Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / July 1, 1971, edition 1 / Page 11
Part of The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
?COURT? Continued from page I sentenced to six months suspended for 3*4 years with 3V4 years probation. He was ordered not to drive for the next two years and was fined' S3 00 and costs. The breathalyzer was .24 per cent. Thomas E. Allen of Raeford pleaded guilty to DUl and wis sentenced to six months suspended for 18 months and was ordered not lo drive for the next 12 months. He was fined $150 and costs. The breathalyzer was .15 per cent. Benjamin Franklin Hendrix of Raeford pleaded not guilty but was found guilty of DUI and was sentenced to six months with capias and or commitment to issue at any time during the next 18 months upon conviction of any traffic law violation. He was ordered not to drive for the next 12 months except under the conditions on the limited driving privilege and was fined S150 and costs. The breathalyzer was .25 per cent. Prayer for judgment was continued upon payment of costs by Billy Gerald Wagner of Spring Lake who pleaded guilty to speeding 55 in a 45 mph zone. Prayer for judgment was continued upon payment of costs by James Lafayette Edge, Jr. of Fayetteville who pleaded guilty to failing to stop for a stop sign. Carl T. Taylor of Raeford was sentenced to four days in jail retroactive to date of his arrest for public drunkenness. Prayer for judgment was continued upon payment of court costs by Luke Oldness Rackley of Wilmington who pleaded guilty to speeding 60 in a 50 mph zone. James Quincy Lewis of Shannon pleaded guilty to allowing a non ? licensed operator to drive, to failing to transfer title within 20 days and to driving without liability insurance. He was sentenced to 90 days in jail suspended for two years and was fined S50 and costs. James Levern McGoogan of Lumber Bridge pleaded guilty to driving while his license was revoked and DUI, second offense. He was sentenced to a total of 2M years and the sentences were suspended for 3'/4 years with 3W years probation. He was ordered not to drive for the next three years and not to own or have in his possession any type of motor vehicle designed """ primarily to be operated on the public streets for th2 next three years. He was fined $500 and costs. The breathalyzer was .27 per cent. Colon Harris of Raeford pleaded not guilty but was . found guilty of public drunkenness and was sentenced to four days suspended on the condition that he pay the court VA is urging employers to develop Gl Bill on ? the ? job training opportunities for returning veterans. If interested, contact the nearest VA office for information. costs. James Edward Long of Raeford pleaded guilty to failing to report an accident and was sentenced to 30 days suspended and was fined $50 and costs. James Henegan of Raeford pleaded nolo contendere to non ? support. Prayer for judgment was continued for five years with the court reserving the right to pass final judgment at any time during that period. Henegan was ordered to pay SSO a month child support. Costs were remitted and the amount was ordered pud instead for child support. Lawrence Edward Murchison of Raeford pleaded guilty to DUI and was sentenced to six months suspended for 18 months and was fined SI SO and costs. He was ordered not to drive for the next 12 months. The breathalyzer was .23 per cent. The state took a nol pros on a charge of running a stop sign. Murchison gave notice of appeal and bond was set at SSOO. He pleaded guilty to unsafe movement and was sentenced to 30 days suspended and was ordered to pay SI SO restitution and court costs. Murchison appealed the judgment and bond was set at S300. MAGISTRATES COURT The following persons pleaded guilty and their cases were processed by the Magistrates: Tony Eugene McNeill, Red Springs, improper mufflers, costs. J.L. Turner, Laurinburg, worthless check for S40 to Carlton Niven, pay check and costs. George Ray Tucker, McColl, S.C., improper passing, $10 fine, costs. Betty Harris, Rt. 3, Raeford, public drunkenness, $6 jail fee, costs. Clarence Gene Ferguson, Fayetteville, improper passing, SIO fine, costs. Junior Lee Washington, Red Springs, inspection violation, costs. Lacy Edward Campbell, Red Springs, speeding 55 in a 45 mph /one, SS fine, costs. Robert Leroy Alston, Vass, without a valid chauffeur's license, S25 fine, costs. John Clinton Alston, Siler City, inspection violation, costs. Salvatore Virga, Bronx, N.Y., speeding 75 in a 60 mph zone, SIO fine, costs. Gary M. Hunt, Fayetteville, failing to stop at stop sign, costs. Thurman Dixon Hudson, Fayetteville, speeding 55 in a 45 mph zone, S5 fine, costs. Willie Malby, Red Springs, improper passing, SIO fine, costs. Kyle Dexter Stidham, Big Stone Gap, Va., improper passing, SIO fine, costs. William Thomas Chappell, Troy, no driver's license, S25 fine, costs. Henry C.Gilmore, Fayetteville, inspection violation, costs. Willie B. Nickson, Red Springs, failing to apply for transfer of registration, costs. PFC Roger Lee Granger, Ft. Bragg, no safety helmet, costs. William Sutherland, Fayetteville, improper passing, SIO fine, costs. S/SGT William A. Bryant,, Ft. Bragg, speeding 70 in a 60 mph zone, S5 fine, costs. Hule Th 'ms, Raeford, public drunkenness, S6 jail fee, costs. William Demps, Raeford, public drunkenness, S6 jail fee, costs. Eugene Campbell, Raeford, public drunkenness, second offense, $5 fine, S6 jail fee, costs. MOST VALUABLE - Henry Hostetler was presented a trophy at tennis camp at Atlantic Christian College at Wilson last week as the Most Valuable Boy Camper. He was honored for his conduct, participation and achievement. The award was presented by Coach Ed Cloyd at final exercises. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hostetler were present for the award. rrflidd BY JIM DEAN liilHllirilil III! 11 'III 1 know Nelson Bryant and I like him. I know him because I've fished with him in the Gulf Stream off Hatteras, in the surf at Nags Head, in mountain trout streams, and I've hunted waterfowl with him when the ice was so thick at Ocracoke we couldn't get a skiff through it. I like him because he is a good hand with boat, rod and gun, because he enjoys his work - which is writing outdoor columns for The New York Times -- and because he revels in the unforgettable delights and glories of wood, field and stream. Recently, Bryant published a collection of some 125 columns under the title. Fresh Air, Bright Water (American Heritage Press, 283 pages, S6.95). The book reflects his stated intentions in writing a column that appeals to far ? flung and often sophisticated Times readers. He succeeds, with more than a little touch of the poet, in giving "an occasional glimpse of a mountaintop trout pond wreathed in mist, of black ducks flying low against a dark November sky over a brown salt marsh, of great, silvery tarpon rolling in the Caribbean, or red grouse rising above the purple bloom or Scotland's heather." Of equal interest to Tar Heel readers are the seven columrts from North Carolina included in the collection. The first time I met Bryant I was to host him, with help from Chester Davis, Reid Bahnson and Alvin Johnson of Winston ? Salem, for trout fishing in the Daniel Boone Wildlife Management Area. On first impression, the man comes across as a rather urbane, sophisticated world traveler who, with studied courtesy, can be as earthy, bawdy and plain ? spoken as the situation demands. After several years of hunting and fishing with him, I now have him sized up as a kind of well ? read country boy who may be as urbane and sophisticated as the situation demands. When you know his background you begin to understand something of that. He has been a farm hand, cook, deck hand, paratrooper, logger, grave digger, carpenter, oyster fisherman and - for thirteen years - managing editor of a small daily newspaper in New Hampshire. When he took the job with the Times he was building docks with his brother near his home on Martha's Vineyard and freelancing for outdoor periodicals. In one ot the columns from the Daniel Boone trip, Bryant .wrote: "Harper Creek and Vrheri..,lik*^.J^ in North Smoky and are not through wild and lovely country. Harper makes its tumultuous way down the mountain through a boulder - strewn bed, past steep rocky cliffs, past stands of hardwood and an occasional conifer, past the lacquered green of rhododendron.'' He remembered that as well as the 40 trout he and Bahnson caught that day. On a surf fishing trip to Nags Head, he was unable to sleep one night, dressed in the dark so as not to dusturb his sleeping companion and walked the beach under a nearly full moon. He wrote: "1 was grateful for the moon's illumination; it washed land and water with a holy light and enabled me to give a wide berth to occasional couples who lay close embraced in the warm night." Bryant began one of his columns from a Hatteras fishing trip: "Music - it was something of Brahms -? came fitfully down the wind to us as we rolled in three ? foot seas offshore from Hatteras Inlet. The music, which came from Diamond Shoals light, a Texas tower manned by Coast Guard personnel off North Carolina's Outer Banks, blended with the excited cries of terns diving after bait fish and the sound of the sea surging against the giant steel legs of the tower, which are anchored in the ocean bottom more than fifty feet below." All our trips have not been productive of fish and game, but as a competent professional, Bryant comes up with colorful columns in spite of weather and bad luck. At Ocracoke, when we were iced in late one waterfowl season, he discovered a native recipe for old drum (channel bass) that called for salt pork, of which he is excessively fond, reflecting his origin on the seacoast of New England. After quoting the recipe, attributed to Mrs. Dell Scarborough, he wrote: "So reinforced, you may be sure, a seafaring man could face the treacherous waters of Hatteras and Ocracoke inlets with energy and confidence." 1 read Fresh Air, Bright Water with fascination and put it down reinforced, you may be sure, to face future days afield and afloat with energy and confidence in the company of Nelion Bryant. MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT Completely Furnishod Good Location PHONE 875-2156 DAY OR 875-2117 NIGHT IT'S VACATION TIME! Do you find youriolf short of fundi for thot wall datarvad vacation you hava ptannod? If to, I at tha friandly paopla at SAFEWAY FINANCE arranga a vacation loan for you. WITH CASH IIP TO $900 (MMla And lit Vt Sarva Tou FREE COUNSELING SERVICE SAFEWAY FINANCE M Donnii Stiwtft, Minifif w * Tr ios N. Main St. RMford, N. C. 878-4111 KEN'S CARPET CENTER 2MS RMfert Rd. FAYETTEVILLE Nwm 04-7M1 128 W. Htm HampcMra Am. SOUTHERN PINES SS2-7427 CLASSIFIBi MHi $ FOR RENT: New two bedroom Mobile Home on Inland Waterway at Sunset Harbor. Call 875-2922 or 875-2332 after 2:30. 8-9C FOR SALE: 1965 Corvair Monza, 2 door hard top, radio-heater, white sidewalls, automatic transmission, bucket seats. Excellent second car. Call 875-3197 after 5:30 p.m. 8P FOR RENT: Trailer on front at Holden's Beach. Phone 875-3932. 8-10P FOR SALE: 3 bedroom brick house by owner. Kitchen ? family room combination, living room, ltt baths, carport, utility room. Corner of Bethel and S. Wright St., next to Hoke High. Pay low equity and assume low interest loan. Call 875-3644 for appointment. 8P FOR SALE: 1960 Ford truck. F-250, good condition, S675. Call 875-2923. 8P WANTED TO RENT: 3 or 4 bedroom house. Will sign lease or rent with option to buy. Call 875-2909. . 8-9C YOUR OWN BUSINESS -- Full or part time distributing famous high quality Rawleigh Products in S.E. Hoke County areas. For information, write ucpt. 470, P.O. Box 1207, Greenville, S.C. 29602 and give phone. 8-9C FOR SALE: 2.8 acres with spring stream, 6 miles up Aberdeen Hwy. Phone 875-4587. TFC IT'S SO SIMPLE: Why make hard work out of buying a used car? We HAVE one of the FINEST SELECTIONS and they can be bought at PRICES that WILL SURPRISE YOU. We've been doing it for years. QUALITY MOTORS, Harris Avenue, Raeford. 8-12C CCC Loan Regulations The US. Department of Agriculture announced amendments to Commodity Credit Corporation loan regulations on cotton, grains, and similarly handled commodities which will permit producers to enter into contracts to sell these commodities without loss of eligibility for loans. The amendments provide that a producer shall be eligible for loans if he enters into a contract to sell, or gives an option to sell his commodity, if, under the contract or option, he retains control, risk of loss, and title to the commodity. Loan regulations previously provided that commodities which producers agreed to sell where ineligible for loans even though the producer still retained title, risk of loss, and control. This restriction has tended to hold down marketings and has limited the producer's freedom to agree to sell his commodity at the best price obtainable, USDA officials explained. The manner in which loan collateral is released to the buyer remains unchanged under the new regulations. In the case of grains and similarly handled commodities, loan collateral will be released only upon the written request of the producer and written authorization by the county office of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service at the time of the release. In the case of cotton, a producer who gives written release of his warehouse receipts to a buyer or other person to whom he transfers his stocks must present the release to the County ASCS Office within 30 days. The county office, as in the past, will not release CCC's security interest in the loan collateral until the loan has been repaid. 1 iiyWStrvlct |W.N.T?MIR,SR.| lOlfetoA*. ItMford, N.C. 29379 FOR RENT: Mobile Home spaces less than 1 mile from city limits. Located near North Raeford Tire station and Burlington Mill. If interested call 843-4718 collect. 8P HI neighbor! Tried Blue Lustre for cleaning carpets? It's super! Rent electric shampooer SI. Raeford Hardware Co. 8-12C MEN (17-35) Guaranteed assignment to Europe. The US Army is accepting applications for a minimum 16 month tour in Infantry, Armor, or Artillery career fields. For complete information call SFC Cox of SSG Bartlett at 739-7236. 8C WOMEN (18-33) Are you tired of your present routine? Do you wish for travel, meeting people, and exciting work? The Women's Army Corps has many skills available for qualified young women. For complete information call SFC Cox or SSG Bartlett at 739-7236. 8C MEN (17-35) Guaranteed assignment to Hawaii, Panama, Alaska, Europe. The US Army is accepting applications for a minimum 16 month tour in Infantry, Armor, or Artillery career fields. For complete information call 483-7855, Box 495, Fayetteville. 8-12C WOMEN (18-35) Are you tired of your present routine? Do you wish for travel, meeting people, and exciting work? The Women's Army Corps has many skills available for qualified young women. For complete information call 483-7855, Box 495, Fayetteville. 8-12C FOR SALE: 1969 Volkswagen, green, extra clean. Call 875-3437. 8-9P FOR RENT: 3 bedroom House, 202 West 5th Ave. Available July 1. J.D. Hall, Rt. 1, Red Springs. N.C., 843-5814. 8P FREE: Kittens. Call 875-4609. 8P FOR SALE: Dodge pick-up, new engine. Call 875-2554 after 5 p.m. 8C FOR RENT: Oecan front cottage, Holden's Beach, $135 Call 875-2775. 8P SECURITY GUARDS If you would like to work the U.S. Open Golf Tournament in Southern Pines, please write to: Pinkerton's, Inc., 1179 Commercia I Ave., Charlotte, N.C. 28201. Giving name, address, telephone number. Must have clean police record. Equal opportunity employer. FOR SALE: Floor fan, Westinghouse in good condition. Call 87S-2I2I HELP WANTED: Newspaper Dealer. Route now open in Wagram, S300 a month. Must live in or near Wagram. Call 484-8896 or write James P. Barbour, Box, 853, Fayetteville.N.C. 28304. 7-9C SINGER Zig ? Zag in cabinet, repossessed for non payment. Does fancy sewing, buttonholes. Interested party can pay balance of S69 cash or in payments. For details call 692-3348 collect. Southern Pines. TFC WANTED: Salesman or Distributor. Oldest company of its kind. Part - time salesman. 58,000 ? SI0,000, full - time. SI5,000. Distributor, S25.000 ? 530,000 per yr. W'rite giving full resume to Lo-Heat. P.O. Box 669, Lumberton. N.C. 7-9P FOR SALE: 3 bedroom brick house, den - kitchen combination, living and dining combination, 2 full baths, forced air, electric heat and air condition, 2 car garage, utility room, screened back porch. Pay equity, assume 5'j loan. College Drive, Raeford. Call 875-2208 after 4:30 P.M. TFC TRACTOR ? TRAlLtR DRIVERS NEEDED (Experience is not Necessary) Must have a good driving record and be in good health. To train for local and over - the - road hauling. For application, call 704-394-4320 or write NATION WIDE SEMI DIVISION, 3313 Bellmen Blvd., Charlotte. North Carolina 28216. 7-KP Exterminate for roaches, waterbugs, ants, l ice termite inspection. Call 944 2474, Aberdeen Exterminating Co.. Aberdeen. 51-24P Imagine No More Septic lank Troubles. Get ROEB1C k- * and K-57. Mone\ Kuk guarantee. (It Works). ROEBIC K-77 eliminates roots RaoU :U Hardware Company. i-i:c WORK WANTED: Have John Deere tractor mowei *ill mow. Satisfaction guaranteed. C:i II Dooie Leach, 875-2454. IFC I OR RENT: 3 bedroom house on 628 h. Donaldson. Call 875-3924. TR G & H CONCRETE FINISHING CO. CARPORT - DRIVEWAYS WALKS - PATIOS FLOORS FREE ESTIMATES Call Evenings After 6 875-2373 FOR SALE: 30" Ke Electric Range. Cot tee thru door. Call 875^4813 6-8C FOR RENT OR SALE: 2 bedroom house, completely paneled, tile floors, stairway to attic sloiage. Call 875-4587. TFC FOR SALE" Gleam r Combine, mode! 1 . ( all 8"7<-.:UX.\ TFC FACED WITH A DRINKING PROBLEM? perhaps Alcoholic Anonymous can help. Call 875-2025. Weekly meetings open u> the public. \Vednesda> 8:15 p.m. ? (Building Rael'ord. COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE at BOBBY CARTER'S TIRE SERVICE SOUTH MAIN STREET D?w?y In man Repair Sorvict ROOFING CARPENTRY PLUMBING REPAIR PAINTING HEAT & AIR CONC PHONE 876-itEo lUtfORD WHEEL ALIGNMENT NEW TtNES and RE CAPPING MtDCN AIDS TIRE RECAP. SERVICE PHONE 875 207" 111 RACKET A I. L E V 8 STEWART STREET 3-ROOK APARTMENTS FOR RENT Air Condition*1!) Refold Hotr Buililioy See Erneii CartVM yfi*. or Phon? 8?b 3CbB Uay 875 3492 M.ght WHEEL ALIGNMENT SERVICE: of BOBBY CAftTttf w TIRE SERVJ CE SOUTH MAIM STf.? FT ? Central Heat ?Builtln Ranges ? City Water ?Paved Drives 1 OPiNm'USi'rUN DAY 2 P.M. - 5 P.M. WE INVITE YOU TO COME 00T AND INSPECT THESE BEAOTIFUL ! THE ANSWER IS YES Wl HAVI NIW NOMIS RIADY TO OCCUPY IN ! Oakdale Estates Subdivision AND ARE BUILDING MORE - THESE HOMES FEATURE I *3 or 4 Bedroom Brick Homes | .u?.... You may qualify for a FHA 235 loan with only | a $200 down payment and low monthly payments. [North State Realty Co. s NIQHT PHONE 276 2914 SSKLi Jim Graham LAURINBURG N C Jarry Paele I 276-3005 * C 276-0517 CALL LS COLLECT TO SEE IF YOl Ql'VLIEY. WE WILL MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE YOl
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1971, edition 1
11
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75