Buy Cars and Trucks in Southern Pines, North Carolina

Chevrolet : Impala 1966 Chevrolet Impala Survivor
Chevrolet : Impala 1966 Chevrolet Impala Survivor
$3,306.00
$14,500.00
Time Left: 13h 27m
Toyota : Matrix 2003 Toyota Matrix 5-speed
Toyota : Matrix 2003 Toyota Matrix 5-speed
$4,482.00
Time Left: 15h 20m
Datsun : Z-Series 240Z 1972 Datsun 240Z
Datsun : Z-Series 240Z 1972 Datsun 240Z
$610.00 (16 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 17h 3m
Toyota : Tacoma X-Runner TOYOTA TACOMA X-RUNNER
Toyota : Tacoma X-Runner TOYOTA TACOMA X-RUNNER
$13,500.00
Time Left: 4d 15h 8m
Mazda : RX-7 Awesome 1987 Mazda RX-7 with LT1
Mazda : RX-7 Awesome 1987 Mazda RX-7 with LT1
$2,024.00 (11 Bids)
Time Left: 5d 19h 30m

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Questions Related to southern, pines cars

Provided By Y! Answers

Can these people do this? Please help. ?
Question:
I am going to make this as detailed as possible. I've tried looking things up, but I'm just at a loss. My mother and I recently moved to North Carolina after having years of trouble in Arizona. We have very little possessions, and simply planned on moving here with our pets and whatever we could stuff in our car. For months my mom looked for a job, to no avail. We have very little money available, and we considered ourselves lucky when we found a low-rent "efficiency" apartment on Craigslist. The ad read as follows: "New furnished efficiency apt with all utilities and even Direct TV, - miles to Southern Pines, Pinehurst. - minutes to Fayetteville/Sanford. No smoking indoors, no drugs. $450 plus last months rent of 450., call --- before 8pm only." (I've taken some information out; phone numbers and specific locations as they don't apply to the matter.) After months of searching, we thought we had finally found someplace to stay in the little town we wanted to live in. Of course it would only be for a few months, as the apartment was supposed to have a small kitchenette and was located in the landlady's garage. My mom talked to the woman renting out the apartment on the phone for almost a month before we arrived. They had the money for two weeks before our arrival, and new the date and time we would be there. Everything was supposedly set up (the beds, kitchenette, etc.), and they said it would all be ready when we got there. After three days of driving, we came to our new home right on time at about 9PM, tired and dirty, only to find a 20 by 20 foot shed with a small bathroom and cluttered closet, filled with grooming equipment. The landlady and her husband began moving all of their stuff out of the building and putting together the beds when we arrived, as their small children ran around, jumped on the beds, and tried to feed everything they found to our dog. After being there for two hours, we could finally get some rest. We were starving, but unfortunately the kitchenette that they had been telling us about for weeks was no where to be found. My mother cried for most of the night, and woke up crying the next morning as she found that the place was even grubbier in the light. We looked over the Craigslist ad and emails that had been sent, seeing that we had seriously been screwed over. The situation only seemed to get worse when we realized they had lied to us about how far away we really were from town. It takes thirty minutes to get anywhere, and they had previously told us it only took seven. The bathroom is 5 by 9 feet, and has an uncovered hot water heater, a shower "shell", a toilet, a sink that falling off the wall, and their dryer. When we leave the house, they come in and use the dryer without asking (they have a key). There are no smoke detectors. They never got the kitchenette. We had to buy a small dorm fridge and microwave, and we won't even attempt to buy a stove as the room is too small. It is impossible to cook anything since there is no room, so when we get hungry we often have to drive thirty minutes to eat. This is extremely inconvenient. Internet was supposed to be set up, but we had to do that as well. We had to buy two routers because their children broke the first one, and I had to network all the computers. I'm 16, and it's kind of funny that every time this lady now has a problem with her computer, she comes to me. She's also asked me to make her a website, and she even had the nerve to ask me to help her post a Craigslist ad for their old house because she didn't know how! They didn't ask us to sign a lease...and now we know why. We've been living here for almost three months. My mom still can't find a job, as it is a close knit community and you need connections to get in anywhere. They have tons of dogs (at least 16) that are always barking. They have them in cages outside, and they don't feed/water them or clean the cages. When we walk outside we get attacked by flies and the smell of dog poop. It's just not sanitary. Living with a single mom can be hard, and we thought things might get better if we moved out of Phoenix since it was getting so congested. Turns out we're in even deeper crud than before. I honestly feel this woman manipulated the situation in such a way that she would profit from it. I think it's truly wrong, as she knew we were coming from out of state, had no where else to stay, and couldn't personally come and look at the apartment. So my first question is, are they are laws that prohibit this? Can this woman post an ad on Craigslist that is selling one thing yet you get another? Are there federal laws or North Carolina state laws that require a person to have a license to rent-out an apartment? Would they even be allowed to rent this shack out? We will hopefully we out of here by the end of August, and we were just wondering if there is anything we can do to stop this from happening again to other people, and to maybe even get back the money we had to pay to live in the awful place. Any help or advice is appreciated. I'm sorry this ended up being so long. Thank you. Actually, we wanted to live in Aberdeen. My father lives there (my mother's ex-husband), and he said it would be easy to find a job at the local hospital since my mother has 10 years experience in the field. He said it was cheaper to live here, and that we would love it. We'd been planning for six months, and thought that we had found a decent place to live temporarily. I know my mother messed up when she chose this place, and she realizes she did too. She feels terrible for putting us through this. They did send pictures. Trust me, the pictures look nothing like what we ended up getting. They even sent a picture of the lake nearby, saying it was part of their property, and later told us it wasn't when we got here. Yes, we may sound stupid, but I think what these people are doing is wrong. They are taking advantage of an already sucky situation, and as parents they should not have knowingly rented this place to a single mother and her child. Debra, we have called the humane society. The landlady claims to be a "groomer and breeder of dogs", when all she is doing is running a puppy mill. So many of her animals have died in just the few months that we've been here that I don't even want to let her near my dog. She won't give us a straight answer about what the humane society said when they came here. They may not be breaking any laws renting this place to us, but they sure are doing something wrong with those dogs. Even the horses are mistreated. Thank you all so much for your help. Has anyone here seen that movie 'Funny Farm'? I feel the same way as they do in that movie. I'm surprised the mail man doesn't throw our mail at us. Thanks again for all of your help. And to 'Expert Realtor', I appreciate your answer. You live in NC, have you heard of Ellerbe? That's where this place is. When we tell people that, they look disgusted that we live out this far (it's pretty funny, actually).


Answer:
If you still have the add from craigslist (did you print it out?), take pictures of what you are living in. They totally misreprented themselves and the apartment. I would also call the Humane Society due to the dogs in cages not being taken care of properly. Call the health department, call the fire safety inspector, and call the city's Code Enforcement. They may not even have permission to rent it out. Different states and city's have different laws. You may quality for free legal aid where you are, I would find out. It sounds like to me that they may have to pay you all of the money you paid them. Call or visit the Welfare office. Apply for welfare and Section 8 housing, food stamps, free medical and help with utilities. You sound a lot worse off than some of my tenants that get help with all of that stuff. Once you get on your feet again, you can support yourselves again. These people are taking advantage of your desperate situation. Also, they shouldn't enter your dwelling without notice.

Maine shark question- help?
Question:
I'm 14 years old and I was at Pine Point beach in Southern Maine this 4th of July weekend. I was about 4 feet deep in the water. A wave pushed me back a step or two. I felt something on my foot and I moved it and felt something rake across and go in. My foot went numb, I looked in, and I saw the inside. I limped back to shore and my dad carried me to the car. At the ER they said it was about 5 inches long and 2 inches deep. I got 9 size 4 stitches that have 2b taken out in about a week. I was wondering if this could have been a shark. My dad says if it tried to bite me and I moved my foot it would've done that but my Mom says it must've been glass or something. I heard there were shark sightings at York beach but those were deeper waters and I think they were much bigger sharks. 1. Even if it isn't a shark, what type of sharks would b in waters that shallow? 2. Could it hav been a shark? (My dad says it was a sand shark but in the pictures I've seen they seem to be very small and not hav big enough teeth to cause this much damage.) As I think I said, it felt like something raked across while I was moving my foot away. So, I'm basically wondering if this would happen if a shark tried to bite.


Answer:
If it's an actual bite where you can see puncture wounds, maybe. It seems like you're describing a gash more than anything though, so I would be more inclined to think you either had a sharp finned fish run into you (still could have been a shark) or you possibly hit some sharp rocks without realizing. If it wasn't a clean cut and was a bite then it's still possible it was a shark. Many can be in as shallow as three feet of water, so it's hard to say what could have done it for sure.

If you have this paper please give me the answers?
Question:
Name___________________________ Date__________________ 20.1 The Sentence (complete Subjects and Predicates) •Practice 2 Exercise 1 Recognizing Complete Subjects and Predicates. In each sentence, underline The complete subject once and the complete predicate twice. EXAMPLE: The tall pine trees swayed in the wind. 1)The car swerved away from the child. 2)My favorite radio station plays all of the hit songs. 3)Grandfather Kim owns an art gallery in Chicago. 4)Mexico City was built on a lake. 5)The evening news summarizes the day’s events. 6)Shakespeare’s father was a glove maker. 7)Computers process information very quickly. 8)My older brother has a telephone shaped like Mickey Mouse. 9)The bags of coins were places in an armored truck. 10)Damascus, the capital of Syria, has been continuously in habited for over four thousand years. 11)Mr. Axelrod worked for years as a traveling salesman. 12)The magma in volcano is called lava when it reaches the air. 13)The ancient Greeks were the first people to have free public museums 14)People in ancient times used the abacus to compute numbers. 15)Some museums are devoted entirely to computers. 16)Some species of bats are very beneficial to the environment. 17)More than five hundred volcanoes have erupted over the centuries. 18)Our sun is a typical, medium-sized star. 19)The gravity of the sun is almost twenty-eight times the gravity of Earth. 20)Some planets have one or more moons. Exercise 2 Recognizing Complete Subjects and Predicates. In each sentence, underline the complete subject one and the complete predicate twice. EXAMPLE: The blue-eyed Siamese cat curled up on the oak desk. (1) The giant panda lives in the remote mountains of Southern China. (2) This animal is a frustrating mystery to zoologists. (3) The Chinese name for the pandas is xiong-mao, or “bear-cat”. (4) However, the animal is not a cat. (5) Zoologists do not agree about identity. (6) Some call it a bear. (7) Others place it in the same family as the raccoon. (8) Sadly, the panda is becoming rare. (9) The reason for this is the scarcity of bamboo, its main food. (10) The panda populations can be saved only through worldwide efforts.


Answer:
There is no way anyone should do your work for you. You don't learn anything that way.

Joke. Have you ever fallen off the wagon?
Question:
FALLING OFF THE WAGON Late one Saturday night, after a long and difficult day of visiting hospitals, nursing homes and elderly members of the congregation, a Southern Baptist preacher was making his weary way home. As he traveled the hilly, curving country road, he overtook a car. The slow moving car was weaving from one side of the road to the other in a most disturbing manner. Being familiar with most residents of the area he recognized the car as belonging to a member of his congregation. "Oh no," said the preacher to himself, "Frank Johnson has fallen off the wagon again. The way that car is weaving, he must be really plastered. I better pull up beside him and get him stopped before he hurts himself." Putting thought to action, the preacher pulled along side Frank's car just in time for the next swerve to run him off the road. Over the shoulder, down a steep bank, the preacher's car rolled over twice and came to rest against a large pine tree. Not completely senseless to the world, Frank stopped his car and staggered back to a point above the preacher's car. Fortunately, the preacher had been using a seat belt. That and the relatively slow speed had prevented any serious injury. When Frank saw someone struggling out of the wrecked car, he yelled, "Who the hell are you and what do you mean?" The preacher yelled back, "Frank Johnson, don't you dare talk to me like that." "My God preacher, that you?", hollered Frank "Yes Frank, it is, and I'll thank you not to take the Lord's name in vain. It's already bad enough that you're drunk.", exclaimed the preacher "Are you OK preacher?", questioned Frank "Yes Frank, fortunately the Lord was with me.", the preacher said. Frank replied,"You better let him ride with me. The way you drive, you gonna kill him." I guess some people are just plain dense in the brain.. oh well you lose some you win some..Tough..


Answer:
i enjoyed it very funny

Your favorite and least favorite states you've lived in? Why?
Question:
My favorites, through upbringing, military, school, and work: Favorites: 1. TEXAS: Where I am now. What an incredible place. Houston is so large, but it takes no time to be out in the country--one direction will take you to pine forests, another to swamps, another to the beach. The friendliest people I've ever been around, and I've even been all the way up to Amarillo. 2. LOUISIANA: The state of my birth, a 7th generation Louisianian. Nice place, the swamps have a mystic beauty to them, people are generally nice. The tax structure is oppressive, though. I'd return just to be close to family again, but that's it. 3. MICHIGAN: I am gung-ho Southern till I die! But, the upper peninsula (Marquette) is still a place where if your car breaks down, people will pull over and help you. Beautiful place! Least favories: 1. CALIFORNIA: dirty, polluted, horrid traffic, generally mean people. 2. KENTUCKY: it's NOT that friendly, sorry. Very boring, too. 3. MINNESOTA: it's just okay.


Answer:
Only lived in Oklahoma, I hate how dusty it is but thats about it.

Rules of the South!?
Question:
Rules of the South A friend just moved from Southern California to North Carolina and he e-mailed this. He said they gave it to him at the state line. If you are going to live or visit in the South, you need to know these rules: 1. That farm boy you see at the gas station did MORE work before breakfast than you do all week at the gym. 2. It's called a "gravel road." No matter how slow you drive, you're going to get dust on your Navigator. Drive it or get out of the way. 3. The red dirt -- it's called clay. Red clay. If you like the color, don't wash your car for a couple weeks -- it'll be permanent. 4. We all started hunting and fishing when we were seven years old. Yeah, we saw Bambi. We got over it. 5. Go ahead and bring your $600 Orvis Fly Rod. Don't cry to us if a flathead breaks it off at the handle. We have a name for those little 13-inch trout you fish for -- bait. 6. Pull your pants up. You look like an idiot. 7. If that cell phone rings while a bunch of mallards (ducks) are making their final approach, we will shoot it (the phone). You might want to ensure it's not up to your ear at the time. 8. No, there's no "Vegetarian Special" on the menu. Order steak. Order it rare or, you can order the Chef's Salad and pick off the two pounds of ham and turkey. 9. Tea - yeah, we have tea. It comes in a glass over ice and is really, really sweet. You want it hot -- sit it in the sun. You want it unsweetened -- add a LOT of water. 10. You bring Coke into my house, it better be brown, wet, and served over ice. 11. So, you have a sixty thousand dollar car. We're real impressed. We have a quarter of a million-dollar combine (it's farm equipment) that we only use two weeks a year. 12. Let's get this straight. We have one stoplight in town. We stop when it's red. We may even stop when it's yellow. 13. We eat dinner together with our families. We pray before we eat (yeah, even breakfast). We go to church on Wednesdays and Sundays and we go to high school football games on Friday nights. We still address our seniors with "yes, sir" and "yes, ma'am," and we sometimes still take Sunday drives around town to see friends and neighbors. 14. We don't do "hurry up" well. 15. Greens - yeah, we have greens, but you don't putt on them. You boil them with salty fatback, bacon or a ham hock. 16. Yeah, we eat catfish, bass, bream (pronounced brim) and carp. You really want sushi and caviar? It's available at the bait shop. 17. They are pigs. That's what they smell like (money). Get it -- pig farms -- income -- money? Get over it. Don't like the smell? Interstate 85 goes two ways Interstate 40 goes the other two. Pick one. 18. Grits are corn. You put butter, salt, and maybe even some pepper on them. If you want to put milk and sugar on them, then you want Cream of Wheat -- go to Kansas . That would be I-40 west. 19. The "Opener" refers to the first day of deer season or dove season. Both are holidays. You can get pancakes, cane syrup, and sausage before daylight at the church on either day. 20. So every person in every pickup waves? Yeah, it's called being friendly. Understand the concept? 21. Yeah, we have golf courses. Don't hit in the water hazards. It spooks the fish and bothers the gators...and if you hit it in the rough, we have these things called diamondbacks, and they're not baseball players. 22. That Highway Patrol Officer that just pulled you over for driving like an idiot...his name is "Sir," no matter how young he is. 23. We have lots of pine trees. They have sap. It drips from them. You park your Navigator under them, and they'll leave a logo on your hood. 24. You burn an American flag in our state, you get beat up. No questions. The liberal contingent of our state legislature -- all four of them -- enacted a measure to stop this. There is now a $2.50 fine for beating up the flag burner. 25. No, we don't care how you do things up North. If it is so great up there, why not stay there? 26. And no, down here we don't have an accent, you do. In God We Trust. YA'LL COME BACK!


Answer:
Some of these are true but they dont really pass this out of course. But we dont like it in the south when the northerners sell there house for 400,000$ and then move down here and buy the same house for 150,000$ and then complain about everything down here.

10 points for meanest answer?
Question:
No not really mean, lol but i do want feed back and critique for my poem. if you want to see more, subscribe to my new blog- inkedmemories-abbie.blogspot.com. like i said its new so im still getting my stuff up. btw, where is home for you? No walls No roof No fireplace No home Or is it? Must there be an enclosed space for it to be a home? My home Is the sand between my toes My home Is the ocean spray mist Shining like morning dew droplets Within the fine strands Of my goldenrod hair Only to be absorbed By the sun’s strong rays of slanting light And to be replaced by It’s ever healing nutrients Friend, where is your home? Is it surrounded by everglade trees, with pine needles under your feet? Or is it connected to a life line as you scale the highest mountain? Is it anywhere with a hard surface and a pair of tap shoes in hand? Or is it in a kitchen with bowls, utensils, and a rolling pin? Is it with small children, teaching them their ABC’s? Or in the thrill of amusement parks while taking your physical capacity to the extreme? Is it in a quiet study where you are surrounded by books which hold the dreams of people throughout history? Or is it driving a car in a track circuit, accelerating each moment you continue? Friend, where would your home be If you would just move your dreams From your mind to your heart? Soaring with foul in the air? Swimming with dolphins amongst the coral? Hacking away at greens in a southern jungle? Or digging for a lost treasure That you always had But never found Home


Answer:
you've got a good idea for your poem but it well honestly... it lacks the ability to keep me interested for more than 30 seconds, try figurative language like personification, metaphors, onomatopoeia, etc.

Your favorite and least favorite states you've lived in? Why?
Question:
My favorites, through upbringing, military, school, and work: Favorites: 1. TEXAS: Where I am now. What an incredible place. Houston is so large, but it takes no time to be out in the country--one direction will take you to pine forests, another to swamps, another to the beach. The friendliest people I've ever been around, and I've even been all the way up to Amarillo. 2. LOUISIANA: The state of my birth, a 7th generation Louisianian. Nice place, the swamps have a mystic beauty to them, people are generally nice. The tax structure is oppressive, though. I'd return just to be close to family again, but that's it. 3. MICHIGAN: I am gung-ho Southern till I die! But, the upper peninsula (Marquette) is still a place where if your car breaks down, people will pull over and help you. Beautiful place! Least favories: 1. CALIFORNIA: dirty, polluted, horrid traffic, generally mean people. 2. KENTUCKY: it's NOT that friendly, sorry. Very boring, too. 3. MINNESOTA: it's just okay.


Answer:
LOVE, AZ cause it my home town and the sun is great! HATE, TN cause the weather is depressing and everyone there is as dumb as a rock!