From the bare record it is difficult to follow all steps, both in this case and in the prior hearings in which the suspended sentences were imposed. However, the defendant makes it clear that he relies altogether on his objection to the sufficiency of the evidence to take this case to the jury and to the consolidation. The State concedes that if the conviction in this case is set aside execution of the suspended sentences is not justified.
On the day of the arrest, four Rutherford County officers were making a search near the Polk County line. As they walked along an old woods road (not public) they heard a car start a few hundred yards away and as it passed them the driver attempted to run over them. The car was driven by Howard Martin. The defendant sat beside him on the front seat and Arthur Pritchard, the owner, was in the back seat. By means of a “walkie-talkie” other officers further along the old road were notified and they placed a roadblock in front of the car. When confronted with the roadblock, the occupants abandoned the car and ran. In the trunk of the car the officers found five gallons of nontaxpaid white liquor. They were armed with a search warrant. The officers backtracked the car to a place at or near where they first heard it and there found tracks leading off about 300 yards to an illicit distillery that was still warm from recent use.
The three men were together in a car hauling whisky on an old woods road, near the place where it was probably manufactured. The defendant ran at the same time and apparently as fast and as far as the driver and the owner. The evidence in this case is much stronger than in *617S. v. Ferguson, 238 N.C. 656, 78 S.E. 2d 911, on which the defendant relies. The evidence was sufficient to warrant the consolidation and to take the cases to the jury.
No error.