PAGE EIGHTEEN THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina THURSDAY. JUNE 3a 1955 $500 Fine Levied Monday For Second, Third Offenses Of Drunken Driving Special License Needed For Deep River Seine Users Use of seines for takiijg non game fish will be lawful in Deep V^lkes County Man Arrested Twice In Period of Few Days Second and third , offenses of drunken driving—recorded with in a few days of each other by James Eli Shoemaker of Wilkes . County, temporarily living at f^iver, in Moore County, during Aberdeen—brought a suspended July and August, it was. announc- sentence to six months on the ed this week by Ray A. Overcash, roads, a $500 fine and loss ofi^^foore wildlife protector, driver’s license for five years, in | Each person seining must have Recorders Court at Carthage tu his possession an individual Monday. (Special Fishing License, Over- “V j' T Tr cash said. These licenses for sein- Judge J Vance Rowe also taxj be purchased at E. M. ed the defendant with the costs Rj^ter’s hardware store in Rob- the two cases and ordered that Hardware com- a half-pint of wtiiskey held m Carthage; or from Mr. evidence in connection with one P ^ Aberdeen. ot the cases be destroyed. . , snecial seinine li- Shcemaker was charged with'^^ie price ot a special seining li d^nken driving and possession g^.^. g^^^ unlawful, of legal whiskey with the seal , wildlife urotector stressed broken. He has been living in this wiidiite protector stressea. area, it was reported, while work ing on a road construction job. After his double arrest at Aber deen, investigation by the High way Patrol revealed that he had been convicted of drunken driv ing in Wilkes County in January, 1948. " Youth and Mother speeding 70, $20 and costs; Don ald Elliott Almond, Aberdeen Route 1, speeding 65, $15 and costs; Stacy Hitter, Vass, Route, public drunkenness, allowing un licensed person to operate his au to, drunken driving, pleaded not guilty to all charges except im- An attempt to keep an obvious- ^ proper license, found guilty as ly strained and difficult family charged, 60 days on roads or $100 situation from breaking the and costs, driver’s license bounds of peaceful living was revoked for 12 months; ap- made by Judge Rowe when he pcal to Superior Court entered, suspended a six months sentence bond set at $250; Festus Burton for Picora Johnson, 18, a Negro Ackerman, Laurinburg, speeding youth who was charged with as-j®®> pleaded not guilty, found guil- sault with a deadly weapon onily speeciing “around 60,” judg- his mother, Mary Johnson. They ment continued on payment of live between Aberdeen and Pine- costs; Samuel Liles, Aberdeen, as- biuff. sault and battery on wife, judg- While the youth denied or said continued on payment of that he could not remember any- costs and on condition he be of thing that happened, a witness, behavior towa(rd hie wife and Jessie Rogers, said that the son obey the laws during the next 12 was observed chasing his mother with an axe and threatening to kill her. 'The attack apparently took place while the son was un der the influence of liquor and Judge Rowe, in setting conditions on which the sentence might be suspended, specified that the de fendant refrain from drinking any intoxicating beverage during the two-year suspension period. Other conditions of the sus pended sentence were: that he pay the costs, be of good be havior, be good to his mother and not assault her and also that he allow his mother to dispose of his rifle and that he not acquire a gun of any kind, nor have or carry a gun, during the two years. Farmer Gets Break Judge Rowe, who is a landown er and farmer as a sideline to the practice of law, showed his sympathy with the financial problems of farmers when he ren dered' another judgment worthy of Solomon in a non-support case. Frank Hale of Sanford, Route 1, in court for failure to comply with a previous judgment in the matter of supporting his estrang ed wife and three children, plead ed not guilty to the charge, say ing he had done all he could for his family and that he had no money coming in until he can start to sell his tobacco at the end of the summer. While the defendant was found guilty. Judge Rowe suspended a 60-day road term on payment of the costs .and on condition that Hale give $6.25 per week—^the amount being half of what he is supposed to pay—to his wife and children, either in cash or grocer ies. This arrangement, the judge specified, is to continue until the defendant can sell his tobacco. Then he is to pay $50 in cash to cover the payments delinquent up to the time of Monday’s court session and is to pay an addition al amount that will make up the other $6.25 per week that will be due, from this week until the time of the tobacco sale. Then the payments are to c(Dntinue at $12.50 per week. Other Cases Other cases heard Monday, list ing defendant, charge and dispo sition, were; Clarence Lambert, Robbins, and Bertha Mae Morris, Cameron, Route 1, possession of illicit whis key, $10 and costs each; Ed Cal- licut, Carthage, driving without operator’s license, $10^and costs; James David Waters, Aberdeen, Route 1, driving witheJut Opera tor’s license, and Clarence Eu gene Saunders, Carthage, posses sion of illicit whiskey, $10 and costs each; Alex Paul Smith, Car thage, public drunkenness, pos session of illicit whiskey, allow ing unlicensed person to drive his auto, pleaded guilty in absentia, $10 and costs; William Jasper Black, West End, public drunken ness, possession of legal liquor with seal broken, $15 and costs; Charlie A. Bryant, Sanford, Route 3. possession of illicit whiskey, $20 and costs. Willie Lee Ray, Aberdeen, ' Mil - n liil® M MISS DINYES AND MR. BROWN Miss Dinyes, Fiancee Of Local Man, Visits Here On Trip From New York Yugo-Slavia Native Came To U. S. With Family From Germany months (wife wanted to withdraw charge). Ernest Jackson, Cameron, as sault and battery on wife, plead ed not guilty, nol pros with leave on payment of costs; Fred Titus Burris, Albemarle, speeding 65, $10 and costs; J. R. Bowker_, Pinehurst, operating auto im properly in that his driver’s li cense requires that he wear cor rection glasses and he failed to have the glasses on while driving, defendant allowed to plead guilty in absentia on account of his age (81) and on advice of a physician, judgment continued on payment of costs and on condition he com ply with the requirements of his driver’s license. Raymond Sherill Almond, West End, driving without operator’s license, judgment continued on payment of costs, not to dt-ive until he obtains operator’s license; Sgt. BiUy Griggers, Southern Pines, drunken driving, judgment continued * on payment of $100 fine and costs, driver’s license to be revoked for 12 months; Earsie C. Gadd, Southern Pines, drunken driving, speeding 90, three months on roads, suspended on payment of $150 fine and costs, driver’s license to be revoked for 12 months; Odes McKamey, Fort Bragg, driving without operator’s license, representing another’s li cense as his own, pleaded not guilty, but changed plea to guil ty, and Willard C. Carter, Fort Bragg, allowing another person to use his driver’s license, joint fine of $25 and costs. Lacy Johnston, Cameron, Route 2, speeding 70, $20 and costs; Earnest A. Short, Jr., Carthage, Route 3, earless and reckless driv ing resulting in accident (took place in September, 1954), Speed ing, driving without operator’s license, $25 and costs (nobody in jured but the defendant who was seriously injured); David Allen Vest, West End, driving after li cense was revoked, three months on roads, suspended on payment of $200 fine 'and costs, license to be revoked for an additional period as required by law; War ren David Thomas, Sanford, drunken driving, driving on wrong side of road, pleaded not guilty to drunken driving, guilty of other charge, found guilty as charged, 60 days on roads sus pended on payment of $100 fine and costs, driver’s license to be revoked for 12 months, appeal to Superior Cpurt entered, bond set at $250. Last Tuesday's Court In last Tuesday’s session of Re corders Court, the following cases were heard: Larry Thomas Newal, speeding 65, $25 and costs; James Elgin Shamburger, Robbins, Route 2, allowing unlicensed minor to operate a motor vehicle, $10 and costs; Floyd Elbert Dowd, Rob bins, driving without operator’s license, careless and reckless driving, and Herbert Melvin Dowd, Robbins, allowing an un licensed person to' drive automo bile, careless and reckless driv ing, 30 days on roads each, sus pended on payment Of joint fine By VALERIE NICHOLSON Miss Kathe Dinyes, a pretty young lady of international back ground, was seeing a new coun try, and learning many new things, last week. She was seeing the United States of small towns, hospitable people, friendly ways and good home-cooked food. She was learning about—of all things— fried apples and country sausage for breakfast, neither of which she had ever seen before. Hot rolls, too. “I love it all,” she told this re porter, her dimples showing and her blue eyes sparkling. “I think I will like living in a small town. And I liked it better, the farther south we came.’’ Born in Yugo-Slavia, a resident of Germany for nine years, she came with her parents and a sis ter to this country just three years ago, but last week was the first time she had been out of New York City. She has always lived in large cities, and they are much the same the world over. In New York, Kathe and a Southern Pines boy, Harry Lee Brown, Jr., met and fell in love. They became engaged and last week he brought her home to visit his family, meet his friends and see his home town. Harry Lee may be covered with degrees—A.B. University of North Carolina, A.M. and Doctor of Ed ucation, Columbia University — but in Southern Pines he’s just a riage later. Kathe is looking forward to Michigan. “There wiU be skiing there,” she said. “I loved skiing in Europe and have had no chance to ski since we came here. In Germany, there is much skiing.” i Since she was in Germany from! the age of 12 to 21, after her fam ily fled from Kula, on the Dan ube, in Yugo-Slavia, and settled in Munich, it looms larger in her memories than does her native land. When she was homesick in this new country—and she admits that she has been, quite a lot—it is for Germany that she yearns. But now, she thinks she won’t be homesick any longer. Her first experiences in the United States were dismal, even though an aunt and uncle, and a sister, were already living here. Knowing no English, she set out one day from the family apart ment to go to her sister’s place of work. She had the address, thought she. knew the way but, coming up out of the subway, found she was lost. “I looked at all the people and wondered who might help me, but they just hur ried by. I was afraid to speak to anyone, and they could not have understood me anyway. I saw buses go by and did not know which one to take. I stood there and cried.” Finally, she seiid, she screwed up courage to speak to a police man, who shook his head help lessly at her strange language. But he did accost a taxi driver for her, and she showed him the ad dress written on a slip of paper. At last she found her sister, and fell weeping into her arms, vow- uui. III .jv/umcxii 1 iiico iic;o juov “. j^g never, never to go out on the home town boy, and as he and' . , . street alone again. But Kathe is too smart and sen- Kathe strolled about, usually hand in hand like a couple of kids, they ran into happy greetings everywhere. At first Kathe was a mite shy, but before the week was out she was gaily responding to the greet ings and, in fact, had become pret ty much of a “home town girl.” They won’t live here, though, as Harry Lee, after taking her back to New York this week, will go to his new position as professor education in Central College of Education, Mt. Pleasant, Mich. They wiU set a date for their mar- of $25 and costs; Howard Gilbert Morrison, Car thage, drunken driving, careless and reckless driving, 60 days on roads, suspended on payment of $100 fine and costs, driver’s li cense to be revoked for 12 months; Charles Curtis Davis, Eagle Springs, Route 1, careless and reckkless driving, accident, 60 days on roads, suspended on payment of damages done to the Nall truck, and costs (damages es timated at $100 to $150); William Whitaker, Southern Pines, driv ing through red light and speed ing, pleaded guilty to speeding, not guilty to driving through red light, found guilty as charged, 60 days on roads, suspended on pay ment of $25 fine and costs and on condition he not violate State or muicipal traffic laws in the next 12 months. Marian Rachel Moore, driving without operator’s license, $25 and costs; Malcolm Lewis, West End, careless and reckless driving, ac cident resulting in death, pleaded not guilty, found not guilty of careless and reckless driving, no phobable cause found on man slaughter charge (Lewis was driv er of the pickup truck that left the road and overturned, killing M. C. McDonald, Jr., of West End June 20, as reported in detail in last week’s Pilot; Junior English, Robbins, speeding 50 in 35-mile zone, called and failed, capias to be issued, returnable Monday of this week, bond set at $35; Wil liam Oren McGuire, speeding 65, careless and reckless driving, nol pros with leave (defendant not to be found); Charles Harry Bloom, Camp Gordon, Ga., speeding 65, called and failed, capias to be is sued returnable July 5, bond set at $30. sible a girl to be discouraged for long. She enrolled in an English class, filled with many displaced persons like herself, at a YWCA. Then she took a position for a month as a nursemaid, in order to live with an American family and learn their ways and speech. When she had built up sufficiept confidence in her powers of com munication and understanding, she took a course as a dental as sistant, and is working at' this profession now. In her work she deals with many kinds of people, of various nationalities, an(i finds her knowledge of several Euro pean languages useful. Though her English is precise and more nearly textbook-perfect than that of most native Ameri cans, she still gets her tenses con fused once in a while, or feels for a word which isn’t there. “So many little words have many meanings,” she cites as on big dif ficulty. The word “slip” was one example, both as noun and verb. At home with her parents, old- world ways are maintained. For instance, they have no television set—“My mother doesn’t believe in it.”' Thanks to the cosmopoli tan markets of the city, they con tinue to eat Yugo-Slavian dishes, though she is learning to cook Airterican food too. And, if her fiance’s mother’s cooking gave her some happy sur prises, Harry Lee had the same kind of new thrills at her home in New York. “That Yugo-Slavian food is wonderful,” food is wonderful,” says Dr. Brown. Top-trained as a teacher, he is happily anticipating teaching Kathe lots more about this coun try, also about the game of tennis, an important thing in his family and among most of their close friends. His sister Audrey, whom Kathe sare to know last week, is one of the South’s top players and North Carolina state champion. Harry Lee is also a player of tour- neiment calibre, and a founder and leading spirit of the Sandhill Ten nis association. Watching the goings-on on the courts as the Moore County Clos ed tournament got under way, fingering a tennis racket, Kathe showed her dimples again—“I’m going to learn that game.” QUALITY PRINTING TICKETS FOLDERS BLOTTERS BOOKLETS HANDBILLS ENVELOPES BILL HEADS STATEMENTS LETTERHEADS LEGAL BLANKS WINDOW CARDS BUSINESS CARDS PAY ENVELOPES CHARGE TICKETS SOCIAL STATIONERY WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS TLe Pilot I: