Driver who flipped his in the village station parking lot faces charges

Brian Hans Sealey, 37, of Columbia Avenue in Lumberton, accused of drunk driving, drunk driving, careless driving, licensed driving, open container, seatbelt violation and lane failure, said On Friday, Lumberton Police Major Tommy Barnes.

The turn of fate occurred at approximately 8:36 p.m. On Tuesday, while Sealey was driving his 2005 Nissan vehicle southeast on Kahn Drive, Barnes said. The vehicle came off the road on the right and overturned, spinning in the parking lot of the Village station.

Sealey was airlifted to an undisclosed hospital with a damaged arm, he said. The extension of his injuries and an update on his condition were available friday.

Sealey was not placed in the Robeson County detention center on Friday afternoon.

Orrum’s iconic reopens with a new name, looks

TV book – August 29, 2020

LUMBERTON – Two other people were hospitalized after a vehicle collision Friday morning on Starlite Drive, according to the State Highway Patrol.

The turn of fate occurred at approximately 0609 when a Chevrolet S10 pickup truck passed through Kenneth Worley from Lumberton west on Starlite Drive. The van collided with the back of a Ford Mustang, operated through Adrian Blanks of Rowland, who parked on the road, the Trooper J.L. Locklear said. The road was not well lit at the time of the turn of fate.

Both men were taken to an undisclosed hospital with minor injuries, Locklear said.

Infantrymen are also investigating whether Blanks had his lighting fixtures at the time of the crash, the Trooper D.B. Strickland says.

No fees had been filed on Friday afternoon, Strickland said.

LUMBERTON – A 47-year-old Lumberton woman died Friday morning in a car tour of fate in Rowland.

Kimberly Locklear died after not giving in to a tow truck approaching Dew and Union School Roads at approximately 9:04 a.m., the sergeant. S.b. Lewis, State of The Angels Highway Patrol. The semi-trailer, driven through 65-year-old Kenneth White, from Fayetteville, was traveling east on Union School Road when it collided with Locklear’s southbound vehicle.

Both cars left the road on the right, Locklear’s vehicle perched on the roof and the side semitrailer.

White was taken to the Southeast Regional Medical Center for minor injuries and Locklear was pronounced dead at the scene, Lewis said. No deficiencies are suspected in the accident.

LUMBERTON – Charges have been filed for a single-vehicle destination spin that resulted in a vehicle dumped in the Village Station parking lot.

Brian Hans Sealey, 37, of Columbia Avenue in Lumberton, accused of drunk driving, drunk driving, careless driving, licensed driving, open container, seatbelt violation and lane failure, said On Friday, Lumberton Police Major Tommy Barnes.

The turn of fate occurred at approximately 8:36 p.m. On Tuesday, while Sealey was driving his 2005 Nissan vehicle southeast on Kahn Drive, Barnes said. The vehicle came off the road on the right and overturned, spinning in the parking lot of the Village station.

Sealey was airlifted to an undisclosed hospital with a damaged arm, he said. The extension of his injuries and an update on his condition were available friday.

Sealey was not placed in the Robeson County detention center on Friday afternoon.

ORRUM – A must-see in this small town that has reopened after being closed for more than a year.

The store closed shortly after the death in 2016 of former owner Robert Wilkes. And his new co-owner, Abraham Obaid, seeks to restore the city’s collector’s position to its former glory.

Obaid and other business partners operate approximately 10 retail outlets in Lumberton, Fayetteville, Shannon, Red Springs and Elizabethtown. Obaid said he and his brother Adam were passionate about researching and serving older convenience retailers that involve “a lot of history and pride.”

“I like to go to retail stores in the country like that,” Obaid said.

A first opening rite will be held at a later date, once the fitness inspection has been carried out and the store will be able to open its grill, he said. Free food samples will be held at this event.

The store, which will employ five people, will begin promoting hot dogs, burgers, pizzas, chips and other classic foods in the coming weeks, he said.

And the rest of the people in town are in a position to have the staff take care of the grill.

“The chain wants the store and we’ve missed it since it closed,” Mayor Wilton Caulder said.

He remembers attending the Orrum General store for his lunches and plans to model the food of the new store, Caulder said.

Many city citizens stopped to ask questions about the store’s opening during the following month, Tabatha Chavis, who works at fuel station 76 near Lumberton High School, which passes through Obaid.

Chavis worked at the Orrum Registry on Thursday morning as citizens stopped to buy food and gasoline.

“I’m glad to see you open, man. There are many other people who are happy to see it open,” said Gene Walters, an Orrum resident.

Gasoline costs are moderate for Lumberton fuel stations, he said.

“Now it’s more like Orrum, reopening the store, ” said Jeanette Walters, Gene’s wife.

Lumberton resident Jocelyn Perry prevented me from passing through the fuel station to move to street paints at Community Innovation. He would prevent at the old store for lunch, instead of moving to Fairmont or Lumberton during his lunch hour, Perry said.

Perry said the store was “more convenient” and said he would soon be out for lunch.

“It’s going to be good, ” said Chavis.

He’s been hiring lately. You can contact him at his new number, 910-628-8573.

LAC CHARLES, Louisiana – One of the most powerful hurricanes that ever hit America, Laura crossed Louisiana on Thursday, cutting roofs, killing at least six other people and maintaining fierce strength as a destructive trail of many miles inland opened.

A full assessment of the damage caused through the category four formula would likely take days. But despite a trail of demolished buildings, entire neighborhoods left in ruins and more than 875,000 people without electricity, a sense of relief prevailed that Laura did not run the annihilating risk that meteorologists feared.

“It is transparent that we have not suffered or suffered the absolute catastrophic damage that we think is likely,” said Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards. “But we’ve been in great harm.”

He called Laura the strongest hurricane that hit Louisiana, meaning she even overcame Katrina, who was a Category 3 typhoon when she hit in 2005.

The maximum hurricane wind speed of 241 km/h (150 mph) ranks it among the toughest systems ever recorded in the United States. remained a tropical storm.

The typhoon hit the Louisiana lowlands and affected Lake Charles, a commercial city and casino for 80,000 people. On Broad Street, many buildings had partially collapsed and those that had not needed parts. The windows flew, the awnings ripped off and the trees split in two in a strangely distorted way. Police saw a floating casino loose and hit a bridge. At the local airport, the planes overturned, some more sensitive than others.

In front of the courthouse, a Confederate statue that the local government had voted for to hold in place a few days earlier. After Laura, she knocked down.

“It looks like a thousand tornadoes have passed through here. It’s destruction everywhere,” said Brett Geymann, who capsed the typhoon with three members of the family circle in Moss Bluff, near Lake Charles. He described Laura passing through her space with the roar of a jet engine around 2 a.m.

“There are houses that have completely disappeared. They were here yesterday, but now they’re gone,” he said.

Shortly after dawn gave the first glimpse of destruction, a huge column of visual smoke for miles began to rise from a chemical plant. Police said the leak at a facility passes through Biolab, which manufactures chemicals used in family cleaners such as Comet bleach scrub and pool chlorine powder.

Local citizens were told to close their doors and windows and turn off air conditioners. State and federal aircraft headed to the skies of the coast to look for symptoms of additional commercial damage.

The deaths included a 14-year-old woguy and a 68-year-old boy who died when the trees fell in their homes in Louisiana, as well as a 24-year-old boy who died of carbon monoxide poisoning caused by an internal generator. your house. Another man drowned in a boat that sank the storm, the government said.

There have been no deaths in Texas, which Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said would amount to “a miracle.” Chevellce Dunn herself is one of the luckiest after spending a night huddled on a couch with her son, daughter and four nieces and nephews as the winds shook their home in Orange, Texas. Without electrical power in the midst of sweltering heat, I did not know when the electrical power might be restored.

“Possibly it wouldn’t be easy. As long as my kids are fine, I’m fine,” Dunn said.

President Donald Trump makes plans to make plans to stop the Gulf Coast this weekend to take a look at the damage.

More than 580,000 coastal citizens have been evacuated in the shadow of a coronavirus pandemic and are calling for masks and social estrangement to combat its spread. It is the largest evacuation order since the start of the pandemic and many others followed it, filling hotels and sleeping in cars. Although not all fled the coast, officials attributed those who left for minimizing the loss of life.

Meteorologists had warned that the typhoon’s 15-20 foot tidal wavet would be “unsurpassed” and could grow 40 miles inland. Edwards said the typhoon’s tidal wave ended up being measured at a diversity of nine feet to 12 feet, still bad, but far from the worst prognosis. I hoped broken houses could be temporarily habitable.

Priority, Edwards said, searching and rescuing, followed efforts to locate hotel or motel rooms for those who could not stay at home. Officials in Texas and Louisiana sought to avoid classic mass shelters for evacuees for fear of coVID-19 spread, and Edwards was concerned that the typhoon would save him coronavirus tests as schools and universities reopen.

Bucky Millet, 78, of Lake Arthur, Louisiana, thought of still evacuating to weather the typhoon with his circle of relatives due to considerations of coronavirus. He said a small tornado blew the canopy of his truck’s bed and made him think the roof of his space would be next.

“You hear a crack and a and everyone trembles, ” he said.

Laura’s wind force blew through all the windows of the Lake Charles space living room where Bethany August survived the typhoon with her sister and two others. They sought protection in a closet when the hurricane was at its worst.

“It was like a jigsaw in that closet. We were more sensitive to each other, we just hugged and cried,” Aug said.

The typhoon is so strong that it can regain strength after turning eastward and reaching the Atlantic Ocean, potentially threatening the densely populated northeast.

Laura hit the United States after killing about two dozen other people on Hispaniola Island, adding 20 in Haiti and 3 in the Dominican Republic, where it cut off the force and caused heavy flooding.

It is the seventh named typhoon to hit the United States this year, setting a new record for American lands in late August. The last record of six in 1886 and 1916, according to Phil Klotzbach, hurricane researcher at Colorado State University.

Laura was tied with five other typhoons in the fifth-largest hurricane in the United States, the 1935 Labor Day typhoon, Camille from 1969, Andrew from 1992 and Charley in 2004, Klotzbach said.

Associated Press participants come with Jeff Martin in Marietta, Georgia; Kevin McGill in New Orleans; John L. Mone in Holly Beach, Louisiana; Paul J. Weber in Austin, Texas; Seth Borenstein in Kensington, Maryland; Juan A. Lozano in Houston; Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Alabama; Jill Bleed in Little Rock, Arkansas; and Sophia Tulp in Atlanta.

St. Pauls Police Officer Dwight Atkinson moves boxes Thursday afternoon a distribution of food and hygiene items while driving in the parking lot of St. Pauls High School. Volunteers at the Church and Robeson County Network Center worked with St. Paul Police to serve about 200 city citizens, distributing six pallets of food.

The artist of Pembroke D.J. “Cowboy” Brooks lends his prowess to the place where the Lumberton covered flea market is located by giving market-place posters a new coat of paint on Thursday. Brooks has been a regular at the flea market site on Second Street for 8 years and has painted 3 artworks inside.

The Holy United Pentecostal Church, at 2300 Gavintown Road, Lumberton, will sponsor an hour-long parking appreciation parade on Saturday from 6 p.m. 7 p.m. honoring Sister Irene Curry. Everyone’s invited. For more information, call 910-734-6173.

Let’s go

Power in Prayer Ministry, an online convention prayer ministry, takes position Saturday morning from 6:15 a.m. to 6:30 a.m. anywhere over the phone. Call 605-475-4120 to participate (ID number – 3390591). The user in the rhythm of prayer is Sister Shelia Caviness-Branyon. Email a prayer request to [email protected].

Refuge Christian Center, at 111 S. Railroad St. in Rowland, operates the Sunday school at 10 a.m.; Sunday adoration at 11 a.m.; Wednesday Prayer at 6 p.m. Bible Study at 7 p.m. Reverend S. Lomax Bryant is the pastor.

The Fairmont Ministerial Alliance meets on the third Saturday of the month and the two at Jonesville Baptist Church, 327 Mill Branch Road, Fairmont. Breakfast is at 8:30 a.m. The assembly begins at 9:00 a.m. New members are welcome. Dr. Martine Spencer is the president.

Expanding the Vision of Kingdom Ministries, at 101 Industrial Drive in Fairmont, meets on Sundays for the Christian Life Class at 10 a.m., and for the morning cult at 11:30 a.m. The Bible exam is conducted on Tuesdays at 6 p.m. The Apostle Marcia Lassiter is the shepherd. The phone number is 910-280-0509.

The Tabernacle Baptist Church, at N.C.711 in Pembroke, has a Sunday school at 9:45 a.m.; Sunday Worship Service at 11 a.m.; and Bible examination on Wednesday night for youth and youth at 7 p.m. The Reverend Henry Oxendine is the shepherd.

Bethany Christian Fellowship, at 307 S. Jones St. in Pembroke, runs Sunday school at 10 a.m. and Sunday worship at 11 a.m. The Bible exam is performed on Wednesdays at 7 p.m. The Reverend Charles P. Locklear is the shepherd.

The Center for the Liberation of the Deepest Truth, at 6154 Wire Grass Road in Orrum, meets for Sunday school from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. and the morning cult at 11:30 a.m. The Bible exam is performed Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Reverend Cycachee Scott is the shepherd.

Greater McKoy’s Chapel, Inc., at 284 Centre Road in Dublin, organizes Sunday school at 10 a.m. and the morning cult at 11 a.m. on Sundays. Pastoral Sundays are the second, third and fourth Sundays; and the day of deacons and deacons or ministers and the day of the Christian woman take place on the first Sunday. JPCW is at 6:00 p.m. and Bible examination at 7 p.m. Wednesdays. Dr. Delora A. LeSane is the shepherd.

Smyrna Baptist Church, in 8003 N.C., 211 East Lumberton, meets for Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. and worship service at 11 a.m. The morning Bible exam is at 11 a.m. on Wednesdays and night service is at 7:30 p.m. The Reverend Carl Pevia is the pastor of the church. For more information, call 910-733-2592, 910-774-0707.

Crown of Life Outreach Ministries, 127A. E. Broad St. in St. Pauls meets every Sunday to pray at 10 a.m., Sunday school at 10:30 a.m. and morning worship at 11 a.m. Every Saturday, there is a prayer at noon. There’s a Bible exam Monday at 7:00 p.m. Pastor Kenneth R. McAllister is the pastor of the church. For more information, call 910-316-5712 or 910-774-6376.

LUMBERTON – Southeastern Health executives announced Thursday the postponement of the Community Health Awards rite scheduled for October.

“SeHealth’s control has taken the decision to postpone this year’s event, which historically takes place in October, spring 2021 in the hope that COVID-19 will no longer be a widespread fitness challenge for the community,” is read in part from Southeast Health.

Since 2013, Southeastern Health has organized an annual Community Health Awards opportunity to celebrate the efforts of many others in the region who have worked for the fitness of others.

The Southeastern Health Awards allowed the organization to recognize companies, churches, lifeguards, educators, and health professionals who have more than others.

An example of an award on the occasion is the Lifetime Achievement Award. Those honored to lead fitness efforts come with Dr. Martin Brooks, Dr. Stephen Bridgers, Dr. Jerry Devine, Dr. D.E. Ward, robeson County Retired District Attorney Johnson Britt and Dr. Thomas Walden.

“We look to the assembly in the spring to continue our culture of celebrating the winners of the long-term fitness awards for their tireless efforts to provide our network with opportunities and resources for general fitness,” reads below.

LUMBERTON – More effective expanding the Internet in rural North Carolina will be a priority for two Robeson County lawmakers when the General Assembly meets Wednesday for a brief session.

Sen. Danny Britt Jr., a Lumberton Republican, is among the state legislators who have pointed to increased investment in the Growth of Rural Economies with Access to Technology program, or GREAT Scholarship in 2020 ahead of the brief September session. Britt and other lawmakers expect to inject $30 million of federal CARES cash into the program to fund some other set of awards by 2020.

“From day one, the GREAT program has benefited rural North Carolina, adding Robeson and Columbus counties,” Britt said. “Access to a reliable Internet is a game changer for our business community, our school systems, and our lives. Ensuring that our students and small business owners have access to a reliable Internet is more vital than ever.”

The legislature allocated $24 million to the program this year, according to lawmakers. In 2020, more than $12 million in grants were awarded to expand to 8,017 families and 254 businesses in 11 counties.

“As a rural county, we are fighting for our youth to have the Internet. It’s in the minds of many parents and teachers. It’s a challenge to public education,” said Rep. Charles Graham, a Lumberton Democrat.

The challenge of Internet access has been around for years and probably won’t be solved next week, however, lawmakers will have to work bipartisanly to get equivalent opportunities for young people in rural Robeson County, Graham said.

“So I’m going to advocate for greater investment for the Internet in rural counties through the GREAT Grant Program,” he said. “I need to see more investment for the GREAT grant program.”

Senate Leader Phil Berger showed Thursday that the factor will be discussed as the General Assembly resumes next week.

“Yes, lawmakers will talk about the additional $30 million for the GREAT program next week. This is one of many laws that the General Assembly will consider assigning the remaining investment of the CARES Act,” said one from Berger’s office.

Support for increased investment for the GREAT program follows Friday’s announcement that regional communications company ATMC has won two grants totaling $2.5 million to expand Internet service to communities in Columbus and Robeson counties.

ATMC, based at SHALLotte, was one of 8 investment recipients in the time phase of the NC GREAT Grant broadband program. Cash will be used to expand high-speed Internet service to serve more than 2,000 homes in the Fair Bluff and Boardman communities of Columbus County, and Robeson County communities in Orrum and Proctorville. ATMC will need to provide an additional $1 million budget for all those projects.

“High-speed Internet allows the user to expand their globalization beyond their wildest imagination,” said Senator Bob Steinburg, Chowan Republican. “Murphy’s academics in Manteo lose their critical learning because they don’t have access to the Internet. As distance learning becomes a new standard, it is imperative that we invest in this infrastructure.”

The General Assembly created the GREAT programme in 2018. Since then, lawmakers have continued to prioritize investment to expand broadband, although Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed investment in 2018 and 2019, according to a set of Republican lawmakers.

“When we created the GREAT program in 2018, it was cutting edge and has become a style for other states,” said Representative Dean Arp, R-Union. “This pandemic only underscores the common desire to continue investing in this program. Investing in rural broadband is an investment in North Carolina’s future.”

In May, the General Assembly approved $11 million for more Home Wi-Fi, $35 million for electronic remote learning devices, and $1 million for Wi-Fi buses, according to lawmakers’ statement. In September, the Legislature expects to allocate another $10 million to Internet problems for K-12 students.

“This investment strengthens the Commitment of the Senate and House to connect our students, parents, and online learning resources, regardless of the demanding situations we face,” said Rep. Jason Saine, R-Lincoln.

The brief sessions of the North Carolina General Assembly are regularly convened only for budget matters, appointments, and appointments for forums and organizations.

The brief session, which begins on Wednesday, is expected to last one day, with the legislators’ assembly on Wednesday and the return home on Thursday. But the final resolution, also known as Senate Bill 870, passed on June 26, was passed sine die, meaning lawmakers left the door open to stay longer to deal with problems they believe they want resolved immediately.

One of the upheavals may simply be Governor Cooper’s spending proposal, which he announced Wednesday. The proposal includes concepts on how to spend the remaining federal state aid dollars COVID-19. Cooper also needs a quick adjustment to the government’s annual spending plan, which began on July 1.

The Democratic governor said he was looking to spend an additional $559 million on state dollars on things like crisis relief and education for at-risk students. It needs instructor bonuses far beyond what Republican lawmakers passed in June. Cooper also needs Medicaid expansion and more than $5 billion in proposed new debt for investment and infrastructure projects.

Rep. Graham will “continue very strongly” to expand Medicaid in the next session.

“We threw the can on the road in our last sessions and we didn’t do anything,” he said. “This is a serious fear for many North Carolinans and more than 13,000 uninsured citizens of Robeson County. This is an opportunity to give them the opportunity to close the fitness policy gap. It’s an ethical issue.”

Republicans have criticized Cooper’s spending plan. They call it a dicy proposal to “spend now, pray after” that is 4 months late.

LUMBERTON – Robeson Community College, Southeastern Health and other organizations are doing their paintings to combat road traffic deaths, the county attorney said Thursday.

There were 36 traffic-related deaths in Robeson County between January and July 2020, thirteen more than 23 reported at the same time in 2019, according to the North Carolina Department of Transportation. There were 31 fatal vehicle injuries between January and July 2020, an increase of 48% over the same time in 2019.

“We have made progress in combining and highlighting a major public protection factor for Robeson County,” said Grady Hunt, president of Robeson County’s Vision Zero Working Group and a member of the North Carolina Transportation Council. “But we’ll have to be vigilant. We still have a lot of pictures to do.”

But projects such as the Saved through the Belt protection class, the DWI Treatment Court and defensive driving courses have been put in a position to save lives, said Matt Scott, a Robeson County attorney. Scott briefed attendees Thursday on the systems at a virtual meeting.

“We have partnered with several agencies and teams to resolve the disruptions we face on our roads throughout Robeson County,” Scott said.

Defensive Driving and Alive at 25 show up at the RCC to other people who register after receiving an urgent fine. Both courses are taught through State Highway Patrol infants and are designed to ensure driving habits. Classes began in January.

The elegance of defensive driving goals to adults. I live with 25 goals, other people over the age of 15 to 24, according to the Alive at 25 website.

“Traffic injuries are the leading cause of death among adolescents and account for 44% of adolescent deaths in the United States,” reads on the website.

Robeson Community College is one of the few schools in the state that does not offer courses, Scott said.

“Knowing all this, at the DA we brought the RCC to the table,” he said.

Once participation in the course increases, he hopes to get something into class, Scott said.

According to NCDOT, there was a 53% increase in the death toll of others who were not wearing road belts between January and July 2020 compared to the same time in 2019. In 2019, seven deaths were reported due to – wearing seat belts in the event of an accident, and 15 in 2020.

Saved through the belt is a course that addresses this problem, Scott said. The course began in September 2019 and 243 other people have completed it since March 30.

The loose course allows others with seat belt violations to attend a two-hour course at Southeastern Health to cancel the first-price ticket.

The DWI Treatment Court continues to take care of drinking and driving in the county, with two participants whose lives have passed since joining the program, he said.

During a medical examination, which is of the program, the two patients were informed through a doctor that they had two months to live, the prosecutor said.

“Now that they are sober, they effectively approve our program and get the medical remedy they need to solve the underlying problems,” Scott said.

COVID-19 has delayed or delayed some courses.

Saved through the Belt categories stopped in March due to restrictions and resumed on June 20 with player selection, social estrangement and category reduction and instructors, Scott said. As of August 22, Southeastern Health has launched 20 seat belt protection courses. The redress court resumed in July.

In other road protection news, NCDOT is achieving pedestrian traffic protection in 17 cities, adding Lumberton, Whiteville, Charlotte and Fayetteville, which account for approximately 56% of pedestrian injuries across the state.

Recommendations for progressive protection are expected until March 2021.

A signage assignment is also being carried out on county sidewalks, focusing on adding or replacing complex signals and speed warnings in curves with track exit collision history. The assignment began in April and investigations are expected to be completed in November, according to Brian Mayhew, a road protection engineer at NCDOT.

The assignment “identified 27 sections of the road with more than two hundred curves,” Mayhew said.

In 2019, statewide rural lane exit collisions accounted for approximately 58% of all lane exit collisions, 76% of deaths, and approximately 79% of serious injuries, according to NCDOT.

“Focusing on the curves that have a turn in the history of fate is another vital tool we can use to motivate the protection of force and save lives right here in Robeson County,” Grady Hunt said.

The following thefts reported Wednesday and Thursday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office:

Valarie Martone, Smith Farm Road, St. Pauls; George Treminio, Nealy Avenue, Lumberton; Allysia Canady, Biggs Road, Lumberton; Nancy Maynor, Lovette Road, Lumberton; Leander Locklear, Hayes Locklear Road, Pembroke; and Maggie Collins, Red Hill Road, Maxton.

The following thefts reported Wednesday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office:

James Cade, Bollinger Avenue, Lumberton; Candice Lawson, Wire Grass Road, Orrum; Shirley Scott, U.S. 301, Maxton; Sandra Jacobs, Morrison Road, Maxton; and Charles Spivey, Centerville Church Road, Fairmont.

Derrick Pratt reported Wednesday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office that he assaulted someone with a gun on Oxendine School Road in Maxton.

James Pittman, of N.C.131 in Bladenboro, told the Lumberton Police Department Wednesday that he was the victim of a robbery at Sun-DO Kwik Shop at 5111 Fayetteville Road in Lumberton.

Kaid Nagi, of Cedar Creek Road in Fayetteville, reported Wednesday to the Lumberton Police Department that he stole cigarettes from the Tobacco Brothers Minit Shop, located at 2205 S. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive in Lumberton.

Hank will be available for adoption at the Robeson County Animal Protective Society. He came here with his sister, Loretta. They appear to be pointer/beagle puppies combined and are sweet and playful. They have received their vaccines and will be sterilized/sterilized or will submit a voucher for their sterilization/sterilization procedures when adopted. Call 910-738-8282 or email [email protected] to request an adoption. The Animal Protective Society is located at 3180 West Fifth St. in Lumberton.

[…]

LUMBERTON – The Robeson County Bears’ semi-professional football team will open their season on the road on Saturday after the start of the season is postponed for a week.

[…]

LUMBERTON – Two other people were hospitalized after a vehicle collision Friday morning on Starlite Drive, according to the State Highway Patrol.

[…]

LUMBERTON – A 47-year-old Lumberton woman died Friday morning in a twist of fate in Rowland.

[…]

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LUMBERTON – Charges have been filed for a single-vehicle destination spin that resulted in a vehicle dumped in the Village Station parking lot.

[…]

ORRUM – A must-see in this small town that has reopened after being closed for more than a year.

[…]

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LAC CHARLES, Louisiana – One of the most powerful hurricanes that ever hit America, Laura crossed Louisiana on Thursday, cutting roofs, killing at least six other people and maintaining fierce strength as a destructive trail of many miles inland opened.

[…]

James 3: 13-18; 5: 7-12

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St. Pauls Police Officer Dwight Atkinson moves boxes Thursday afternoon a distribution of food and hygiene items while driving in the parking lot of St. Pauls High School. Volunteers at the Church and Robeson County Network Center worked with St. Paul Police to serve about 200 city citizens, distributing six pallets of food.

[…]

[…]

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