups Limited Accommodations for Boarders Sixteen State Prison Sentences Passed Out in Superior Court Would Bond Attorneys Who Collect Taxes The Week in Vass THE MCME SCHOOL Kindergarten First and Second Grades Apply to MISS LAURA M. JENKS Phone 7973 Moderate Kates Will be in his office over the Post Office, Sanford, N. C., every Wednesday, fi)om 10:00 a. m. to 8:00 p. m. Don’t fail to se« him if your eyes are wtak. DRS. NEAL & GRIFFITH Veterinarians Office at Race Track, PInehurst. Also at Swinnerton Stab'ps, Southern Pines, daily E. V. PERKINSON General Contractor Soathem Phtes, N. C. Tel. 5033 A. L.. ADAIVIS PAINTER — DECORATO* PAPER HANGER WALL PAPERS * Phone 6922 J. N. POWELL, INC. Undertaking- Embalming Ambulance Service East Broad St., Southern Pinen NOTICE For Your Painting Drop TOM PONDYSH A Card. Estimates Given Gladly. COAL — COKE ANTHRACITE POCAHONTAS W. VA. Sr»LINT KENTUCKY RED ASH STOKER NUT COKE Prompt and Courleous Delivery C . G. FARRELL PHON'E 58 Aberdeen, N. C. DIAL SS41 For Quality Cleaning MONTESANTI Burglary, Car Thefts and As sault Cases Feature Docket Before Judge Alley In last week’s term of Superior Court for the trial of criminal cases which closed on Thursday afternoon, sixteen State Prison sentences and five county jail sentences were hand ed out by Judge Felix Alley. Four prisoners have been sent to the pris on in Raleigh, twelve to the prison camp located in Moore, and five to jail to work on the county roads. Breaking and entering, larceny and receiving cases led the docket with assault with deadly weapon cases coming second. George Hill, colored boy who did an extensive breaking and entering business in Southern Pines during the summer and early fall, gathering to gether a nice collection of jewelry, blankets and other articles, was triad in five cases. In two of the cases he drew a total of from six to ten years in State’s Prison to work under the supervision of the State Highway and Public WJorks Commission, and In the other cases, judgment was sus pended upon condition of good behav ior. Charlie Thomas and John Williams, defendants along with Hill in one of the cases, were given from 18 month3 to two years in prison, and it was specified that all are to wear felon stripes. Clarence Willis, another col. ored man who is thought to have been associated with Hill, drew from two to three years in prison for breaking and entering, larceny and receiving, and he, too, is to wear stripes. Stole Biddle Car Carl Story, white man who stole an automobile owned by L. L. Biddle, II, from its parking place in Pinehurst, turned it over near the Moore Coun ty Hospital and was captured in rec ord time, was given a twelve months’ prison sentence with stripes speci fied as his garb. Gardner Rose, colored, who was found guilty of the larceny of Mr. Butner’s car at Pinebluff, was sent to the county roads for nine months. George McKinnon, colored, who broke the breaking record when he broke into the County Home, had his twelve months’ jail sentence suspend ed upon payment of the costs. Rowland Hayes, colored, who en tered Len Field’s house near Carth age and stole some articles, was giv en a State Prison sentence of from two to three years on the breaking and entering count and a suspended sentence of from three to five years on the larceny and receiving count. Willie Arnold, colored boy of Vass, was sentenced tf serve from eigh teen months to two years in prison for breaking and entering, and for larceny was given two years in jail to work on the roads, this sentence suspended for five years. Gladys George, colored of Pinehurst, was given from one to two years in prison. She and two colored boys are said to have gone to the home of an elderly colored man in Pinehurst and requested a drink of water. Later, the man found that a jar containing $37 and 100 pennies which he had hidden in his stove was missing, and Glady.s was found to be at the root of the jar’s disappearance. James Day, color’d, who, after an unsuccessful attempt to play a flim flam game to the detriment of a man from Hoke county who had just sold tobacco on the Aberdeen mar ket, snatched his wallet and made off with $78 was given from two to three years in State Prison to wear stripes. John Williams, Hack Reeves and Minnie Ingram, colored of the Aber- Flighlartd F^ines Inn andl Cottages • (WEYMOUTH HEIGHTS) SOUTHERN PINES SEASON DECEMBER TO MAY Highland Pines Inn with its Splendid Dining Room Service and its Cheerful Homelike Atmosphere Caters to the Requirements of those Occupying Winter Homes in the Pine Tree Section. The Hotel is Situated on Weymouth Heights (Massachusetts Avenue) Amid De lightful Surroundings. Good Parking Space is Available for Motorists. All Features of First Class Hotels are Included at Highland Pines Inn. Best of Everything. M. H. TURNER, Managing Director W. E. FLYNN, Resident Manager CH.\S. J. SADLER. Mgr. Park View Hotel FINE LOCATION GOOD ROOMS EXCELLENT CUISINE RATES MODERATE 986 Killed Over ^Hundred More Deaths Than in 1933 in Automo- l)ile Accidents in State While Senate and House roads committees, jointly, were complet ing at Raleigh a very stringent drivers’ license bill to curb auto mobile accidents, the Motor Vehi cle Bureau was issuing a report showing 986 persons had been kill ed in auto accidents in the state in 1934, as compared with 853 deaths in 1933. Injured last year were 6,273, ascompared with 4,975 the year before. In December 177 were killed, 11 charged to drunk en drivers, 23 to speeding, while seven death cars went on without stopping to aid their victims. Grand Jury Report Mainly Fav orable; County Home Self Supporting Methodist Auxiliary Meets abeth Wood spent Friday night in The Methodist Auxiliary met on Carthage with Mi.ss Ollie Seagroves. Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Jewell Edwards and' Miss Mrs. C. J. Temple, with the new Alice Hackett of the Lucama school I Favorable findings concerning the President, Mrs. C. L. Tyson, presiding, faculty spent last week-end with county offices and institutions and topic for the evening was "Chil-, Mrs. Mary E. Edwards, few recommendations marked the God.’ Mrs. Borst made an j S. D. Lewis of Lexington visited deen section, who relieved W. J. Al len of Vass of $81 after getting him intoxicated, were given prison sen- port of the grand jury submitted to , ^^■''P’^’^tional talk on ‘Making 1935 I the judge of the Superior Court last - Best Year of Our Lives,” after ■ week. The county home, according to ^he main program, in three di- ' the keeper’s statement to the com- was presented. "Prayer and I mittee, is practically self-supporting. was given by Mrs. Emma I Among the recommendations made . Laub.scher, Mrs. Alex Smith and I by the grand jury were these; That C. Callaghan; "Prayer and all attorneys authorized to collect de- P‘i*’tnership by Mrs. T. F. Cameron linquent taxes for the county be re- Mrs. W. D. Matthews; “Pledge quired to post a surety bond of suffi- Participation” by Mrs. C. L. Ty- cient size to protect the county; that j Mrs. S. R. Smith, and this a more adequate system of maps be made more impressive by a installed in the court house; and that i ceremony. Mrs. W. H. the insufficient water supply at the|‘^®’^^ conducted the Bible Study, prison camp be corrected. It was I Mrs. W. J. Cameron offered to do- suggested that the pastors of Carth- j Jiate a patchwork top for a quilt if age be requested to hold religiou.s the auxiliary would get the other ma. services for the inmates of the coun-! terial necessary and help with the ty institutions. I quilling, so Mrs. Florence Thomas i volunteered to furnish the lining and floor at Taylortown, ’ had her 12 :.xrs. H. c. Callahan the cotton, and Wednesday of this week was set as he day to meet and make the quilt month.*;’ jail sentence suspended upon condition that sh£ pay the costs of tences. Williams is to serve from 18 ' the case, $40 for the use of Pearl i for the Methodist'^Orphanage’in Ra'l- months to two years. Reeves from McLean, the injured girl, and $27.50 eigh. An enjoyable social hour follow- one to two years, and Minnie from to the Moore County Hospital. Ig(j t^e business meeting 18 months to two years. i Curtis McLauchlin and Hendron The auxiliary was delighted to Joe Thomas Dowdy, who shot a Person, colored of Carthage, must have Mrs. Thomas, a former member colored man named Patterson caus- show at the May term that they have ■ who has resided in Greensboro for ing him to become almost blind, was helped build a tobacco barn in the t^e past few years present as a given 18 months to two years in pris- place of one which they burned a guest. on on one count and three to five few weeks ago. , Mjgs Margaret Smith of Cameron years suspended on another. | Hobart Fry, white of Pinehurst, was is spending some time with Mr. and Ben Monroe, colored, of West End, sentenced to serve four months in ^'jrs. A. C. Smith at their home here who shot a colored bov, drew.from jail to work on the roads for po.ssess- Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Keith and lit- 30 months to four years in prison, ing liquor, and for possessing for sale tie son of Raeford visited Mrs. Jane with stripes. he was given two years, suspended Keith Sunday. Mrs. Alton Chappell and little Ollie Lewis, colored, who shot a for five years. boy from the West End Community, Belk Funderburk, colored, charged was sent to the Moore county jail to with breaking and entering, larceny work for twelve months under the and receiving, and Bud Phillips, supervision of the State Highway charged with violating the prohibi- Commission. George Clark, colored, tion law, were found not guilty. of West End drew a jail sentence of —r* — .,*1, * 1 .u J ^ 'Valentmes, Valentme Party Favors, 12 months to work on the roads for , j ' < . 1. and Tallies at Hayes, shootmg a colored boy. _ _ ^ Emma Jane McNeill, who as.sault- Visit the Curb Market in Southern ed another colored girl on a dance Pines each Saturday morning. friends here during the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Smith attended the funeral of J. V. McFayden in Fay etteville Sunday. T. J. Keith of Fort Bragg visited his mother, Mrs. Jane Keith Thurs day night. Mrs. T. J. Smith and little daught er, Margaret Bettina, visited rela tives in Durham Friday night and Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Pendergraf, Mrs. Chalmers Carr and Jack Alex ander, all of Durham, were here to attend the funeral of their brother, Quentin Alexander. Mrs. Mary E. Edwards returned last week from a visit with her daughters. Miss Ossie Edwards of Garner and Mrs. Seth W. Lassater of near Smithfield. Henry A. Borst, Jr., student at Campbell College, Buie’s Creek, spent Vast week-end here with his parents. Warren Cox is ill of pneumonia at his home on Route 1. Mrs. Lizzie Borst, Mrs. W. G. Par ker and Miss Helen Parker of Camer on visited Mrs. H. A. Borst Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. Lee Richardson of Hamlet were here Monday to attend the funeral of Quentin “T. T.” Alex ander. MISS MOORF: TO WED Mr. and Mrs. William A. Moore ot Southern Pines have arrounced the engagement of their daughter, El eanor Coburn to Buster Clayton De- yoe of Raleigh. The wedding will take place this month. Rlizabeth Ann of Sanford spent last vveek visiting relatives in and near Vass. Miss Katharine Graham, Mrs. C. L. Tyson and Marie Tyson were Raleigh M.VRRl.AGE LICENSE visitors Saturday. I Marriage license was issued from Mr. and Mrs. L. L. McLcan of Le- : the office of the Register of Deeds “oir were w'eek-end guests of Mr. and | of Moore county to Edw'ard Swag- !.Irs. N, N. McLean. ' gerty of Knoxville. Tenn., and Estelle Mi.ss Ruth McNeill and Miss Rliz- Thomas of Carthage route 2. the New Fdntiac STANDARD SIX 7^c^:^liona/ line < and peau^ make th Today Pontiac presents an addition to the Pontiac family—tiic Standard Six line—evenlower in price and offering many of the features that the 1935 De Luxe Six and Improved Eight introduced with Buch sensational success. All models have the same speedlined styling that gained Pontiac the name of tlie most beautiful thing on wheels. The bodies are the same solid steel "Turret-Top” Bodies by Fisher. The brakes are the same—big, positive hydraulics, triple-sealed against $ dirt and moisture. The new ride, the happy result of stabilized, synchronized springing, is every bit as gentle and comfortable as you could ask for. The engine, with its silver-alloy bearings, pro vides dependable performance so smooth and lively that you will doubt it is a six. And, best of all, it operates with an econ omy of gasoline and oil that will literally amaze anyone who has had experience with other low-priced cars! A look, a ride and you'll decide simply can't do better. PONTIAC .MOTOR COMPANY, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. DimsiMi of General Motors 615 HIGHLIGHTS OF PONTIAC QUALITY FOR 1935 1. Solid Stael "Turr»t-Top" Bodlaa by Fisher 2. Tilple-Sealad Hydraulic Brakai 3. Speadlinad Styling 4. Complately Saalad ChassU 5. SUvei-AUoy Baortnq Engines 6. 10-Sacond Starling ol Zero 7. Eran Graolar Economy 8. No Draft VantUalion 9. Full Prauura Matarad Lubrication 10. Luggaqa and Spara Tiia Compartmtu *And up. List pru^ o/ Standard %ix^iinder Coupe at Pontiac, AfichiMn. Standard group of ocm. sorin extra. Avauable on easy G.M.A.C. Time Payments. DEALER ADVERTISEMKMT m MARTIN MOTOR COMPANY Aberdeen, N. C.

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