Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / July 8, 1951, edition 1 / Page 3
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CARD or THJUME8 .We wish to cjcprca* our deep appreciation for the sympathy and many kindnesses received on the occasion of the recent death of Charles Teasley Creel, beloved husband, fattier and. brother. VIRGINIA 15 CREEL and DAUGHTERS. liSLVUt M. CRKrif, NOTICE or ADMINISTRATION Laving tli!j doy ti u.c.t sg Ancillary Administrator, C. T. A. of tJbe North Carolina Estate of Austin Marliiid Woolnough, de ceased. late of York County, Province of Ontario, Canada, no tice is hereby given to all per sona, firms ana corporations hav ing claims against said estate to present them, duly verified, to the undersigned, Ancillary Adminis trator. C. T. A., at his office in Hurv/itr, Building, Carthage, North Carolina, on or before the 1st. day of June, 1952, or this no tice will be pleaded 'u her of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Estate will please make prompt settlement with the undersigned. This the 1st. day of June, 1961. W. CLEMENT BARRETT, Ancillary Administrator, C. T. A. of Austin Marland Woolnough, Deceased. julyl3 iMWinffWMMaww. ? Mrs. Besdey Passes At Monroe At Age of 82 Mrs. George M. Beat.'-v. 82 of Monroe died Friday afternoon in the Monroe hnsoital following a iong period of failing nealth and several days of critical illness. Silt was the mother of John Beaslny of Southern Pines, who with his brother George M. Beas ley, Jr., of Troy, publishes the Moore County News and Mont gomery Herald. Funeral services were held at Monroe Saturday, at the Harris Wells Funeral home with the Rev. C. Arthur Francis officiating. Burial was in the Monroe ceme tery. Mrs. Beasley was the former Miss Eleanor Austin, daughter of J. G. W. and Frances Houston Austin, and was long a beloved community leader in Monroe. She married into one of North Caro lina's best known publishing fam ilies. Her husband, with his broth er R. P. Beasley, is one of the founders and present owners of the Monroe Journal. Surviving besides her husband are four daughters, Miss Antoi nette Beasley of Monroe, Mrs. John Wallersteia of Lewes, Del., Mrs. K. D. Barnett of Tarpon Springs, Fla., and Mrs. Horace Helms of Charlotte; two sons, John Beasley of Southern Pines and George M. Scoslev of Troy; one brother, Vernon C. Austin, and one sister, Mrs. T. T. Smith, both of Monroe J Drs. N?d and McLmlu VETERINARIANS Soul barn Piaaa. H. C. i - i T^trh-nt 2-8161 Powell Funeral Home O. K. Bin*. Jr. BavXimta. PLrm 24 hoar AmbuUncs Svrrie* j First Quality INDIAN HEAD. 69c yd. LOOP or CLIP RUGS. $1.29 Towel End $2.10 psr bundle; Spreads, single and double, tfUS lo $4.Sd MILL ENDS St REMNANTS. Aberdeen, N. C. lfn Smllh Bidg. RECORDS . . . 5 for a<Kt it! 1 HAYES BOOK SHOP Southern Pines, N. C. UNDERCOATIHG m mncrioH If provide* j tough coating for oli undtrbody units, (s impervious to rood setts, odd? wid f?!hotis. Resists abrasion from gr*? v?l, - stones and cinder*., m FOft COMFORT H puiNifratot i*ami amI e?^ n?rs to b?ip> saal your cor again** drafts* dost ana Hrm** Mokes cor qutotar by ractvctng all rood and angina naif aw -vjllwr* JACKSON MOTORS, Inc. Your FORD Dealer SOUTHERN PIKES. K. C. Staacks for Shoppers Take Time Out for a Quick Pick- me-up at our Famous Fountain HOME MADE SANDWICHES WITH ICE TEA Try Us Today SOUTHERN PINES PHARMACY SOUTHERN PINES 1 Jim Lentz Victim of Two Accidents; Both On Trial At Carthage Monday ?? ?* Pwctfr*H>mr 1/Mm ? 11 Korean Seuvmlr A* I Concealed Waapon r James Herman (Jim) Lents, ot , Southern Pines, was defendant in ohe accident case and prosecuting witness in another, in recorders ' court at Cartilage Monday. The ' two accidents took place leas than 1 a month apart. Lenta was in court 1 with his left arm still bound as ' a result of injuries suffered in ' the first accident, May 19. c In connection with this wreck, an early-morning collision on 1 Youngs road, both Lenta and the driver of the other car, Odell < Lexie MeCrlmmon of Southern | Pines, were convicted of driving g at excessive speed, taking into ? consideration the condition of the ( road, and judgment was continued j lor each on payment of costs. Both ] defendants and a friend in Mc- i Crimmon's car, who acted as his < witness, were hurt. 1 The second accident took place ^ June 17, and in this case James ' Duke (Boscoe) Sheffield, Pine- 4 hurst youth, offered a plea of ! guilty of driving on the wrong ( side of the road in lieu of the ' original charge of careless and 1 reckless driving. This the state ' accepted, along with Sheffield's 1 plea of guilty of hit-run. He was 1 given a 60-day road sentence, sus- 1 ponded on payment of M6? for ' damages to Lentz's car, also the costs, and on condition that he , violate no traffic iuwg in the next ? 12 months. Of three drivers convicteu of ] careless and reckless driving and]1 drunken driving, all pleading i guilty, two gave notice of appeal to superior court. These were Dunston Gales, of Pinehur3t, and James P. Jackson, Lakeview. I Wayne L. Brown, Carthage, ac cepted the penalty, which was the 1 same for all three?60 days sus- 1 pended on payment of $100 and 1 costs, with license revocation for ! 12 months. 1 A corporal of the 82nd Airborne division. Lloyd C. Rice, living in , Southern Pines was fined $50 and ' costs on conviction of carrying a 1 concealed weapon, and his pis- ; tol. an Italian weapon brought * back by a fellow paratrooper as ' a souvenir of Korean warfare, ' was ordered destroyed. Corporal ' Rice, testifying for himself in full ' uniform with overseas ribbons j and battle stars, wearing the green shoulder tabs of the combat ' leader, declared he did not know ! his newly acquired pistol was con cealed at the time police stopped I him downtown in Southern Pines. Unloaded, in a hoister attached to i his belt, it was hidden beneath i the loose tail of his sport shirt, i the arresting policeman said. He ! had no permit, the corporal sta- 1 ted. " but my commanding officer ( knew I had it and said it was all 1 right." "Th3t made it ail right on J the reservation," said Judge r Rowe, "but in town the civilian law must be observed t Speeders plead:-.? gudty and * paying up i>u>nua> *e(c Henry I 5. Ozncnt, Aberdeen, 70 ~iph, $25 ' and costs: Floyd Deese, Aberdeen Rt. 1, 70 mph, $30 and costs; Era- ] est Kelly, Hamlet, 70 mpb, $25 and costs: Elvin Mayhew, Jackson Springs Rt. 1. 55 mph (truck), $25 and costs; Jack Dunn, Dunn, 70 mph. $25 and costs. ? ' Judgment was continued for James Kimball, of Vass, on con viction of public drunkenness and unlawful possession of illicit c whiskey. Maty Johnson, Carth- i age, got 30 days in jail or work- i ing at the county home for public ; drunkenness and disorderly con- 1 duct. ; Junius Crump ton, Aberdeen, 1 pleading not guilty to assaults, threats etc., received a three : [months' road sentence, suspended 1 on payment of $25, costs and Etta 1 Mae Se&groves' hospital bill. On another count against Crumpton, careless and reckless driving, state's witness Dannie McDougalj failed to appear and a fine of $15 was imposed on him for failure to heed the subpoena. William Haywood Ransom, sole address "Army," failed to appear in answer to a bastardy and non support charge and sci fa was or dered on his bondsman ($300) re turnable next Monday, also capias for Ransom. No probable cause was found against Sylvester Maloy and Wel don Greene, the former pleading not guilty, the latter guilty, to larceny of a power chain saw. The verdict for Joseph DeWitt Hensley, Southern Pines, was not guilty of driving while drunk, and careless and reckless driving. However, Judge J. Vance Rowe noted on his book: "Paxentheti rally, the court is of the opinion that in a government like ours it is the duty of a citizen to cooper ate with the regularly constituted I official? In the enforcement nf| he law." um Waul IsvuiuM. (Held over for lack of space) 2iue* Conrtaujd A number of cases were con- ' iaued at the close of the busy . lav, adding to the everincreas- , ng reserve with which it seems ; Vtoore's one-day court cannot now ?atch up. Most of those tried were ! raffic and highway law violation ?ases. The docket (all penalties plus :osts unless otherwise noted): ] Andrew Ledbetter, Fairmont, Iriving without operator's license, :ruck overweight by 6,100 pounds, I >rayer for judgment continued, , >25, defendant ordered not to op erate vehicle without first obtaini ng license; Joe Allen Purvis, Purvis, Glendon, speeding 70 nph, $25; Robert Lewis Powe, | ;heraw, S. C? speeding 70 mph, > inlawful possession non-taxpaid : vhiskey, 69 days suspended, $75; ilton Johnnie McNeill, Steeds, ' :areiess and reckless driving re- j mlting in wreck (nobody involv ed but defendant), judgment con- 1 :inued, $25; Sarah Horner and i Virginia Purvis, Eagle Springs, < ?nd Hlance Davis, Bobbins, va rious charges of affray, at request >f prosecuting witnesses uol pros with leave taken for each case on lavment of costs. R. E. Davis, Carthage, worthless check, judgment continued; Wal ter Elliott Nutt, Oxford, speeding 75 mph, $35; Carl Blanthard, Jr., Carthage, driving while drunk, 80 days suspended, $100. license revoked for 12 months; James Ed ward McKeithen, Aberdeen, fail ing to stop at stop sign, using vile and abusive language in a public place and on a public street and highway, and interfering with a police officer in discharge of his duties, 60 days suspended, $50 and posts; William Shelton Davis, Steeds Rt. 1, careless and reckless driving, judgment continued. $25. Benson S. Futrell, Vass. driving ahile drunk. 60 days suspended, S100, license revoked for 12 nonths. gave notice of appeal to iuperior court and bond was set it $300; Donnie McDougal and lohn D. Kill, Aberdeen, assault with deadly weapon, three months in roads as to each suspended on payment of half the costs each md on good behavior conditions 'or next two years. McDougal to pay half of HtU's hospital bill. Hill :o pay the other half; James Marsh, Carthage, speeding, im proper equipment, $10. Out-of-state defendants on speeding charges who failed to ippear ar.J forfeited their cash londs were as follows; Robert M Haver. 73 mph, Sandusky, Ohio; iVaiter Lee Turrentine, Stamford, 7onn., 70 mph. $50; James Lewis tosev, College Park, Ga.. $50, lack Riner, Graymont, Ga., 70 aph, $50. Also forfeiting a $50 cash bond vas James Bryant Spivey, U S. Via v. Wisconsin, charged with icssassian >nd transporting of lon-taxpuid whiskey. Bragg Safetv ol? j Engineer Moves To Fayetteville Otto B Edwurds, post safety mgineer at Fort Bragg and his 'amily moved last week from Southerr Pines to 825 Arsenal ivenue, Fayetteville They have ien living at 305 West Illinois ivenue while Mr. Edwards com muted daily to Fort Bragg. The Edwatdses had lived in Southern Pines since April 1947, when Mr. Edwards was transfer red to Fort Bragg from Maxwell AFB, Ala. A native of Wilming ton. he graduated in safety engin eering at the University of Ala bama and has held positions in private industry and a number of military installations. At Fort Bragg he has responsi bility for safety of personnel all over the reservation, a job which is enormously aggrandized dur ing the maneuver periods. During his residence here. Mr. Edwards gave much time to civic service in the safety field. He served as chairman of the South ern Pines Safety Council, which conducted safety campaigns here for eight successive months in 1950. and also worked with the Sandhills Kiwanis club in setting up their interclub program on highway safety which is now un der way. He was a charter member of the Southern Pines Lions dub, and was recently Installed as i';toil twister." Btsides his wife, his family con sists of Anna Graham, aged eight; Carolyn, six, and James, two. j John L. Curri? Pass*? At Home Near Bobbins John L. Currie, AO, died sudden ly last Thursday morning follow ing a heart attack at his homo noui KobDins. Funeral services umre held Pt the FohMns Metho dist church Saturday afternoon, with burial in the church cem tery. Surviving are his wife, the for mer Miss Blcniiie Stutta; five, daughters, Mrs.. Charles William?,, Eagle Springs Rt. 1; Mrs. John Butler, Mrs. Archie Rhoades and Mrs. Clarence Moffitt of Rcbbins, and Miss Elgie Currie of the home; two sons, Carl E. Currie of Conroe, Texas, and J. Wilbur Cur rie of Robbing; two sisters. Mis;' Eugenia Currie and Mrs. L. S. f'urr, of Eagle Springs Rt. 1; and 17 grandchildren. Stamp Fans H?ar Catalog On Order An enthusiastic group attending the final meeting of the Sandhtlbr Stamp club till next fall heard with pleasure the news that the Southern Pines library is, at the ' """ ' club's request, securing the latest isse of Scotts Standard catalog. I The nine present participated s in a contest on foreign stamps, in i which the junior division winner t was Ja3ia Guryn, the senior Har old M. Fowler. Stamps were given as prizes. , Each person then spoke briefly j on "My Favorite Stamp. A tridsjj diversity of favorites was noted, I with good reasons for each choice. 11 The Kev. C. V. Coveli. club leader, showed an exhibit of damps of the British American ends. The meeting was held at he Park View hotel. A group of Vance County home demonstration club women has tttt a 1Mee*o?i u lilt iuudauieuioia ui aewuig. MLOT ABVZATSUffG PAYS I NOTICE U.S.AJT. AIRGROUND OPERATIONS SCHOOL Highland Pinw* Ion PHONE NUMBER IS 2-2972 HIGHLAND PINES INN (for buiiiwas call*! PHONE NUMBER IS 2-2913 i JOHN C. PARRISH Plumbing and Heating Day PJjoo# SS?3 Southern PImm Nigtu Plum* 1*14 Mclver's Annual SutT^^Skoe NOW FULL SWING ^ MORE SHOES ADDED TO ALL RACKS! WHi+oa hrno>n A* mhitn hliitin mi) nnuinc nram nainnta I Ladies' Casuals 199 , 099 I ana I Values So S6.35?Famous Brands I Ladies' Casuals And Dress Shoes 4" .?d 5" Valu to $10.95?Famous Brands i special group TW?T!M?? CI OC OF $14.95 IVlLWlLd, ..Children's Shoes a t I Group of Sandals 1.99 Values to $3.99 Group of Sandals 2.99 Values to $5 j These shoes are by Acrobat, Story Book and Gerwinettes { Sen's Saner Sport Shoes 6.99 and 9.99 Includes white oxlords . , bs'cwn & white saddles , . black St white saddles . . . brown St white moccasin toes . . . woven styles . brown & white wing tips . . . two-tone ventilated styles .. and white buck loafers. Mel ver's j ?N:" | Distinctive Footwear CENTRAL CAROLINA'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE SHOE STORE ' i II ? I Will i MM n n .wBftWOTMiiiiimw?1111 wBii i ?-.? im n i a??i nmg^rtwo! 11 mai ?IH9MI<I!W?W w 1.1 i w?i mm
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 8, 1951, edition 1
3
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