Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Dec. 16, 1982, edition 1 / Page 13
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Area Incidents Hoke Deputies Arrest 5 In Break-Ins Break-ins and thefts from homes and other property occupied much of the time of Hoke County Sheriff's Department officers in recent weeks but they arrested and charged at least five suspects and recovered some allegedly stolen property. Three men were caught and charged December 6 with breaking and entering, and larceny from Duffle Grocery on Rt. 3, Red Springs, Sheriff David M. Barr ington reported. The men, arrested not long after the store was broken into, are listed as Bruce Miller, Oscar William Davis, Jr., 22 of Hope Mills, and David Glenn Perry, 18. A total of $506.51 worth of mer chandise and money was stolen from the grocery but all but S100 in silver coins and the cash register drawer valued at $100 were found by the investigating officers. Bobby Vanoy, 18, of Rt. 2, Raeford, and Marvin McRae, 20, of East Orange, N.J, were arrested and charged with breaking and entering, and larceny, after McPhatter Quick Stop on Rt. 2, Raeford, was entered late Friday or early Saturday, and $289.35 worth of foods, wine, beer, a radio, and a cassette player were stolen. In another break-in, committed late Saturday or early Sunday, $1,533 worth of property was stolen from Friendship Grove Church on U.S. 401 north near Raeford. The stolen articles in cluded two microphones, a five piece drum set, a two-piece public address system, four speakers, a seven-piece Holy Family set, food, a cooking pot, and a cooler. Cyrus Peterkin, 1143 Gardenia St., Shawtown, reported someone broke into his home Thursday or Friday and stole an $830 television set. Richard Blattner, Rt. 4, Raeford, reported someone stole the battery from his 1968 Chevrolet pickup truck Saturday or Sunday. Tim McCoy reported Saturday someone stole a $100 wall mirror from an unocccupied mobile home at his Village Mobile Home Park on Rt. 1, Raeford. The window of a car parked at Brady's Club on N.C. 211 east was broken while the owner, Oscar Lee, Jr., of Red Springs was away. A 1980 Chevrolet Chevette own ed by Gail Anne Pate was damaged by fire of undetermined cause about 6:45 p.m. Sunday after the owner left the vehicle when it developed mechanical trouble in the Quewhiffle area. Pate told of ficers she saw fire under the hood when she returned to the car after trying to get help at a nearby store. She said she then called the fire department. The car was valued at $4,000. Raeford Police Chief Leonard Wiggins reported his department received the following complaints recently. Patrick Holland, 403 Harris Ave., reported December 8 some one stole a pair of speakers worth $79.95 from his car. Connie Wall, Raeford Apart ments, was arrested and charged with shoplifting a $1.29 bottle of wine from The Grocery Mart, West Prospect Ave., Thursday after the management notified police of the shoplifting. Sadie Wright, Rt. 1, Box 162A, Raeford, reported Friday money, a wedding ring set, perfume and cosmetics valued at a total $839 were taken from her purse she had left under a counter at B.C. Moore's while she was working there. Jerry Lewis, 221 E. Prospect Ave., reported Saturday a tool box containing $350 worth of tools was taken from the Western Auto Store service truck he operated. He said the box was taken while the truck was parked behind the store. A juvenile was apprehended and turned over to juvenile authorities after a Mack's Store employee reported a shoplifting. The child was accused of taking a 59 cent water gun. Ashley Burrell reported his coat containing a pair of eye glasses was gone from the rack in Raeford Presbyterian Church when he returned to get it Monday after at tending a church lunch. The coat and glasses are valued at S 1 85 total. Baker Completes Basic Army National Guard Pvt . Michael G. Baker, son of James N. Baker of Aberdeen and Sybil M.H. Gardner of 124 Derby Drive. Rocky Mount, has completed basic training at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. During the training, students received instruction in drill and ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, military justice, first aid, and Ar my history and traditions. Investigations Continuing In Arson, Robbery Investigations arc continuing but no arrests have been made in the burning of the Nashville Music club and the armed robbery at Mc Quage's Grocery and Hardware, Hoke County Sheriff David M. Barrington said Tuesday. Nashville Music was reported burned about 3 a.m. December 1, with three masked men involved. The club is on N.C. 211 east near the Robeson County border. The SBI Arson Division is assisting the Hoke sheriff's department in the investigation. Two men, and possibly a third person, are being sought for the armed robbery at McQuage's about 5:30 p.m. December 6. A man armed with a pistol reportedly forced Jimmy McQuage, the owner of the business, to lie down, then took about $350 in cash and about $100 worth of jewelry on sale and left the scene in a 1980 or '81 gray or silver Pontiac Trans Am with a wind scoop on the back. The man with the gun, which ap peared to be a blue steel .38 pistol with a four-inch barrell, was described as an Indian 18 to 20 years old, about 5 feet 8 inches tall and weighing about 130 pounds. He had long black hair and was wearing faded blue jeans and a dark blue cotton windbreaker. The other man also was describ ed as an Indian about 5 feet 8, weighing about 130 pounds, and 18 to 20 years old. He had black, collar-length hair and was wearing faded blue jeans and a dark blue cotton windbreaker. Waste Ordinance Held (Continued from page I ) member Dr. Ramnik Zota said, adding that the physicians should be compensated for the work. "A* long as there is no formal contract, and we can help, we are glad to," Zota said. Efforts will be made to get the commission to set aside approx imately $200 per month for each of the doctors. Those wages will pay the doctors almost $4 per hour for the work they do at the center, Home said. "That's a pretty good bargin for the service we are getting," he add ? ed. Board members also voted to approach .the commission. . about pay raises for health center nurses. The center may loose half of its staff during the next few months, and because of the low pay scale, it could be impossible to fill the vacancies with qualified persons, Home said. In order to offer more money to nurse applicants, nurses, who are on the staff now, must receive raises, Home said. Many of those nurses were caught in the county's wage freeze and are being paid below the pre sent registered nurse scale of other counties in the state, he added. In still further business, the board voted to apply for a $5,000 to $7,500 grant to set up a hypertension program. If the state funds are awarded, then a program of working with and screening industry employees would be established, Home said. Artificial Heart Surgeon Worked At McCain Hospital T^e surgeon who implanted the artificial heart in the chest of Dr. Barney Clark in the historic opera tion of December 2 served at Mc Cain Hospital for four months in 1975, John Watson, McCain ad ministrator, said Thursday. The doctor, William DeVries, headed a 20-member surgical team that performed the operation at Utah Medical Center where DeVries now serves. Clark, a 61 -year-old Federal Way, Wash., dentist, was the first person ever to get the device, a polyurethane pump, and the im plant was done to save his life. Clark was suffering from an in operable condition of the heart known medically as car diomyopathy. DeVries is the only physician now authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to im plant the device. Watson said DeVries served from July through October 1975 as a thoracic (chest) surgeon at Mc Cain on a Duke University Medical Center arrangement. DeVries, now 38, was studying at Duke at the time to specialize in thoracic surgery, which he is now doing. He came to Duke after graduating from medical school in Utah. Watson, who came to McCain in 1974, said the surgeon overseeing and assisting in the surgery at Mc Cain was Dr. Wilson Staub, who is practicing in Pinehurst. He said one or two chest operations were performed weekly at McCain then. McCain no longer offers such surgery. Such operations on Mc Cain patients are now performed at Moore Memorial Hospital in Pinehurst. Watson and DeVries had a good reputation at McCain. He said doctors on temporary duty from the Duke residency, which covers seven years, had to be good to be assigned to McCain. Christmas Parade Saturday 2 P.M. A. A. Meetings Wed. 8 p.m. Nursing Home Dining Room COMING DOWN This cotton seed storage building of Hoke Cotton Oil and Fertilizer Co. is being torn down. Standing behind the present Hoke Concrete Works. 220 Wilmouth St.. Raeford. the building hasn 't been used in 20 years. It was built to replace one destroyed by fire. HARDIN'S FOOD STORE ( BESIDE FIRE STA TtON) ROCKFISH. N.C. AND COLE'S FOOD STORE (Except Gasoline J MAIN ST., RAEFORD 2 LITER (Plastic Btl. ) PEPSI 99< & Other Pepsi Products GENERIC TISSUE 4 ^69' 3 LB. BAG ONIONS GIANT SIZE RINSO $ | 29 50 LB. BAG DOG FOOD * 5 99 10 LBS. POTATOES 89* TALL CAN ZEST SALMON $|49 OYSTERS $2" Pint 2 LONG LOAVES GOLDEN CRUST BREAD 89* 3 LB. CAN CRISCO w/'10 Food Order Smoked picnic 79* i FRESH FISH Dressed Daily ALL STAR FEED ALL KINDS AT REASONABLE PRICES GASOLINE *1.12* *1.17* REGULAR UNLEADED GAS Hardin s at Rock fish ONL Y OPEN 7 DAYS 6 a.m. 11 p.m irockfishi r f ' v DRIVE OUT & SAVE WITH THESE GREAT FOOD & GASOLINE SAVINGS CHRISTMAS Grady Hardin. Manager, Rockfish PARADE SAT., 2 P.M. 875-2201 WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC VOUCHERS Holiday Greetings fro ii) fljc Bargaiif ?arp NOW UNTIL CHRISTMAS Only % Down, Puts Any Item In Lay-A-Way After Christmas, It Will Take % Down To Put In Lay-A-Way SO DO YOUR LAY-A-WAYiNG NOW AT % DOWN DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING WITH US. AND SAVE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE WE WILL BE OPEN UNTIL 11:00 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY. SUNDAY 1:00 P.M. TILL 6:00 P.M. Como In And Roglstmr For A It Pound Country Hem, To Be Qfvon Awey Doc. 24th. You Do Not Hove To Be Present To Win. We Will Co* You The 24th. Our Customer* Are The Boat People In The SmndhMs. We Have Many, Many Naw Itama And Toya At Diacount Prlcss. Wa Have T.V.'a, Radios, Dinette Set. End Tables Wood Stovs, Oil Stove. New And Uaad Toole. Staraoa, Cheat Of Drawara, Draaaar With Mirror. New Kelvinator Electric Dryer, - Just To Nama A Faw. So Now la tho Tims To Msfcs A VWt To Tha Bargain Bom, ? MNss Wsst Of Wosford On Rt. 211. \ t / ? > A ? mmmj * \ A / - - - v . y - ? ' ' ' " ' (i MEFRY CHRISTMAS
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Dec. 16, 1982, edition 1
13
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