Daily Reflector, August 24, 1983


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THE GOOD NEWS

1

htfiamvai ' -- 1

For the first" time in a long time, nearly 300 Greenville area jobs are waiting for right workers, says local office of Employment Security Commission. (Page 5)

-

' A sizzling heat wave that has claimed 15 lives to date just keeps getting hotter. Its locked in by powerful front along Mason-Dixon line. (Page 11)

SPORTS TODAY

JBlCJEASLEiCKS

Northern Nash was the choice of the Big East coaches to wm that conference's football race, with Rose second in the voting. (Page 18)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 184

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 24, 1983

80 PAGES6 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

Tripoli Is Again Scene Of

Partisan Militia Clashes

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Pro- and anti-Syrian militias clashed today with mortars, machine guns and rockets in Lebanons northern port of Tripoli, and Christian and Druse fighters traded sporadic shellfire in the hills overlooking Beirut.

Israels military command said that a Palestinian guerrilla was killed and an Israeli soldier wounded in eastern Lebanons Bekaa Valley when Israels troops chased men who set off a roadside explosion.

The report today gave no furtner details about the blast that wounded four Israeli soldiers about 11 miles from the Syrian border Tuesday.

In Tripoli,' the fighting pitted the pro-Syrian Arab Democratic Party militia known as the Arabian Knights against the Sunni Moslem Islamic Union Movement, reporters said in telephone calls from the city .

The clashes took place in the seaside residential neighborhood of Bab El-Tabbeneh and the citys wheat market center. Smoke could be seen billowing from the city from about three mUes, according to the phone reports.

There were no immediate reports of casualties. The reporters said police were unable to determine what touched off the new fighting in the nations second-largest city 50 miles north of Beirut.

In Beirut, the shelling by Christian and Druse militiamen caused police to warn motorists to stay off the highways linking the capital with northern Lebanon.The exchanges stopped at midmorning.

At least seven shells landed on or near the coastal highway on Beiruts Christian-populated northern outskirts, police said.

The shelling, which threatened a two-day-old ceasefire, came as President Amin Gemayels government intensified efforts to ensure a smooth deployment of the Lebanese army into the embattled central mountains to replace Israeli forces, who

plan to redeploy southward soon.

The authoritative independent newspaper An-Nahar said the Gemayel government had taken a final decision to deploy his army in the Aley and Chouf mountain regions once the

Israeli army begins its pullback to more secure positions along the Awali River. An-Nahar and other Beirut newspapers said the government was determined to allow no security vacuum to develop in the turbulent regions lest an all-out Chris-

tian-Druse civil war break out.

Israels English-language Jerusalem Post said today Druse militias have prepared a full-scale battle plan to capture strategic areas in the Chouf region before the Lebanese army or

Christian militiamen move.

The newspaper said Israeli military planners are taking into account the possibility that the partial pullback might take place under fire.

A date for the much-talked about pullback has not been announced.

Electrical Storm Snarled Communications,Power

ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer

A fierce, deadly lightning storm spawned by triple-digit temperatures roared over eastern North Carolina Tuesday night, leaving utilities and communications systems snarled and trees limbs sheared and scattered.

Greenville Utilities reported that 179 locations in its Pitt County system were damaged by lightning or falling trees during the storm. Despite the unusually high number of problems, said Malcolm Green, superintendent of the electrical department, no major lines or circuits were down.

Outages, he said, were numerous and scattered throughout the county, but none were serious. Many of the calls we had were simply fuses blown or trees on lines but a number were lightning strikes, said Green.

He said 15 electrical transformers were damaged by

lightning and had to be replaced, damage thats unusual for GUC. Even more freakish, said Green, was a direct lightning hit on an underground line on highway 33 east that resulted in damage to three pad-mounted transformers.

In addition, said Green, lightning hit GUCs radio transmitter twice, knocking out ooth the main and the back-up transmitters the second time.

Green said seven repair crews, three spotter vehicles, three supervisors and two staff engineers worked throughout the storm and a couple of them were still working this morning.

By 9 p.m. (Tuesday) we had somebody assigned to every trouble location we knev about and this morning we caught the usual rush of calls from those folks who just went on to bed without the lights, said the electrical superintendent.

(Please turn to Page 8)

tiurricane 'Alicia' Turning Out More Desfrucfive Than Thought

HOUSTON (AP) - Even though Hurricane Alicia is being called a billion-dollar storm, it was far more destructive than many people realize, a school administrator said after todays scheduled start of fall classes was delayed because of power outages.

We have a large number of schools without power, without water and without air conditioning, Houston Independent School District spokeswoman Geri Konigsbergsaid.

About one-third of the districts 235 schools were still

blacked-out, and rather than open some facilities today and delay opening the others, officials decided it would be easier to put off classes for all 194,000 students until Monday, Miss Konigsberg said.

Alicia was far more destructive and disruptive than most people realize, Superintendent Billy Reagan told school employees Tuesday.

The Federal Emergency

Management Agency is set to open two more disaster relief centers today to process aid applications for storm victims. The agency handed out applications to more than 1,100 people Tuesday when it opened three centers.

At least 25,000 storm victims are expected to apply for some typ of federal aid made available since President Reagan declared a six-county region in

major

RKFLKCTOR

Libyan Forces Said Advancing

woTun

752-1336

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1%7, Greenville, N.C. 27834.    

Because of the large numbers received, Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.

TRANSPORTATION TO KINSTON

Hospice of East Carolina Director Beverly Burnette has asked Hotline to appeal for persons to drive a 70-year-old Greenville man to Kinston for radiation treatment over the next six weeks. If you can volunteer one day a week or even one day, please let me know, Ms. Burnette said. She may be reached at 758-4622 days; 749-1301 evenings.

She expressed appreciation to those who responded to a recent Hotline appeal to transport a Farmville man to Kinston, noting that some of the volunteers were from the Greenville area and were willing to make the round-about trip to assist someone they previously did not know.

NDJAMENA, Chad (AP) - The Chadian government said today that Libyan tanks and Libyan-backed rebels were pushing south toward the governments defensive lines, but denied a radio report that there had been a skirmish in the desert.

I can confirm that there is a continuing and massive advance of Libyan forces and heavy tanks toward Oum Chalouba and Koro Toro, Information Minister Soumaila Mahamat told reporters.

He categorically denied a report by Chad radio that government and rebel patrols exchanged fire in the desert about 60 miles northwest of the government outpost at Oum C^ouba.

The government radio report said the skirmish occurred Tuesday in the wilderness about halfway between Oum Chalouba and the edge of the Libyan-held strategic oasis of Faya-Largeau, 120 miles to the northwest.

Faya-Largeau was overrun by Libyan forces and rebels led by former President Goukouni Oueddei on Aug. 10. Heavy Libyan air attacks on the )vernment garrison at Oum Chalouba then continued for four days, but ceased abruptly.

Since then, a tense standoff has been maintained along the 500-mile-long defensive line on the 15th parallel, where forces loyal to President Hissene Habre have been reinforced by French army strongpoints.

Oum Chalouba, 450 miles northeast of NDjamena, the capital, is about 100 miles beyond the most northerly French position.

southeast Texas a disaster area Friday.

It gets hairy and hectic, said agency worker Marilyn Darby of Dallas. The first days are always the worst.

Quite frankly, this had been a real good first day, Ms. Darby said.

Up to 125,000 Houston Lighting & Power Co. customers remained without electricity for a sixth day Tuesday.

Weve got all the easy stuff done now, company spokeswoman Sally Mathis said as utility workers began a house-to-house canvass of homes blacked out by Hurricane Alicia. This is the slow part.

About 3,900 utility employees from Houston and from other companies in Texas and along the Gulf Coast are trying to restore power severed when the storm slammed into Galveston on Thursday, then charged inland past Houston.

At least 18 deaths have been blamed on Alicia, which insurance specialists say probably will result in claims exceeding $1 billion, making it the most costly ever in this nation.

Ceremonies Set For Plant

Ground breaking ceremonies for Greenvilles new $10.4 million waste water treatment plant will be held at 11 a.m. S^tember 1, at the plant site, east of the Eastern By-pass and north of the Tar River.

Site Work for the 10.5 million gallon per day plant is well under way, and contractors, who have two years to complete construction, say the facility should be completed in 14 years.

Funding for the waste water treatment plant includes more than $7.8 million in federal grants and $1.3 million from the state.

John Ferren, assistant director of the Greenville Utilities Commission, said today that guests for the ground-breaking will include rqiresentatives of the N.C. Department of Commerce and others involved with industrial development.

The guests, Feirai said, will be invited to lunch following the ceremiMiy so we will have the opportunity to tell them that, with a new water treatment plant operating and a wastewater treatment plant under construction, Greenville is ready for any industry that they can bring in.

TAKES FINGERPRINTS ... Identification officer Jammie Allen takes fingerprints from the door of the Planters National Bank on South Lee

Street in Ayden Tuesday afternoon after a lone gunman robbed it. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Police Report 'Leads' In Ayden Bank Robbery

AYDEN - Police said this morning they have leads they are currently pursuing in the Tuesday robbery of Planters National Bank in Ayden.

According to Federal Bureau of Investigation agent Tony Rogers, police are searching for a black male who robbed the bank at gunpoint around 12:15 p.m. Tuesday of an undisclosed amount of cash.

Rogers said the FBI is also looking for another black male officers suspect was the gunmans accomplice and a dark gray, late

model automobile the two may have fled in. Although the robber was last seen on foot', Rogers said officers had information that led them to believe there may have been another fellow in town.

Police say the robber was carrying a small caliber handgun.

Rogers noted that the North Carolina Bankers Association offers a $2,000 reward for information leading to an arrest in a bank robbery.

Expert Says No City is Prepared For 'Worst'

MIAMI (APj. - Many parts of Floridas highrise-lined coast could withstand the wrath of a hurricane like Alicia, but its doubtful any of the country's coastal areas are ready for a worst case storm, the nations top hurricane tracker says.

Theres going to be a lot of damage ... bunches, said Neil Frank, director of the National Hurricane Center.

Hurricanes are rated on a scale of one to five, based on a formula of wind speed and potential destruction. Camille was the last Category 5 storm to hit the Unit^ States and claimed 255 lives when it assaulted the Mississippi coast in 1%9.

Alicia, which struck the Texas coast Thursday and left 18 dead, was a Category 3 storm with winds of 115 mph. It hit Galveston and then blasted Houstons skyscrapers, sending shattered glass through the streets. Insurance adjusters expect over a billion dollars in claims.

The seasons second tropical storm, Barry, developed Tuesday night and was gathering strength off the

Atlantic coast of Florida.

Miami officials said Houstons fate may be a warning for south Florida where highrise buildings dominate the waterfront skyline.

Frank said Tuesday that hurricanes always will inflict building damage but he was pleased that Florida has completed studies of how long it would take to clear residents from a storms path.

Other areas lag behind, he added, although he doubted theres any place in the nation that is prepared for the worst possible case.

In New Jersey, Frank said, there are not even com-, prehensive evacuation studies initiated up there... On the New Jersey coast, its just a string of barrier islands with hundreds of thousands of people on them.

WEATHER

Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday with 30 pen.'cni chance of thun (Jfr.iiorins. Low tempera-uros near 70. high around 90.. ,

Frank added, Evacuation is the primary action to save lives.

Similar problems exist in areas such as Ocean City, Md.. and Long Island, N.Y..

Ot

Lookjnq Ahead

Partly cloudy Friday through Sunday with chance of ihunderstonris mainly Saturday and Sunday Higbs in 9us except some 80s on Sunday. Lows in 70s with- 6<)s m the west Sunday mom-mg

ln$ide Reading

Page 10 - .Area items Page 15-Soviet louK Page 16 - Obituaries Page 22-Trump Tower Page34-ET search





2 The Dttly Reflector. Greenyille. N C '

Wednesday. August 24. 1983

Preppies Shag To Beach Music Galicic-Williams Vows Exchanged

1,000 Miles From Sand, Surf

ByMARKSCHWED

UPI Entertainment Writer

: NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -f You have to slither ttjrough the silk-shirted disco crowd, past the blue-collar pool hall before you hit the beach.

Its not the motion of the ocean, but the sound of the vibes that lets you know youve reached Buckhead Beach, a trendy bar in Atlanta that has a disco, pool hall and beach bar under one roof.

Nashville has beach. So do Dallas, Denver, Washington, d:C., Athens. Ala., Knox

ville, Tenn., Gainesville, Fla., and Auburn, Ala. Dont confuse it with Los Angeles, which has surf, not beach, and the Beach Boys, not The Tams.

Beach music, the ogce-undercover nickname for that laid-back rhythm & blues sound bom on the Carolina shores, is moving inland. You can find it a thousand miles from the sea.

i guess back during the time when it wasnt proper for white kids to listen to black music, they started calling it beach music, explained Otis Pope, manag-

Book Draws Attention To Alcohol

By Abigail Van Buren

1903 by UniverMi Pru Syndicate

DEAR READERS: A coloring book is an ideal way to educate children, and I have just come across one that really grabbed my attention.

Its Winthrop and Munchie Talk About Alcohol a non-jttdgmental approach in presenting information about alcohol to children.

Winthrop, an appealing cartoon character, is about to dig into his morning cereal when in walks his thirsty friend, Munchie. Winthrop offers Munchie some milk. But milk isnt what Munchie had in mind. Its hot outside, and he could really go for a nice cold beer. Winthr(^ is shocked! He tells Munchie hes not old enough to drink alcohol. Munchie says he was only kidding, but adds, Its very grown up to drink beer.

Their conversation develops into a powerful but subtle educational message about the alcoholic content of beer, wine, vodka and whiskey; how alcohol affects the brain, the bpdy and the way you act; the legal drinking age; and Just about everything a chUd should know about the subject. Its a wonderfl way for parents and educators to teach children about alcoholism.

The Winthrop and Munchie coloring book can be obtained by writing: Operation Cork, 8939 Villa La Jolla Drive, U Jolla, Calif. 92037.

The price is $1 (discounts for quantity available on request). However, Operation Cork, which is a nbn-profit organization, will send a copy free if you are unable to pay.

DEAR ABBY; I do lap swimming oa a regular basis each week. I swim at a public pool in Aurora, Colo. Sometimes fathers bring their 3- and 4-year-old daughters into the mens shower room with them.

I know I personally am uncomfortable showering with a young female child in the |ocker room. Ive discussed this with other swimmers and ^ey feel the same way. My friends say the children are too young to think anything of this. What do you think?

RICHARD IN AURORA

DEAR RICHARD: Male nudity is probably no big deal to a 3- or 4-year-old girl whose father would bring her into a mens shower room. However, since you and other swimmers are uncomfortable with young females in the shower room, you have every right to ask their fathers not to bring them.

DEAR ABBY; Concerning Wants to Love Again, who asks for the male point of view about silicone implants to enlarge the breasts: Were she my wife, lover or fancee. Id say, Dont do it for my benefit. I am 65 and Ive had a very active sex life, and Ive learned that bosomy women are not necessarily passionate. Neither are all flat-chested women cold. Ive found it to be the other way around. What women lacked in chest they usually made up for in zest.

I have to tell you, the best bed partner I ever had was built like a 12-year-old boy.

REMINISCING IN ROCKPORT, TEXAS

If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

er for the Tams, an Atlanta-based group that had its first beach hit, Untie Me, two decades ago.

Its black music aimed at white preppies, said Charlie Fach, president of Compleat Entertainment Corp., a Nashville-based company that has signed such beach music acts as The Tams and Clifford Curry.

More established record companies are also heading for the beach. Warner Brothers in Nashville thought about importing a truckload of sand and palm trees for a Terminal Beach Party at an old movie theater. Instead, there were beach balls, hot dogs and beer.

The party was thrown to push a new song, Terminal Beach, by a very unbeachy guy. Bill Lamb, a Portland, Ore., native who was inspired to co-write the song when he spotted a seagull-decorated shirt at the Salvation Army.

The song is about a nerd who wants to go rollerskating and a girl who would rather hit the beach.

Were thinking about a followup, either Bride of Terminal Beach or Son of Terminal Beach, Lamb said. For me it was the back door to the beach. The other songs on the album are flat out rockabilly.

Beach music started in ocean-side boardwalk clubs in North and South Carolina and Virginia, but the modem beach aficionados ^ can be found in Southeastern college frat houses at Auburn, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee and Vanderbilt. It blends traditional fifties rock n roll with horns and brass. The result is a happy-go-lucky, upbeat sound.

You dont need the beach to have beach music, said Tony Hosney, vice president

Promotion

Announced

Edna Adams, formerly of Greenville, has been promoted to program director of the Special Assistance Division, Family and Childrens Service of Greater Greensboro, Inc.

It is a management level position and Ms. Adams is the first black to occupy such a position in the organizations 45-year history. The announcement was made by Joseph J. DesPlaines, executive director.

Ms. Adams received her B.S. degree from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and her M.S. degree from North Carolina A&T State University. She

of the Beach Music Awards Association in Myrtle Beach, S.C., the home of beach music. But you do need the shag.

The shag is a shuffling, laid-back, jitterbug-like dance with twirls, spins, and intricate footwork. Unlike piink musics bodyslamming, where couples see how hard they can smash into each other, the shag is a hand-holding, cozy dance for two.

Its smooth, said Sarah Sherill of Compleat, a Carolina girl who grew up shagging to beach music. You dont sweat none.

These Vandy students, they love it, she said. They heard it from their mother and father. Now its making its way inland. It is reviving because of the preppie movement. There are a lot of closet beach music people.

Pope said the time is right for the inland invasion of beach music.

People are tired of sweating. They want to get closer, look into each others eyes, hold hands, Pope said. If you play it too loud it doesnt create the atmosphere its intended to. Its happy music. One of the typical songs is Be Young, Be Foolish, and Be Happy.

Some beach songs are easy to spot - She Shot a Hole in My Soul, My Baby Sure Can Shag, Terminal Beach, There Aint Nothing Like Shaggin.

Others are not - Get A Job, Making True Love, and Thank You John, a beach classic.

Those who love beach music most say the invasion of the beach has only just begun.

Were going to Pennsylvania soon, said Pope. Well try to teach them what the shag is all about.

has been employed by Family and Childrens Service since 1978.

Her mother, Elsie Adams, currently lives in Greenville. '

Each American farm worker now feeds about 70 persons, a sharp gain in productivity over 1950, when each farmer supplied food for 16 individuals, and 1930, when the ratio was 10 consumers per farmer.

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FREDERICK, Md. -Susan Lorraine Williams and Joseph Raymond Galicic were united in marriage Aug. 13. The double ring, candlelight ceremony, written by the bride and bride-^m, took place in the Calvary United Methodist Church here. The Rev. Mark Waddell officiated. -

The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Raymond W. Stroh of Middletown, Md. The bridegroom is the son of* Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Galicic of Oakdale, Pa.

Given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father, the bride was attired in a floor length gown made of silk organza featuring three-quarter length puff sleeves and round neckline. Chantilly lace and seed pearls decorated the bodice. The full skirt gave an apron effect with Chantilly lace surrounding three tiers of sheer organza and ending in a chapel length train. The fingertip bridal veil was a halo edged with scalloped satin, stephanotis, babys breath and pearls. She carried an arm bouquet of a

Seafood Talk Is Planned

Seafood For Your Table will be presented Sept. 14 at 7 p.m. at the Agricultural Extension Service. Joyce Taylor will present the program.

She is marine advisory agent. Agricultural Extension Seafood Lab in MoreheadCity.

The program will cover the selection, care and preparation of seafoods. She will be demonstrating using a protective gel for home freezing, fUeting fish as well as new ways of preparing and serving seafoods.

The program is free but ireregistration is required )y noon Sept. 8 by calling 752-2934.

dozen white silk roses accented with fern and babys breath tied with a sheer organza bow.

Leigh Williams of Raleigh was honor attendant for her sister-in-law. Bridesmaids wsere Angela and Paula Alcock, cousins of the bride of Greenville, Wendy Coleman and Lori Shipley of Middletown, Md. Flower girls were Stacey and Stephanie Williams of Raleigh, nieces of the bride.

Mark Murr of Frederick, Md. was best man and ushers included Mark Galicic, brother of the bridegroom of Oakdale, Pa., Don Williams of Raleigh, brother of the bride, Robert Druga of Oakdale, Pa. and Joseph LaVerde of Gaithersburg, Md.

Providing music for the ceremony was Paula Alcock, soloist, and Marc Nicodemus, organist. The wedding was directed by Barbara Pfeiffer and the guest book was attended by Dan Pfeiffer. Programs and

scrolls were handed out by Wendi and Holli Zimmerman.

Following the ceremony a reception was' held in the church ladies parlor. Virginia Alcock, aunt of the bri^ of Greenville, cut the cake and Dolly Malii, aunt and uncle of the bridegroom from Bethel Park, Pa. served the cake and Bonnie Zimmerman from Frederick, Md. poured punch.

The bride graduated from Middletown High School in Middletown, Md. and attended N.C. State University in Raleigh. The bridegroom graduated from West Alle^iany High School in Imperial, Pa. and Penn Technical Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa. Both are employed by M/A-COM DCC in Germantown, Md.

After a wedding trip to Washington. D.C. and Ocean City, Md. the couple will live. in Frederick, Md.

A rehearsal dinner was given by the parents of the bridegroom at the Red Horse Motor Inn in Frederick, Md. The bride was given several showers given by Barbara Pfeiffer and Dolly Main.

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The names of the bridesmaids were omitted from the Johnston-Mitchell wedding write-up printed in Sundays issue of The Daily Reflector.

They were Judy Stillwell of Boone, Jennifer Simmons of Miami, Fla., cousin of the bride, and Ulana Mallen-baum of Greenville.

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Couple Speaks Vows In Chicago Saturday

CHICAGO, III, Mary Kathryn Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Asa Van Moore Jr. of Chicago, was married Saturday to Charles Ross Landeros in Saint Gertrude Church.

The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. D'onicio Landeros of Tucson, aiii.

The ceremony was performed by Father Daniel OConnell, S.C. of Loyola University in Chicago. Nephews of the bridegroom $erved as altar boys and readers.

The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore an original gown by Bianchi of white silk shantung which featured a V-neckline and dropped shoulders. It had an empire waistline, cap sleeves and the full skirt extended into a chapel length train. She wore a lace covered Juliet cap with an imported silk illusion cathedral length veil and carried a cascade bouquet of pink alstromeria, sweetheart roses and white orchids.

Susan Wind Moore of Chicago, sister of the bride, was maid of honor and bridesmaids included Yvonne Pappageorge of Chicago, Linda Drazin of San Diego, Calif, and Sharon Scannell of Hackensack, N.J.

They wore tea length dresses of sandlewood crepe which featured puffed sleeves, dropped waistlines and tiered skirts. Each carried an arm bouquet of alstromeria lilies and sweetheart roses.

Groomsmen were Mark

Engagement

Announced

Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. McLawhom of Kinston announce the engagement of their daughter, Thelma Lorraine, to James Madison Carraway Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Carraway of Kinston. The bride is also the daughter of the late G.W. Peed Jr. of Greenville. The wedding will take place Oct. 23.

Ayden News

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hooks, Mrs. Marjorie Harrington and Mrs. Virginia Parker of Farmville have returned from a trip to New Orleans, ^Mr. and Mrs. J.T. Martin ^d taddy Martin were Ayden visitors last week. IMrs. Reba Stokes have returned home from Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hooks ahd Tammy Loftin have returned from a vacation in Iowa and Montana.

:The space shuttle Columbia is the largest thing ever to be put into orbit atound the earth.

MRS. CHARLES ROSS LANDEROS

Arroyo and Arthur Villasenor of Chicago, Jim Landeros, brother of the bridegroom of San Francisco and Jay Sutphin of Aurora, 111.

The bride received her degree in psychology from Loyola University in Chicago and is employed as an accountant at the Art Institute of Chicago. The bridegroom received his degree in biology from Aurora College in Aurora, 111. and is employed as a travel agent with Mr. Travel of Chicago.

The couple went to Acapulco, Mexico for their wedding trip.

Grandparents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Leo F. Wind of St. Louis, Mo. and

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Classes Are Offered In Tap, Ballet, Pointe, Jazz For More Information Call Cindy Cannon At

752-8714    >

Carolina Country Day School

Greenville, N.C.

Orades K-6

Applications for fall enrollment are now being accepted

School Begins - Sept. hth Quality Education is our ,Ooar^

-Certified Teachers and Administrator Self-Contained Classes -Smaller Class Size (Maximum 20)

-Challenging Atmosphere for Learning '

-Emphasizes Academics

-Participates in State Testing Program

-Art, Music, P.E., Band

-Annual Enrichment Events

Field Trips

-Assemblies

-Excellent Facility

Telephone 75h-2244 Mn. Settit T. Forrest, Adminstrator

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Shop Monday Through Thursday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m., Friday and Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9:30 p.m. Phone 756-B E L-K (756-2355)





Editorials

Practicalities

We were concerned the electricity-generating windmill experiment in western N.C. proved a dud; but it didnt. Lessons learned at Howards Knob have been applied to a project in Hawaii, and the generator there will be three times as powerful.

Wind farms are reportedly spreading in California.

Hopes were also raised by the prospect of solar electric cells that might supply electricity for individual homes and farm-use. Not much was heard about that field until recently when optimistic news became known. They are nearer reality.

And remember talk about reviving old hydro-electric power systems that used to supply North Carolina manuafacturers? It turned out to be more than talk. One such plant has been set up in the state and others are in the works.

Its encouraging.

An Appalachian State University writer says these and other energy-related projects are a part of a continuing effort which will make a difference in our lives. We were afraid those concepts of just a few years ago were only pipedreams, but they turned out to be more than just that.

One day they will be practicalities.

Street Corner Fraud

Some years back the flim flam was a regular, occurrence in this area when tobacco money began to flow.

The schene seldom varies. Smooth talking strangers find an envelop, tell a bystander it contains a large amount of money and agree to share it if the bystander will come up with a certain amount.

The bystander goes off and brings back the required amount and gives it to the strangers They tell the bystander to wait and they will return with the money. The wait turns out to be interminable.

Such a scheme was reported to police last week and it should warn all of us to be wary of such deals. Big money is almost never made on the street corner and the prospect is to lose a good amount of cash.

Art Buchwald

Pentagon Pushed To The Limit

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Embarrassment

WASHINGTON - In a move viewed by AFL-CIO President Lane Kirklands intimates as an embarrassment. President Reagan has been formally Invited to address the Maritime Trades Department during the AFL-CIO convention at Hollywood. Fla., in early October.

That is where organized labor will give Walter F. Mndale its endorsement for the Democratic presidential nomination. The prospect of Reagan upstaging Mndale at the conventions Diplomat Hotel headquarters was never contemplated by pro-Mondale Kirkland. He was neither asked about nor notified of the invitation to Reagan.

One of the Maritime Trade Departments leading unions, the longshoremen, headed by pro-Reagan Teddy Gleason, hosted the president at its own convention this summer. The department, which includes several unions that have nothing to do with maritime trades, comprises a little more than one-half the total AFL-CIO membership.

Henry Kissinger, chairman of the new Central American Commission and one of Washingtons most accomplished power-grabbers, has promised he will wage no turf battle against former Sen. Richard Stone, the presidents special Central American envoy.

On two separate occasions. Kissinger privately pledged to Stone that his commission w'ould steer clear of the former Florida senators activity. Stone has made preliminary contacts with El Salvadors leftist guerrilla leaders and officals in Nicaraguas Marxist-Leninist regime, the kind of diplomatic activity long associated with Kissinger.

Fears that Kissingers ability to seize.The Daily Reflector

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hold and ekcercise power worried Stones associates. So far, however, there have been no grounds for complaint.

Organized labor is boosting the stampede toward New York Gov. Mario Cuomo as keynoter at next summers Democratic National Convention, but that leaves his friends in a quandry over their hopes to make him a presidential kingmaker.

John Perkins, head of the AFL-CIO's Committee on Political Education, has privately passed the word that Ciomo is labors first choice for keynoter. With Democratic National Chairman Charles T. Manatt inclined toward the New Yorker and no substantial contender on the horizon, that goes far toward clinching the prestigious job.

But recent keynoters have been neutral, interfering with Cuomos intentions to play a major role in the nomination process. He certainly cannot keep major New York Democrats from backing their choice for president (overwhelmingly, Walter F. Mndale). After the states candidates forum Oct. 6 Cuomo could find himself as his predecessor, Hugh Carey, was in 1980; neutral and impotent.

Senate Republican campaign managers. searching high and low for female candidates, are pushing Peace Corps Director Loret Ruppe as the best bet to unseat Democratic Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan next year - a choice certain to detonate an explosion on the right.

No Reagan administration official has come under more fire from the conservative movement than Ruppe, who has continued Carter administration policies at the Peace Corps. But since retired Army Gen. Pete Dawkins is not interested in running. Republican insiders in Washington consider Ruppe the strongest possibility.

Mainstream republican leaders in Michigan feel only Ruppe can raise an adequate war chest against Levin. They count on nationally respected conservative Republicans - such as Sen. Paul Laxalt, the partys general chairman - to stifle right-wing dissent. But even Laxalt wont be able to quiet the uproar from Human Events. Con- servative Digest and other conservative publications.

George McGovern is delaying his announcement that he will run for president again to give him a few more weeks to persuade reluctant members of his family to back him in a comeback decision.

McGovern tells friends that his attempt to repeat his uphill victory in the 1972 battle for the Democratic nomination is based on failure of other candidates to attack Reagan in his two most vulnerable issues. McGovern sees Central America and the arms buildup as the soft spots.

McGovern has disappeared politically since his landslide loss to Richard Nbcon in 1972. Nevertheless, in his comeback attempt he probably could raise enough money to run and might hurt front-running Walter Mndale.

The Pentagon is getting nervous. With a White House foreign policy based on a military response to every situation, there is a growing gap between the number of worldwide commitments weve decided to make, and the armed services ability to meet them.

Just last week the Pentagons joint Chief of the Day received a call from National Security Adviser Clarks office at the White House.

"'The president wants you to send two carriers, three missile cruisers, and six B-52S as a warning to Mozambique."

Were plumb wit of aircraft carriers, Cruisers and B-52S.

How can you be out of them? Weve given you the biggest military budget in history.

We have the money, but most of the stuff isnt built yet. You pecle have asked us to send aircraft carriers to Lebanon, Central America, Libya and Southeast Asia. We dont even have one in dry dock. I wish the White House

would check with us before you do any more saber rattling.

Were not saber rattling. Out national security is at stake in every part of the globe, and if we dont show the flag, our credibility will be zilch.

Well, we cant send any carriers to Mozambique.

What about nuclear submarines? Theyre all spoken for. We have to keep them on station as our main deterrent to the Soviets until we can put the MX missiles in place.

What can you send to Mozambique? How about a World War II destroyer? We got a bunch of them in mothballs. "What kind of message is that to the Russians?

With all due respect, one of the problems is that you keep sending messages to the Soviefe with U.S. naval ships. Why cant you "people use the diplomatic pouch like every other country does?

The only thing the Soviets understand is strength. If we dont produce a task force for Mozambique theyll inteipret it as a sign that we are unable to police the world.-

There is just so much we can do. The Pentagon is always happy to further American foreign policy, but if you would consult with us first, we could let you know whether we can support it militarily.

I thought the armed forces had contingency plans for every situation on the faceof the globe.

We do have the plans. We just dont have the troops. You have to figure out a few diplomatic initiatives that dont require military muscle.

Well, if we cant send the fleet, what about flying in the Rapid Deployment Brigade to Kenya?

You already requested them for Honduras.

Okay, then ferry over some AW ACS. All our AW ACS are spoken for.

1^

John Cunniff

old Sayings Not Always Fact

NEW YORK (AP) - Wherever humans pursue their goals certain notions become accepted as true, seldom suffering critical appraisal of substance or emptiness and acquiring in time the patina of ancient wisdom.

Such as good guys finish last or every player has to give 110 percent or that great corporate managers dont make big mistakes.

They dont? A team of scholars in Greensboro, N.C., isnt so sacrilegious as to scorn that article of faith, but they do suggest strongly that it might be lacking substance, and theyve got considerable research to support them.

That research, still being analyzed, consisted of lirng, probing interviews with more than 100 executives from three very large Industrial organizations, most of whom readily admitted to having made very big errors.

Said one: You cant get too concerned about losing millions or youll become paralyzed. After all, money is lost every day. And another: Successful people dont like to admit they make big mistakes, but they make whoppers nevertheless. And a third: Ive made them all

Michael Lombardo and Morgan McCall, researchers at the Smith Richardson Foundation, said the executives told them literally dozens of stories

about multimillion dollar losses, personal mistakes and-or being caught in disastrous situations beyond their control. Some lost their jobs, were demoted, exiled or otherwise had their careers derailed, but others continued to thrive, which brought the researchers to the conclusion that success or failure might depend on how adversity is handled.'

The derailed executives often hid their errors, blamed them on others or denied their existence, they reported.

But the successful executives? They handled their errors in a markedly different way, one that seems almost like a commercial for forthrightness or an endorsement of Horatio Alger.

They almost uniformly admitted the mistake, said Lombardo and McCall. And they forewarned others of adverse effects the mistake would cause, worked like hell to correct it and then, perhaps most telling, forgot about it.

The non-profit Smith Richardson Foundation, for which the research was done, is curious about examining such behavior because, in its own words, it is devoted to improving management and developing creative leaders.

And so it examined another chestnut, the one that says tough, decisive managers are the most successful. And it may have cracked the truth-impervious shell of that one, too.Tom Raum

Toughness, even in spite of human consequences, might be tolerable at the lower levels of management, they found, but beyond that level we found little evidence that toughness untempered by other virtues led to success.

One senior executive, a fellow who had made it close to the top, reported: You can get away with murder at lower levels be as mean as you like as long as you get results.

But, he explained, It all doubles back on you eventually. People too often forget the one unassailable truth of careers -they last a long time. Which is to say that executive murder at the lower levels is deadly later on.

The key, suggest the researchers, seems to be in the combination of seemingly contradictory qualities that must exist together; confidence and humility, toughness and basic values, standing alone and needing others.

They went on to cast serious doubts on two other notions, that good role models are critical to a managers development (his was a crook who had to be fired, said one) and that job rotation is the best way to season a manager.

But clearly they cannot compare in consequence to the liberating knowledge that, yes, you too can make horrendous errors and still reach the top. Just like the infallible-looking fellow who is sitting up there now.

On The Record For Posterity

WASHINGlXiN (AP) - Only a fraction of the bills introduced in Congress ever become laws and only a smattering of congressional speeches find their way into news reports. Here are some recent items you may have missed, but which were all duly saved for posterity in the pages of the Congressional Record:

- A proposal by Rep. Mario Biaggi, D-N.Y., for a federal crackdown on baseless attempts at ethnic humor on radio and television. Biaggi also expressed outrage at several recent best-selling books devoted to such humor. While we certainly cannot ban books ... we can insist on hi^ standards of accuracy and fairness in broadcast programming, he said.

- Legislation by Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif., that would require automakers to offer fuil refunds or [placement new cars to new-car purchasers after four unsuccesful attempts to have a specific defect corrected within a two-year period. Econountering problems with a new automobile is so common an experience that we have givoi a new meaning to the word lemon, Lantos said.

- A glowing tribute by Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., to pets, in my household alone, we have housed dogs, birds, cats, fish, gerbils, guinea pigs and white mice, and we have even housed a three-foot iguana and a boa constrictor. And those are just the ones that I know of, Hatfield informed colleagues.

- An unabashedly partisan suggestion by Rep. Patricia Shroeder, D-Colo., that F^ident Reagan had establi^ed a Teflon-coated presidency. He sees to it that nothing sticks to him. He is responsible for nothing civil rights. Central America, the Middle East, the economy, the environment - he is just the master of ceremonies at someone elses dinner.

- A reflection by Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., on the value of his gold Rolex watch, once owned by his late father-in-law, Senate GOP Leader Everett Dirksen. I did not pay a bit of attention to it until my esteemed father-in-law passed away and the estate tax was paid on it. Then I realized it was a matter of great worth, and I have worn it ever since.

Rep. Kenneth J. Robinson, R-Va., says he thinks CBS was wrong not to film part of its upcoming miniseries on the early life of George Washington in Winchester, Va., which is In his congressional district.

Mr. Washington, after all, was based in Winchester for 10 years during his early manhood. Were trying to persuade the Hollywood movie-makers theyre making a mistake about this, Robinson said. Not making part of the film in Winchester would be like holding the citys annual Apple Blossom Festival without any blossom, he said.

Senate Sergeant-at-Arms Howard Liebengood, \riro oversees the Senates staff of 1,300 employes and a $65 million budget, is quitting his job to become a tobacco lobbyist. He has been named executive vice president for federal relations for the Tobacco Institute, the major organization representing the industry.

His top assistant, Larry Smith, will take over the iob on Sept. 12.

Then dispatch the 82nd Airborne.

We dont have the planes to transport the 82nd Airborne. Do you want us to (Niil a division out of Germany?

No, that would be the wrong signal to the Kremlin, particularly at the moment were putting Pershing missiles into Euit^.

Do you people really have to send a message to Mozambique at this time? Couldnt we at least wait until the dust settles over Chad?

The president and Mr. Clark are very concerned that if we dont ^ow were serious about Mozambique, theyll be laughing at us in Angola.

So let them laugh.

Watch yourself. General. Im speaking for your commander in chief. What have you got in our military arsenal to warn Mozambique?

If you want the truth - two jeeps, a WAC, and the U.S. Marine Corps Band, Once we ship them overseas you people are on your own.

Public

Forum

To the editor:

Rising interest rates are clear testimony of the disastrous effect that massive federal budget deficits are having on the nations economic recovery. Members of Congress and the administration are reluctant to tackle the problem until after the next elections.

We cant wait that long! As a member of the National Association of Realtors, I am participating in a massive grassroots campaign to urge Congress and the president to take immediate action to solve the deficit crisis and ensure that the recovery continues.

The Realtors campaip, called Three-for-All, advocates limiting the growth of spending for federal entitlement programs to 3 percentage points less than the increase in the Consumer Price Index and setting the indexation of personal income tax brackets scheduled to begin in 1985 at the same amount.

These fiscal policies, if adc^ited, would produce a balanced budget within five yeras and mortgage interest rates 3 percentage points lower than without three-for-all.

Three-for-all would be fair for all, and I urge you to join me in letting the president, our U.S. senators and our U.S. representatives know that we support similar measures contained in legislation just introduced by Sens. John Danforth, R-Mo., and David Boren, D-Okla., and by U.S. Rep. Jim Jones, D-Okla, chairman of the House Budget Committee, and U.S. Rep. Carroll Campbell, R-S.C., whose legislation would balance the budget more slowly.

Lets send Washington a message it cant ignore until after the 1984 elections. Lets tell them we want action ad we want it now!

Thelma Whitehurst

President

Greenville-Pitt Co. Board of Realtors

Letters to Public Forum slmild be Umited to 300 words. The editor reserves Uxri^t to cut longer letters.

Strength

For

Today

The New Testament uses a number of Greek words meaning to pray. The one used most frequently, however, is a word which means to wish forward.

Prayer, among other things, is wishing forward. The average person probably prays timorously. It would appear presumptuous to ask God for too much. Yet the Bible ridicules such an approach. Jesus urges his followers to pray for great things and many things. We are like guests eating the tiniest bits of food because it would seem to presume on the hospitality of the host if we ate more. Yet the host keeps urging us to eat bountifully.

We certainly have nothing to lose by asking for much. We have Gods assurance that he wants to give us much. Why be hesitant? Why be afraid? Ask, cries Jesus, and ye shall receive; seek and ye shall find; knock and it shall be opened unto you.

Take God at his word and you will know the richness of his bounty.





There Ar Jobs Waiting To Be Filled

The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C     ^Weanesaay    Aui;r.s-.

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer

The encouraging word is that there are jobs in the Greenville area waiting to be filled by the right workers -nearly 300 openings in which persons with specialty skills are needed, according to Jim Hannan, manager of the Greenville office of the Employment Security Commissin.

"This is the first time in years that we have had this situation. Hannan com

mented. We have positions that need to be filled in sftvral fields, and the emphasis on these job openings is for persons with skills and experience.

The positions enumerated by Hannan and waiter Dorsey, ESCs labor market analyst in the Greenville office, Include openings for machinists, computer operators, stenographic (not secretarial) jobs, manager trainees, part-time workers in fast food services.

KINSTON, N.C. (AP) - Kinston voters approved a liquor-by-the-drink referendum by a narrow 129-vote margin Tuesday.

The final vote showed that 2,004 people voted for mixed drinks in the Lenoir County town while 1,884 voted against the measure. A countywide liquor-by-the-drink referendum failed

on June 14.

Election officials said only 32 percent of the towns registered voters turned out for the referendum.

FOCUS

Eye On Honduras

The IliiU'd Statt's rec(ntly h('gan six months of militai'v ('xoicisos in Honduras, iiuohing troops from l)oth nations. In tlu' mid-1970s, the richest fi\ (> piMcent of Hondurans n'ceiva'd 29 percenf of the nation's income. Il tak('s the,average Honduran a full year to earn what the* average .Vnu'iican makes in only Id work days.

DO YOl KNOW - To which religion do ino.st Hondurans Ixdong.

TUESDAYS ANSWER - Light travels about 186,000 miles per second.

^ .'1 ''I'    kiii'WIcdyc liiilii'lIII''

Will Ask For Free Checkups

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Teachers at a Greensboro high school say they plan to ask for free physical exams because asbestos removal at the school was still under way when they returned to work.

Joe Hill, director of maintenance for Guilford County schools, said asbestos removal areas at Northeast Senior High School were sealed off from school

personnel. He said special equipment in the areas kept asbestos dust from escaping.

A group of teachers inadvertently walked into one of the work areas Monday.

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Right now, its an employers market, Dorsey pointed out. These people are selective, demanding, seeking top caliber workers. For this reason, they can afford to wait until the worker with the degree of skills and experience want to come along.

We also have employers seeking skilled people to fill openings for auto and diesel mechanics and for front-end mechanics, Hannan added. Another field with openings is that of metalworkers, people who know the techniques of lay-out, of bending, forming, and cutting metal.

Dorsey noted these jobs are open alike to male or female applicants, as long as they meet the skill qualifications.

Salaries for these unfilled positions, Hannan said, mostly are for jobs that begin at about $3.50 an hours. Several are for higher hourly wages, and range on up to one opening with a beginning salary of $17,000 plus benefits.

In my opinion, Dorsey remarked, these op

portunities reflect the definite advantages open to people who had training In high schools and at community colleges In vocational skill fields. At this time, these are the skills being sought by employers.

Another factor involved in filling certain positions, Hannan commented, is that of mobility. Being mobile, or flexible, is often the key to employment and advancement. In most instances, the 300 positions we are seeking to fill are within the area. However, some may involve a willingness for the worker

to relocate to another part of the state, or even make an out-of-state move. But normally, what were dealing with at this time involves work within a 30-mile area.

Anyone with qualifications in any of the fields enumerated may visit the ESC office at 3101 Bismarck, or to call 756-2686 for additional Information.

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g 1 he Daily Rt'tleci'/r Green^llt- NC

_ Wednes^^ August 24 1983

Early Writing Emphasis

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer

This year at South Greenville Elementary School, fourth, fifth and sixth

graders will have opportunities during the school year to express themselves in writing. The name chosen for the project is Stories to

Tell: South Greenville School.

At a preschool opening workshop last week, two dozen elementary teachers m

EXPERIMENT IN WRITING ... Two teachers at South Greenville Elementary School, Mrs. Floretta Smith, background, and Mrs. Carol Gardner, at left, work with three

volunteer students in a writing demonstration of the type to be used at South Greenville this yeaf in the Stories to Tell writing program.

In Person!

Greenville, N.C.

Moose Lodge, 264 Bus. & Memorial Drive

Norvel Hayes Seminar

August 24 & 25,1983 10:00 A.M., 2:00 P.M. & 7:30 P.M.

gathered to exchange ideas with Rebecca Grooms, coordinator of the writing program. This program will be included in the curriculum this year, Mrs. Grooms told the teachers.

The innovative writing program for students will focus on two primary goals

- one, the challoige to express their own thoughts and ideas; and the other, the ability to do express their ideas correctly in the written word. Basically, the approach to the program is to be based on a handbook by Donald H. Graves, Writing. Teachers and Children at Work.

Two other South Greenville teachers, Joyce Costner and Floretta Smith, are sharing the coordination of the pro-

gam with Mrs. Grooms, ach student will have a folder in which a record will be maintained on each story

- the date started, the date finished, and the date published.

Mrs. Grooms said "first emphasis will be on expressiveness, the ability to get an idea across. If at all possible, in the spring each child will be ready to prepare, to publish a book of his or her own. We hope also to have assistance from the art teacher in the preparation of the books.

She cautioned teachers, It will not be easy to find writing time for the students, but hopefully it will be possible for each teacher to establish a regular writing time.

This is an excellent way for students to learn the craft of writing, Mrs. Grooms added. "We all know the best way to learn is by doing, and the only positive way to learn to write is by writing.

In the process of learning to express themselves in writing, students will have free rein to write whatever they choose to write about. Their works will be shared with other students. Guid-i ance in grammar, punctuation and structure will be given by the teachers.

STARVATION FORTALEZA, BrazU (AP) - Famished drought victims in northeastern Brazil are eating lizards and rats to avoid starvation, but still getting only one-third of the essential vitamins to maintain life, officials say.

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Heat Taking A Toll In Poultry

much smaller than good market size, Wilson said.

Howell said no estimates on losses would be available until after the heat wave. However, he said officials will apply this week for

disaster aid for local farmers.

The heat is really taking its toll on the farmers, he said. The bigger healthy birds are the ones that die first so farmers are left with the smaller ones.

ByEUSSAMcCRARY

Associated Press Writer

North Carolina poultry farmers may be facing their third straight year of losses because of hot weather, agriculture officials say.

Poultry losses have increased dramaticly this week during record setting high temperatures. Experts say farmers will lose hundreds of thousands of turkeys and broilers if temperatures continue to reach in the high 90s.

Basicly if temperatures reach % degrees and stay there for four hours, we lose birds, said M.C. Howell, agricultural extention agent in Union County. Chickens and turkeys cool off by taking air in through their mouths and when the air outsidie is as hot as their bodies, they start dying.

Howell said since last Friday Union County farmers have lost about 130,000 broilers and 20,000 turkeys.

North Carolinas poultry industry, which includes broilers, turkeys and eggs, trails tobacco as the states second largest agribusiness. It accounts for $780 million for Tar Heel farmers annually and more than 20 per cent of the states agricultural income.

North Carolina has an estimated 13,000 poultry farmers. Union and Duplin counties are the states largest poultry producers.

In 1981 poultry farmers were plagued by unseasonably high tem-pertures. In Union County extension agents estimated that farmers lost about $1 million in poultry because of heat.

Last year an outbreak of a respiratory disease killed thousands of turkeys across the state.

This summer farmers are taking steps to try to reduce their poultry losses, officials say.

In Duplin County poultry producers are adding extra fans and sprinklers to poultry houses.

But extension agent Snodie Wilson said farmers have already lost thousands of broilers.

The heat not only kills the birds, it keeps them from eating and makes them

(S

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Reg. $17 to $30.

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Levis Cords For Kids

Sale1 0.88

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Reg. $14 to $23

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Super Denim for Kids

Sale 7.99

.9.99

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Action-packed polyester/cotton jeans with smart looks and a great fit. These jeans get an A for style. Preschool and school age sizes.

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Misses Coordinates

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Junior Jeans

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Womens Casuai Shoes

sa. 22.40. *24

Group of womens casual shoes including leather boat, leather loafer, and open toes casual shoes in womens sizes.

Mens Levis

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Sale 17.60

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Mens

underwear

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Shop 9:30-9:30 Phone 756-1190 >itt Plaza

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Large 3' letters.....................1.50

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f





MedicalCenier ABoon To PittCounfy

(Continued from Pagel)

Green said GUC gave priority to bulk bam customers who were without power. "As far as I know, no bulk bams were without electricity for more than five hours, he said.

Green said GUC was without phone service for an hour and "this put us an hour behind in the beginning because we couldnt get information.

Richard Flye, district manager for Carolina Telephone and Telegraph, reported today that the Greenville exchange was isolated - without long distance service - from 7:45-8:41 p.m. because of lightning damage. Local calls could be made on the 752-, 758-, 75fi- and 355- exchanges, he said "if you could getadialtone.

It was difficult to get one (a dailtone) though, because of the number of people making calls during the storm, said Flye. The 757- exchange, he added was out for several hours but was repaired by 10 p.m.

Flye said this morning C.T.&T.s office PBX system was still out of service due to lightning damage.

Pitt County Emergency Communications, a local amateur radio group, aided the Pitt County Sheriffs Department during the storm when phone service was unavailable. According to Bernard Nobles, director of the organization, about 15 amateur radio operators using portable and mobile radio communication provided damage reports to the central dispatch office.

The Greene County Sheriffs Office was still without radio service this morning due to a direct lighnting strike on the systems antenna, reported Faye Elmore, a dispatcher for the county.

For a few minutes everything we had was out, she said. Currently we have the fire and rescue radios working but the sheriffs office is now operating with walkie-talkies.

A tree knocked to the ground by lightning damaged four cars and a portion of the roof at Tar River Estates during the storm, said a spokesman for the apartment complex. Lightning reportedly struck the tree, crashing it into the roof and then onto four cars parked nearby.

Two of the cars were heavily damaged, said the spokesman, and the other two moderately damaged. The roof sustained little damage. No official damage estimates were available this morning.

In Bethel the police department reported lightning struck a power line and some customers were without electricity briefly, but no serious damage occurred.

J.A. Wooten, utilities director for Farmville, reported that lightning hit the systems number one substation, leaving 75 percent of the town without power for 18 minutes.

Nearly three inches of rain, 2.72 inches according to GUC, filled Greenvilles storm drains to overflowing during the storm, and the public works department reported several streets flooded, including Dickinson Avenue, Skinner Street and a portion of Fifth Street.

A spokesman for the department said most of the calls received during the storm were requests from the police to remove large limbs from streets.

All areas of Martin County reported substantial rainfall during the early storm. No damage was noted in any area of the county, however, power was out in the town of Robersonville and adjacent areas for several hours. Technicians for the local utility company reported that lightning hit two electrical switches in Robersonville along with a transformer and a utility pole outside the town. Power was restored in town by 11 p.m. Tuesday, and work on areas outside the town was expected to be completed by mid-morning.

GUC Electrical Superintendent Green said GUC reached their all-time peak electrical demand Tuesday just before the thunderstorm. At 6 p.m. the system peaked at 159.9 megawatts. The high temperature, according to GUC reached 100 degrees Fahrenheit Tuesday and the low fell to 63 degrees F.

Poetic Justice In Court Of Appeals

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A court case in rhyme is providing a good time for judges and a lawyer who says skatings no crime.

The Ohio 6th District Court of Appeals turned to poetic justice as it turned down Jerry Murrays appeal in an illegal skating case.

In part, the appellate judges said :

There once was a man who liked to skate. Who paid his fine early, rather than late.

He asks us to give his conviction the boot, but we, in our wisdom, determine it moot.

For, you see, that we are told, by a court in Columbus, that we know is bold.

That if a defendant should pay his fine, for him, unfortunately, its the end of the line.

Murray was cited in Norwalk for violating a city ordinance which prohibits skating in traffic on the grounds that roller skates are toys unsuitable for

transportation.

The judges said the lawyer had no right to appeal because he paid a $25 fine. But Murray, who pleaded no contest, says he didnt pay it, and the Norwalk Municipal Court clerks office agrees.

So Murray wrote back:

Appellant doesnt mean to whine,

But appellant paid no fine.

"This is a fact, you will agree,

Part of the record for all to see.

And if the court was not apprised.

The Clerk, not appellant, should be criticized.

Appellants case is thus not moot,

And not deserving of the boot.

Instead appellants case should be

Decided on the basis of its constitutionality.

Having problems with do^ in your* neighborhood? Call Animal Control at 752-3342.

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer The growth of the medical center in Greenville, with the East Carolina University School of Medicine and Pitt County Memorial Hospital as the nucleus, is resulting in better medical care for the residents of eastern North Carolina and an economic boost for the Greenville area.

Pitt County Memorial Hospital, which serves the clinical teaching needs of the medical school, opened in 1977. It replaced a $1.41 million facility staffed by 38 physicians when it opened in 1951.

The investment in the new hospital has ^wn to $26.4 million, not including $7.6 million invested in equipment, and a $6.4 million expansion program is in the final planning stages at the present time.

The hospitals operating budget for the coming year is $85 million, $36.6 million of which will go directly to the 2,248 full-time and part-time employees, including 1,163 mursing service personnel. The medical staff now has 336 physicians including 100 residents.

ECUs school of medicine, housed in a $26 million building adjacent to the hospital, has $10 million worth of equipment, and employs 750 persons, including 100 physicians and 68 nurses. Some $16 million of the schools annual budget of more than $32.5 million goes for salaries.

That adds up to 2,998 people earning some $52.6 million from just two employers, and there are more than 45 offices staffed by one or more physicians in private practice who hire nurses, receptionists, bookkeepers, and who purchase services in the Greenville area.

Most of the patients treated at the old hospital, which had 206 beds, came from Pitt County. Only about one-fourth of the patients treated there were from out of the county.

Thats not true today. The growth of PCMH and the school of medicine has caused Pitt County Memori-

Narrow Escape

NEW DELHI, India

(AP) - PoUoe rescued seven members of Prime Minister Indira Gandhis Congress Party from being burned to death by a 50-member Marxist mob in Kerala state, the states home affairs minister told reporters.

The mob chopped off one mans leg when he tried to run away from the house in which Congress Party ' members had tftken shelter, Vayaloar Ravi told reporters.

The mob, members of a Marxist youth group, chased the Congress members into the house and set it afire after a prolonged siege, the minister said.

DONATE MEDICINES

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Project Ho^, a private relief organization, has donated $3.4 million worth of medicine to alleviate severe shortages in this war-torn Central American country.

al, one of four hospitals in the state designated as an academic medical center teaching hospital, to b^ome a regional hospital, rather than a county hospital.

During the fiscal year which ended in September 1979, 15,474 patients were admitted for treatment. Of those, 8,908 or 57.6 percent were Pitt County residents.

For the fiscal year which ended in September 1982, 20,964 patients were admitted for treatment, with only 49.7 percent or 10,425 being local residents.

Each year, almost every six months, a new dimension of service is being offered here, PCMH President Jack Richardson said. The expansions provide local and area physicians with more in-depth diagnostic tools to work with, the capability to accommodate more patients, and additional theraputic treatments.

Dr. William E. Laupus, ECU vice chancellor and dean of the medical school, explained: The growth of this combination of resources, the school of medicine and the large regional hospital, has provided the oppiortunity for many eastern North Carolina residents to obtain care at a level they had not been used to having available to them.

In a number of services weve developed, particularly in cancer and heart disease programs, the population we are serving

appears to be one which has not been served earlier with the same access to diogimtic and theraputic services. What Im saying is that a lot of the people referred to us were not referred anywhere before.

Whats now available to eastern North Carolina is a much larger scope of full-range medical capabilities than was the case earlier.

The medical school dean suggested that because of the development and growth of the hospital-medical school, patients are coming into more sophisticated levels of health care earlier, with emphasis on earlier diagnosis of serious problems.

Initially the hospital-medical school started out almost as a Pitt County program, Laupus said, but weve been able to expand as staff and facilities have grown.

The dean said medical school outpatient clinics are seeing 150 patients a day now, with more than half of them from outside Pitt County.

The Family Practice Center, which serves the clinical training needs of those specializing in the practice of family medicine, is a different matter.

Laupus said family practice handles between 125 and 150 patients a day. Family Practice tends to have more local clientel. We try to give continuity of care to

families, so they have to be in the general geographical area to do that.

The medical school and hospital are now recruiting for a cardio-vascular surgeon or surgeons to head an open heart surgery program. JVith the establishment of lhat program, and the radiation therapy center now under construction, the hospital hopes to be able to provide a full range of services on site, Laupus said.

Were not seeking to develop programs based on rare problems, Laupus said. Irather, the medical school and hospital are working together in our planning to go at those kinds of problems which appear to be of the highest incidence and highest risks to people in this area.

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Birds Seen Flying Back To Island

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -The birds are coming back to Christmas Island.

The National Science Foundation reported Sunday that, six months after millions of birds staged a mass exodus from Christmas Island in the Pacific Ocean, the birds are returning.

The unprecedented disap-'pe^rance of approximately 17 million birds was . first reported in March by Dr. Ralph W. Schreiber, curator of ornithology at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County in California.

&chreiber has since returned to the island, the science foundation reported, and found that at least some of the birds are returning.

Most of the 18 species that disappeared have reappeared in small numbers, the foundation reported.

And if said that three species have begun breeding in numbers approaching their population prior to the fall of 1982, when the mass disappearance occurred. Those there are black noddy terns, crested terns and lesser frigatebirds.

Scientists blamed the dicappearance on an unusual weather phenomenon known as El Nino, which caused changes in Pacific wind patterns, ocean currents and water temperatures. El Nino, a Spanish reference to the Christ Child, is so named because it usually appears every few years around Christmastime.

This phenomenon, which has resulted in unusual weather around the world for more than a year, is responsible for shifts in the fish population. Schreiber suspects the birds abandoned Christmas Island because the fish they depend upon for food had left.

The recovery of the bird populations depends on the food supply in the waters surrounding the island," Schreiber said.

And, he added, ocean and atmosphere scientists are unsure of the future directions for the El Nino conditions and cannot now predict what will happen to the birds in coming months.

That some species are breeding again is a good sign, however, as thousands of chicks were left behind when the birds left the island. Schreiber said that some species lost an entire generation.

l^ost of the birds are long-lived, however, and he indicated that the breeding disruption should not cause them to die out.

Where the birds went is still a question, however.

Schreiber has speculated that many of them merely took to the air over distant waters looking for food. They live on fish and squid and can remain airborne for long periods, floating on air currents and swooping down to feed.

There are other islands 60 miles to 100 miles away, Schreiber has said.

Christmas Island, the worlds largest coral atoll at 200 square miles, is part of the Republic of Kiribati, formerly known as the Gilbert Islands.

It has a population of between 1,500 and 2,000 people and got its name because it was discovered by British explorer. Captain James Cook, on Christmas Eve 1777.

Slight Pay Cut By Bookkeeping

WASHINGTON (AP) -Most white collar federal workers will get a slight pay cut in October when the government begins to use a new bookkeeping procedure to compute their salaries.

'The change, which is expected to save the federal government $120 million a year, adds seven hours to the work year, thereby reducing the hourly salary of the affected workers. Congress enacted the bookkeeping method in last years budget reconciliation bill.

The typical white-collar federal worker in the Washington area will lose $3.40 per paycheck. Blue collar employees will not be affected by the change. The change wiU affect most of the governments 1.4 million white collar workers.

The Daily ReHecto- Greenville N C

BEAUTIFUL FAMOUS MAKER BATH TOWELS. Choose from many prints to accent your bathroom. Slightly imperfect.

A A MENS GARAN^ MOUN-WW TAIN LION SHIRT made of poly/cotton. Several ^ styles and colors. Sizes Ca. S-XL. Reg. to 11.97 Each.

^ MENS GARAN MOUN-QQ TAIN LION BELTED 00 SLACKS. Poly/cotton.

Many colors. Sizes 30-42. Pr. Reg. 17.97.

IV-    August    24_29d3        g

ALARON* ONE-PIECE ELECTRONIC PHONE. Features ringer, On/Off Switch, automatic rediai of iast number, mute switch and a waff holder. Reg. 14.97 Each.

49

88

WITH

EXCHANGE

POWER BREED BAHERY. Sizes to fit most domestic and foreign trucks and cars. 5 year lifnited warranty. Reg. 62.97.

end of summer

sale sale sale

Sale Starts Sale Ends

Thursday

Saturday

The Discount Store That Doesnt Discount People.

Open Daily 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Pitt Plaza Shopping Center Greenville, N.C. ^

LADIES

BIKINI

STRETCH

PANTIES.

3 styles to choose from. Features cotton lined crotch and lace trim.

Reg, 1.38. Pr.

Box

CRAYOLA JUMBO CRAYONS. For

home, office or school. 8 crayons per box. Reg. 1.38.

LADIES DOUBLE KNIT PADDED BRA. Features lace trim, contour cups, nylon lycra sides and adjustable straps. Choose White, Beige or Black. Sizes 34-38 A, B & C Cup.

Reg. 2.66 Each.

FRUIT OF THE LOOM COT-^TONTEE SHIRTS. 3 per

pkg. Sizes S-XL.

FRUIT OF THE LOOM* COTTON BRIEFS. 3

per pkg. Sizes 28-44.

59.88

Samsung' 12 Television

12 Inch Black and White Television 100 State. Chassis AC Operation- Reg. 78.88

Solid

MARKS-A-LOr

ROSES PENCILS.

10 per package. Choose from a variety of colors, and yellow.

Reg. 88'Pkg.

MARKS-A-LOT BROAD TIP MARKER. Permanent waterproof marks on most surfaces. Many colors.

Reg. 79' Each.

WUNOf HS our

ELMERS SCHOOL GLUE.

4 fl. oz. For home, office or school. Reg. 87' Each.

A

FILLER PAPER. Stock up at this great Roses price. 150 ct.

Limit 6 pkgs.

PAC-MAN

THEME

BOOKS

Wirebound with 5 holes. 50 count. Reg. 99*

Illustration Similar

ROSES SOFT FACIAL TISSUE in white

2 ply, 200 ct, Reg. 67 Box.

1.78t

HOME & OFFICE LEGAL PADS. 150 sheets. 3 per pkg. 8V2 in.x14 in.

Reg. 2.78.

No.Rainchecks.

*

i M

QQ FOAM FILLED BED ^ ^ PILLOW. Measures 18 X 25. Standard size. Ea. Reg. 2.57 Each.

099

PAR II ELECTRIC ALARM CLOCK. Reg. 3.99 Each.

LUVS' DISPOSABLE DIAPERS. Choose Medium. 48 ct., or Large 32 ct. Reg. 7.96 Box.

No Rainchecks.





In The Area

IVm/tfrv/V/tf High Class Has Reunion

The class of 1938 o7 Winterviile High School held its 45th reunion Saturday evening at Tar Landing Restaurant. Floyd Holton Avery was toastmaster.

Mr. and Mrs. D.H. Conley, C.D. Ward, Bertha Hart Tripp and Mrs. George Clapp were recognized as special guests by Ernest Leroy Avery.

Mildred Rouse Peede was recognized as traveling the greater distance and R.H. and Betty McLawhom for having the most grandchildren.

Unanswered Questions Linger in Marcos' Rivai Assassination

School Lunch Times Are Changed

A change in arrangements in three of tne city schools refative to serving of meals has been announced by Supt. of Greenville City Schools Dr. Oelma Blinson.

Eastern Elementary and South Greenville Elementary Schools are serving lunches today, tomorrow and Friday prior to the 12 noon early dismissal hour. Aycock Junior High is serving lunches on these three days prior to the 1 p.m. early dismissal hour.

The previously announced early dismissal schedule for the first three days of school remain unchanged - 12 noon for kindergarten through grade six; 12:30 p.m. for Greenville Middle School i and 1 p.m. for grades 8 through 12.

A decision will be made by the school staff on Friday relative to operation hours of the city schools for the coming week.

Student Bikes To Massachusetts

Sean Farley of Greenville bicycled solo from here to Massachusetts thr :ummer.

Between June 6 and June 21, the 17-year-old Rose High School student hiked the 680 miles to Rochester, Mass., where he served as a counselor at Camp Snipatuit. He also took a side canoe trip in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania with friends he visited in New York.

Farley is the son of Charlotte Purrington of Greenville.

Burglary Charge Is Made

Greenville police arrested Charles Person. 19, of 600B Clark St., after he allegedly entered the home of Rachael Black Short at 1804 Norcott Circle through a bathroom window and took $120 worth of property from the home.

Chief Glenn Cannon said officers took Person into custody shortly after the burglary was reported at 3:35 a.m. and recovered a pocketbook, wallet, drugs and sissors that were taken.

Person, according to Cannon, was charged with first degree burglary and larceny after breaking and entering.

Commodity Day Plans Discussed

Plans for the statewide commodity day were discussed at the meeting of the Pitt County Farm Bureau board of directors held Tuesday night.

The event, for all committee chairmen, will be held Sept. 2 at 10 a.m. at the N.C. Farm Bureau. Representing Pitt County will be Gene Paramore, field cn^s; Atlas Wooten, tobacco; Ben Gardner, livestock; David H. Smith, poultry; Tom Carson, peanuts; Alma Worthington, law and order; and Charles McLawhom, dairy.

Mrs. Worthin^on announced the annual R. Flake Shaw Scholarship auction sale will be held Nov. 5 in Raleigh.

Carson was recognized as a new board member representing Bethel. Senator Vernon White was a special guest.

Money Is Taken For Safe

tyii

vlllei

Greenville police are investigating the theft of money from a safe at Huckleberrys on Charles Street that occurred between 3:30 a.m., wh n the restaurant closed, and 6 a.m. when employees returned to the building.

Chief Glenn Cannon said the thieves gained entrance to the building through a vent on the roof, took an undetermined amount of money from a small safe in the office, and left the building through a rear door.

Police Car Damaged In Wreck

The North Carolina Highway Patrol reported today that an estimated $900 damage resulted to a Greenville Police Department car when the vehicle collided with a utility pole at the intersection of Fifth and Vance Streets about 9:35 p.m. Tuesday.

Troo^r Donnie Taylor said Artis Leona Briley of 903A Colonial Ave., was charged with failing to yield the right of way in connection with the mishap.

According to Taylor, Briley allegedly pulled from Vance Street into the path of the police vehicle, driven by Officer Byron M. Highland.

Highland, Taylor said, swerved to avoid a collision with the Briley car and struck a utility pole.

No damage resulted to the Briley car, Taylor said.

By DAVID BRISCOE Associated Press Writer MANILA, PhUlppines(AP) - Four days after the assassination of President Ferdinand E. Marcos chief political opponent, there are still a host of unanswered questions about the slaying of Benigno Aquino.

Government investigators have revealed only meager

Fire Razes Warehouse

ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. (AP) - Seven firefighters were injured Tuesday while battling a blaze that destroyed a peanut-filled warehouse at the Planters Mill Co., authorities said.

Some 90 firefighters were called to battle the blaze, about three times the number normally needed. The extra firefighters were called because of the heat caused by the flames and a statewide heat wave, authorities said.

The cause of the fire, the second in seven months at the plant site, has not been determined. Rocky Mount Fire Chief J.E. Hawkins said.

The seven firefighters were treated at Nash General Hospital Tuesday, with one bing admitted for observation. Two other firefighter were being examined late Tuesday night. The seven suffered bums and heat exhaustion, hospital officials said Allen Smith of Rocky Mount was in fair condition after suffring from smoke inhalation, a hospital spokesman said.

The fire broke out about 10:45 a.m. in a metal warehouse containing peanuts and peanut hulls, Hawkins said. He said no estimate of the losses to the plant were available.

There were.no initial indication that the fire was deliberatedly set, Hawkins said.

We cant determine the cause until we get in there and investigate,he said.

New Eruption

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - The 987-foot Mount Colo volcano on Unauna island erupted Monday, emitting ash and smoke reaching an altitude of 15,000 feet, the official Antara News Agency reported Tuesday.

About 7,000 inhabitants on Unauna. 1,100 miles northeast of Jakarta, were evacuated to Ampana, 80 miles to the south, when the volcano erupted on July 14.

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clues to the identity of the man they say fired one shot from a Smith and Wesson .357 Magnum through the head of the 50-year-old opposition leader.

The investigators said Roily - a common nickname for Filipinos named Rolando - was embroidered on his underwear, and he was wearing a ring with the letter R" on it.

They said he was between 30 and 35 years old, of medium build, 5 feet 7, and dressed in the uniform of an airport utility man.

Investigators headed by

Gen. Prospero Olivas said they had interviewed 70 witnesses, but they were not able to help in the identification.

The governmend says the lone man dashed toward Aquino after he emerged from a Nationalist Chinese jetliner with three bodyguards, shot him in the back of the head, and then was shot and killed by military men detailed to escort Aquino.

A Japanese freelance reporter aboard the plane, Kiyoshi Wakamiya, 37, claimed in a TV interview that he looked out the

Moonies Plan For Charlotte Center

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - A 13-member team from the Rev. Sun Myung Moons Unification Church says it will establish a church in Charlotte next week.

Team leaders say they will set up a video learning center and find a place for the centers staff to live.

The team is part of the International One World Crusade, a wave of evangelism the churchs founder and leader ordered last spring.

Create A Fund For Cooling

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -Public Service Co. of North Carolina Inc. has created an emergency cooling fund to help customers pay air-conditioning bills.

The program was originally intended as a heating fund, said C. Frederick Ward, division office manager in Raleigh. But who would have thought we would have had (the heat) weve had in the past week, he said.

The company, which serves 12 counties, has contributed $20,000 to be distributed through Salvation Army offices. The company will match every $3 donated with $1 from corporate funds. Donations and applications for help are being handled by the Salvation Army.

The team has been working in Charlotte since Aug. 1, distributing literature on the church.

Leaders of the team are Robert Carvell, a native of England who is now a New York City businessman, and John Wilt of Raleigh, director of the churchs work in North Carolina.

Wilt said there are only about a dozen Unification Church members in the state. There are Unification student groups on six campuses, including North Carolina State University and the University of North Caolina at Chapel Hill.

One of our goals is to get up somekind of center for the North Carolina staff to use and for futuremission terns to use when they are passing through, Carvell said. Right now, we dont even have a phone number for people to call if theyre interested in what were doing.

HIGH BACK WICKER ARM CHAIR

window and saw two of the three bodyguards shoot at Mr. Aquinos head from a close range. But the Japanese newspaper Asahi said he told it, I saw the officers draw their pistols and heard the crack of two gunshots. I didnt see who fired the shots.

Wakamiya flew to Japan ,Monday under the protection of the Japanese Embassy, the embassy said.

Nobody else aboard the plane, including Aquino^ brother-in-law, said he saw the assassination.

Among the unanswered questions:

How did the alleged killer know where Aquino would be taken off the plane and how was he able to time his movements to meet his victim just as he stepped onto Philippine soil?

Why did the military guards prevent foreign reporters and photographers from viewing Aquinos arrival? Local photographers had been told by a colonel Aquino would come out one exit of the plane and only rushed to within view of the right 01^ after the shooting was over.

Why did the military take Aquino off the plane when the government announced it would bar him from landing if he didnt have valid travel papers? How did the alleged assassin fire a bullet on what an autopsy said was a downward trajectory into the head of a man who was about his height?

Why was Aquinos body rushed away and that of the alleged assassin left on the ground for viewing by reporters five hours later?

Political killings are not unusual in the Philippines, and many remain unsolved. Among them is the bombing on Aug. 21, 1971, of an opposition rally in which 12 pwple were killed. That was 12 years to the day before Aquino was assassinated.

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Lefhal Heaf Wave Shows No Sign Of Easing

BvDEBORAH ZABARENKO Associated Press Writer A sizzling heat wave that has claimed 15 lives and just keeps getting hotter marked time in the South today, locked in by a powerful front along the Mason-Dixon line, with KKNlegree highs expected through the weekend.

Students left sweltering schools early on Tuesday, the elderly stayed at air-conditioned shelters, soybean and hay crops withered and thousands of chickens died in the heat.

The culprit right now Is a front thats wandering almost along the Mason-Dixon line, a barrier that wont allow cooler air in from the west, said Harry Gordon, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service Severe Storms Center in Kansas City, Mo.

It just keeps getting hotter all the time, Gordon said today, adding that no relief is in sight at least until the weekend.

The mercury soared over the century mark Tuesday in the Carolinas, Georgia, Virginia, Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee, but the nations hot spot was Gila Bend, Ariz., where the high was 107 degrees. In the South, Athens, Ga., suffered through 105-degree heat, the highest in the region.

Relief could come from rain spawned by the seasons second tropical storm, Barry, now located about 200 miles east of Floridas Atlantic coast. But the slow-moving storm isnt expected to come within 65 miles of a major coastal city before Thursday or Friday, the weather service said.

Further west, torrential rains in Arkansas and Tennessee temporarily doused parched ground, but officials said lightning from the storm sparked a grass fire at Little Rock, Ark., a symptom of the summers chronic dryness.

The rains drove winds gusting to 60 mph through mid-Tennesse Tuesday, knocking out power to 12,000 customers. The storms silver lining was a 15-degree drop in temperatures that peaked at 102 degrees in Jackson, Tenn, More 100-plus temperatures were forecast for today, however.

In Nashville, schools closed after only one full day of the new academic year when officials measured indoor temperatures at 98 degrees in some of the citys 1,214 non-air conditioned classrooms.

Stores reported a run on fans and air conditioners.

Weve sold everything we can lay our hands on, said Betty Gibbons, an appliance clerk at a Nashville Sears stores. And we were about the only pwple in town that had anything left. We just cant keep anything in stock.

Its terrible, said Meg Siegenthaler, a seventh-grader at West End Middle School in Nashville, of her sticky classroom. You can concentrate, but its hard. Even If theres a fan, not-everyoneisnexttoit.

Classes were also cut short or canceled in Alabama, Georgia and Texas.

A round-the-clock heat shelter was to open today in North Little Rock, Ark., with instructions to remain open until afternoon highs dip below 100 degrees.

In Alabama, where five people have died in the current heat spell, state Civil Defense Director Dan Turner opened 11 relief centers in Madison County on the Tennessee border.

North Alabama hasnt had a good rain since early July, said state A<riculture commissioner AlL-crt McDonald, adding that crop damage could run into the millions. Theres not a green pasture up there. Without rain soon the soybean crop will be a total disaster.

Farm news was bad in Ohio, where the Ohio Crop

Slightly Better In Bar Exams

RALEIGH, N.C. lAP) -Of the 479 North Carolina law school graduates who took the July bar exam for the first time, 364 passed, according to deans of the states five law schools.

The 76 ptf cent success rate is a slight improvement over last year when 74 percent of the first-time applicants passed.

Reporting Service said 90 percent of fields are short of moisture and Gov. Richard Celeste considered adding 27 more counties to his plea for

federal disaster aid.

Neighboring Indiana has already been granted federal aid, which makes farmers eligible for emergency loans

at 8 percent Interest.

The heat fried some 900,000 chickens to death in Geoggia, and dairy yields were down. Only ,8 percent of Georgias

farm fields have adequate moisture, according to the Georgia Crop Reporting Service, with hay and soybean production decimated.

While about 200 people died in a July heat wave across the country, the temperature since Saturday has been blamed for five deaths in

Alabama, two each in Georgia. Missouri. Tennessee and Kentucky and one each in North Carolina and Illinois

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J2 Th(f Dtiily Reflector Greenvtlle N C_    Wednesday    August    24    1983Faircloth Recalls 'Seconds Of Mayhem' In Crash

By F. ALAN BOYCE

Associated Press Writer

RALEIGHaN.C (AP) -Gubernatorjel candidate D M. "Lauch Faircloth, who swam away from the burning wreckage of a twin-engine airplane Monday night, said Tuesday it was , sheer luck that none of the four men aboard were killed or seriously injured.    /

Faircloth, who sufferea minor bums on his hand from flaming gasoline, said he remember^ the plane hitting water on the grass runway, crashing through trees and crashing in flames in the Catawba River.

The great thing was, any one of a dozen things could have not happened exactly as it did .. and it would have been a total disaster, the former state commerce secretary said in an informal news conference at his Raleigh campaign headquarters.

The plane crashed into the river shortly after taking off from Marion Airport following a campaign speech. Faircloth said crashing on land or into heavier timber would have been disastrous and that everyone needed to be alert to escape the spreading gasoline-fed flames.

The plane was totally engulfed in flames in sec- onds, he said, adding that flames up to 50 feet high shot from the wreckage.

Faircloth recalled that the airstrip was foggy during takeoff, but refused to speculate on what caused the crash.

Once the plane was down, Faircloth, deputy press aide Brad Crone and pilots Leighton Elliott and Manuel Sowers made their ways without speaking through the hatches and into the water.

Crone was uninjured and the two pilots had bruises.

As I remember, Manuel

MUNITIONS CACHE

ASCHAFFENBURG, West Germany (AP) - West German authorities have unearthed a huge World War II munitions cache, including 6.5 tons of live artillery shells, buried three feet under a busy railway line, police announced.

said he couidni swim and someone said. Well, float, Faircloth said. "I don't remember any other conversation.

Elliott, contacted by telephone Tuesday, declined to comment on the cause of the crash until the Federal Aviation Administration had completed its investigation.

Crone said he was the first to escape the plane, crawling

through the top half of a hatch while Faircloth struggled with the bottom. V

When Faircloth went out, he went into fire, Crone said. He star^ beating it away with his hand. He burned his arm."

Brad Crone went through the top door before I could get the bottom open, Faircloth said. The fire was beginning to come in the

AFTER THE CRASH - Gubernatorial candidate Lauch Faircloth speaks at an impromptu news conference in Raleigh a day after he escaped from a burning plane at Marion. His right hand was burned when he pushed flaming gasoiine aside in the Catawba River, where the plane came to earth. (APLaserphoto)

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Help keep Greenville clean! Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 752-4137 for more information.

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plane, so 1 jumped into the water.

Gene Padgett, manager of Marion Airport, said it was incredible anyone survived the crash.

The airplane hit the trees, spun aroiind and spewed wreckage for a quarter of a mile before it crashed in the river, Padgett said. It was burned to a cri^. All you can see this morning is the tail section.

Faircloth estimated the flight, from takeoff to crash, lasted about 10-12 seconds.

It didnt last long enough to get bored, he said.

We went fairly directly to shore, Faircloth said, a distance he estimated at 250 feet. That was the way away from the flames. We

had worked our way through the woods and back to the runway by the time the rescue squad saw us.

Faircloth, still in the clothes he wore in the crash, noted that his coat was still in the cockpit and that his tie was hanging on an oak tree. But he said he had no plans to avoid flying.

'This is something that happens, he said. "We were lucky and you go out tomorrow and do what you need to do.

Crone also appeared unrattled by the experience, although he took some ribbing about his rapid escape from the plane.

Just for the record, I just went out to see how deep the water was, he said.

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Rural Mud Creek Folk To Get A Clinic

By BILL BERGSTROM Associated Press Writer GRETHEL, Ky. (AP) -When Eula Hal) was growing up, medical care was a luxury few people along Mud Creek could afford.

1 never saw a doctor but twice when 1 was a kid, said Mrs. Hall, 55. Everybody just tried to work hard and stay as well as they could. Sometimes that was not enough.

Our neighbor bad five children and she stuck a nail in her leg, she recalled. She was going down the steps and a step broke. She died of tetanus and left those little kids. And she was a young woman.

A lot of pet^les lives could have been saved if theyd had proper medical .attention, she said.

Mrs. Hall remembered. In 1972, her struggle to start a clinic in the rugged eastern Kentucky hills succeeded. It was just a dream come true, she said.

The dream faded last year, when the Mud Creek Clinic Dumed. But the fire also Ignited national attention and :upport.

' Last week, with $400,000 in . federal and local funds in the Dank, the Mud Creek Com-munity Health Corp. advertised for bids to build a new, 5,400-square-foot building.

Were hoping to be in it by next summer, Mrs. Hall said. ,

What finally got the clinic built 11 years ago was a screening of Mud Creek residents by the Center for

Miracle Helps Burglar Escape

PAIGNTON, England (AP) - A would-be cat burglar slipped from a rope over a Woolworths department store in this southwest England town, crashed through a corrugated plastic roof and fell three stories to a concrete floor, police said Tuesday.

He then vaulted a seven-foot gate and vanished into the night before police could arrive." *

He is extraordinarily lucky, store manager Dan Hyde said. I think the police expected to find a body.

Hyde said burglar tools were found on the floor, but nothing had been stolen.

Health Services at -Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn.

Black lung, diabetes, hypertension and poor nutrition were common. They found so many medical problems, and so many peq>le that couldnt afford health care, said Mrs. Hall, who has no formal medical training.

And the people tended not to seek it. Without funds, Mrs. Hall said, You could maybe get seen once. But people didnt go back for their foUowup care because of lack of money. People have a lot of pride.

The clinic started in a small building on Tinker Fork. By July 1974, we outgrew the building, Mrs. Hall said. I moved out of my house and renovated it for the clinic.

It operated at the house on Mink Branch until last summers fire. The blaze did not shut down the clinic, though.

We had the telephone company put us a phone on a willow tree, and we saw some patients in the yard while it was still smoldering, Mrs. HaU said.

The clinic next moved into schoolrooms at Grethel, then to a trailer and two mobile homes on a dusty lot behind a gas station.

Since 1977, when a change in the United Mine Workers union health plan ended the major source of funds that kept the clinic independent, it has been part of the federal Big Sandy Health Care agency at Prestonsburg.

Mrs. Hall said she didnt mind joining the federal agency because I dont think theres any better way to spend a federal dollar than healthcare.

The clinic sees about 50 patients a day, including miners with black lung disease.

And we have the children. We just see everybody. Nobody is denied service, Mrs. Hall said. Instead of taking every dollar somebody has got for health care, they pay according to their income. Besides the physicians who serve at Mud Creek and the other Big Sandy Health Care facilities, the clinic also has a family nue practitioner, pharmacist, laboratory technician afiid medical students who work for course credits.

The entire staff tum^ out to examine children after a recent school bus accident, she said, and one nurse-

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practitioner stayed at the scene of a mine disaster last year at Craynor, hoping to help until the last body was brought out.

Patients who need hospital care are taken to McDowell, seven miles away over a mountain that can be impassable in winter, or 20 rugged country miles to

Pikeville.

Mrs. Hall frequently takes pecle to Pikeville to help them apply for food stamps, Social Security and disability or other benefits because a lot of people dont read and understand the applications.

The new building will be financed through the Mud

Creek corporation by a $320,000 Appalachian Regional Commission grant and $80,000 in matching dona-tidns. The mobile homes now housing the clinic will be converted to a dental facility.

Local businesses and people all up and down Mud Creek poured donations into Box 129 at Grethel, Mrs. Hall

said. And we got donations from people all over the United States who read the story of the fire and what we were doing. We raised the $80,000 in three months.

The corporation will lease the building to Big Sandy Health Care, but the building itself will belong to the community, Mrs. Hall said.

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The Daily Reflector. Greenville N CRussians Welcome More American Tourists

Wednesday_Aogust 24 I9a3 ] 5

EDITORS NOTE -Associated Press Writer Timothy Harper was one of 30 lawyers on a two-week tegal study tour of the Soviet Vnion earlier this summer.

- By TIMOTHY HARPER : Associated Press Writer : MOSCOW (AP) - When the Aeroflot flight had lifted off for Kiev, the Russian fii^t attendants offered soft draiks to their American passengers.

They also asked the Americans, most of them lawyers, to sign petitions for peace. They said the petitions supported nuclear disarmament and would be sent to the generals.

What generals? Where? on^ lawyer asked.

'In the Pentagon, one atndant replied.

American tourists are going to the Soviet Union in unprecedented numbers this yfear, according to Russian and American tourism in-d^try officials.

The dollar is strong. Prices are low. The political climate has made Americans more interested in seeing the Soviet Union. And Russians are more interested in showing it to them - and using the opportunity for driving home their own views on world peace and nuclear armaments.

Theres a big drive for tourism in the Soviet Union, said James Elmstrom, executive vice president of Professional Seminar Consultants of Oceanside, N.Y.

His company is sending

6,000 Americans to the Soviet Union this year, including the 30 lawyers who were offered , the peace petitions.

Elmstrom said he felt more Americans wanted to see the Soviet Union for themselves because of the nuclear freeze movement and Reagan administration criticism of Soviet arms polipies.

I suppose the Russians feel^it is good enterprise, he said. And its a good way for them to make contact, to tell their side of the story.

Last month, the Russians made two friendly gestures, travel agents say. One gesture was the release of several Greenpeace members who had been arrested while photographing a Soviet whaling operation. The other was the two-week tour of the Soviet Union by Samantha Smith, an ll-year-old Maine schoolgirl.

Samantha and her parents . were the guests of the Soviet government after she wrote a letter to President Yuri Andropov. At one point she was asked to sign a ballot for' peace supporting nuclear disarmament, but her parents had her decline.

ithe Russians are involved in a peace offensive, said Michael Brainerd of the Citizen Exchange Council, another New York agency that arranges group y tours.

! group mi^t be mostly mostly mathematics teachers, another mostly high schod students, a third mostly cross-country skiers. Besides the usual sightseeing, these tours include scheduled meetings with Russian mathematics teachers, high school students and cross-country skiers.

The petitions for peace were offered to the lawyers during a five-city tour in which they did the usual sightseeing, attended trials and met in small groups with Soviet judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, law professors and Justice Mlmkry officials.Again Calls For Defense Buildup

WASHINGTON (AP) - In a meeting with the defense minister of Japan, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger renewed his call for the island nation to increase its def^ise buildup.

During a 90-minute meeting wRn Deteise Minister Kazuo Tanikawa, Weinberger said Japans 6.88 per^ increase in defense spending for 1984 was insufficient, according to sources who spoke on the condttion they not be identified by name.

In a statanmit issued after the meeting, Weinberger said Japans primary military r^ should be the defense of Pacific sea lanes as far as 1,000 miles frmn the island natkm. ' i

Throughout the trip, the Americans were offered books of essays and ^>eeches by Soviet leaders blaming the United States for the arms race. And Russian tour guides and lawyers who spoke English told the attorneys that the Soviet Union wanted peace and supported nuclear disarmament.

The sacred duty of every lawyer is to contribute to the

survival of humanity, I.I. Lukashuk, an international law professor, told the Americans in Kiev.

Dan Rubock, a New York City lawyer, said he was surprised when a law professor told him Russians believed the United States wanted war. He thou^it we want to nuke em back to the Stone Age, Rubock said.

Some oj, the American lawyers were struck by the

similarities between the U.S. and Soviet legal systems. 1 was impressed by the )arallels, said' Theresa layer, a University of San Die law professor.

They have substantially more rights than I thought, Gerald Jibilian of Greenwich, Conn., said.

Others, however, were more skeptical. Phyllis Weisberg of Freeport, N.Y., said, I dont know how

much of what we saw was

real.

As in any country, theyre showing you the b^ side of the Soviet Union, said Elmstrom. Theyre not going to show you any problems.

Elmstrom said the tourism industry expected to send

50,000 to 60,000 Americans to the Soviet Union this year, twice the number sent last year.

U.S. and Soviet officials agreed that American tourism to the Soviet Union was up dramatically, but had no exact figures. Its certainly busier than it has been, said John Zimmerman, a spokesman for the State Departments Soviet desk in Washington.

Felix Desyadnikov, a spokesman in New York for Intourist, the official Soviet

tourism agency, said, "There is considerably more American tourism to the Soviet Union this year than last year. We are happy about it.

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16 P^ily Reflector. Greenville. N C

Wednesday, August 24,1983

Stock And Market Reports

By The Associated Press Grain: no. 2 yellow shelled corn higher at 3.72-4.00, mostly 3.74-3.86 in east and 3.80-4.15, mostly 4.00-4.15 in Piedmont; no. 1 yellow soybeans sharply higher at 8.89-9.17 1-2, mostly 8.94-9.17 1-2 in East and 8.70-8.91, mostly 8.80-8.91 in Piedmont; wheat 3.10-3.80, mostly 3.70-3.80; oats 1.10-1.60; barley 1.95-2.43; (new crop -corn 3.56-3.91; soybeans 8.69-9.04; wheat 3.55-3.85). Soybean meal fob. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 percent 362.30-281.50. Prices paid as of 4 p.m. Tuesday by location for com and soybeans: Cofield 3.91, 8.94; Conway 3.78, 8.93; Dunn 3.89, 9.03; Elizabeth City 3.72, 8.94; Farmville 3.80, 8.94; Fayetteville, 9.17 1-2; Goldsboro 4.00, 8.90; Greenville 3.74, 8.89; Kinston

3.74, 8.94; Lumberton (3.80-3.86), 8.94; Pantego

3.74, 8.89; Raleigh, 9.17 1-2; Selma 3 81, 9.07; Whitevle 3.86, 8.94; Williamston 3.74, 8.89; Wilson 3.82, 8.94; Albemarle 3.91,8.80; Barber 4.15, 8.91; Durham 3.80; Mocksville 4.15; Monroe (4.00-4.15); Mount, Ulla, 8.90; Roaring River 4.15; Statesville 3.85,8.70

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices headed lower today, extending the decline that set in Tuesday.

The, Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dropped 3.15 to 1,189.74 in the first half hour.

Losers took a 3-2 lead over gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Analysts said traders mood was dominated by uneasiness over the inter-est-rate outlook and the recent listless performance of the stock market.

The Dow Jones industrial average has been fluctuating between 1,160 and 1,210 since the end of last month. During that period, trading volume has been relatively light - a signal to market-watchers that many investors have lost their enthusiasm for stocks for the time being.

Todays early prices included American Telephone & Telegraph, unchanged at 66'/2; Sony, down V4 at 13^; Johnson & Johnson, off '/i at 41',^, and National Semiconductor, up ^4 at 48.

On Tuesday the Dow Jones industrials fell 10.26 points to 1,192.89.

More dhan two stocks declined in price for every one thad rose on the NYSE.

Big Boabd volume slowed to 68.80 million shares from 76.42 million Monday.

The NYSEs composite index dropped .83 to 94.27. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was off 1.99 at 229.67.

CaroPwU

Celanese

Cent Soya Champ Inl Chrysler

CocaCola

Cotg Palm

Comw Edis

ConAgra

Conti Group

DeltaAirl

DowChem

duPonI

Duke Pow

EaslnAirL

East Kodak

EatonCp^.

Esmark''s

Exxon

Firestone

FlaPowU

FlaProgress

KordMol

Fuqua s

GTE Corp

GnDynam

GenlElect s

Gen Food

Gen Mills

Gen Motors

GenuParts

GaPacii

Goodrich

Goodyear

Grace Co

GtNor Nek

Greyhound

Gulf Oil

Herculeslnc

Honeywell

HosptCp s

Ing Rand

IBM

Inti Harv

Int Paper

Inl Rectil

Int TiT

K mart

KaisrAlum

Kane Mill

KanebSvc

KrogerCo

Lockheed

Ixiews Corp

Masonite

McDrmInt n

McKesson

Mead Corp

MinnMM

Mobil

Monsanto

NCNBCp

NabiscoBrd

Nat Distill

NorflkSou

OlinCp

Owenslll

Penney JC

PepsiCo

Phelps Dod

PhilipMorr

PhillpsPet

Polaroid

ProctGamb s

Quaker Oat

RCA

RalstnPur RepubAir Republic StI Revlon Reynldlnd Rockwl s RqyCrown StRegisCp Scott Paper SealdPwr s SearsRoeb Shaklee s Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co .Sper^ Cp sfdOilCaf StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc UMC Ind l!n Camp L'n Carbide Uniroyal US Steel Unocal WalMart s WeslPtPep Westgh EH Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Xerox Cp

21s. 21.s 71'4    71',

14', 14'ii 23'-,    23',

24 V, SU,    5(^4

TO'V,    2iys.

26^4    26\

28',    28

43'V,    43\

30s,    30'/,

34',,    34'1.

51    50'i,

22    2I

7    6,

67",    67S.

39.    39'-,

68.    68.

38V,

19.    19\

36h 19\    19',

55    54S.

33S.    33'i,

42'    4K

49',

47.

44',

48',

67S,    66,

43    43

24'.    TS'V,

33    33

48'V4

47',

44

47.

29

44.

28. 44's.

52',    52',

22 s. 22q.

4IS. 4D'4 35',    35'4

II5-H. 115 42^^,    42',

51    50'.,

118:^4    118%

8%    8',

53%    53'.

37'.,

41

37

41%

32',    32'/,

19%    19%

14%    14%

20>/4    20',4

41'.    40.

111% 111% 150A, 150 41%    41',^

23    23

41%    41'.,

33%    32.

78    77%

32%    32

102',    102',

28    27%

37%    37%

27    26',

62'.    61%

29.    29.

33    32%

54'.    53.

33%    33',

28    28

61%    61'.

37.    37%

26%    26',

52',    51%

44',    44'.

25.    , 25%

21% 21

4.    4%

22',    22%

31 >'4    31'/,

53'.    52%

29%,    29%

24%    24%

30%    30

28    26%

28%

37

25',    24%

22%    22%

13%    13',

15%    15',

43%    43',

38.    38%

52.    52%

56%    55%

20'.    20>.

67%    67',

38%    38%

16    15.

72%    72'',

67%    67

13%    13%

27%    27%

34%    341,

38%    38%

44%    44%

42    41%

34%    33%

56    56

36    35%

45*,    45%

Following arc selected II am market quotations;

Ashland prC Burrougfis

Carolina Power i Lighi

Collins & Aikman

Conner

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

FieldcresI

Halteras

Hilton

Jellerson

Deere

Lowe's

McDonald's

McGraw

Piedmont

Pizza Inn

P4G

tRW. Inc United Tel

Dominion Resources Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER Aviation    I

Branch    23'

Lillle Mini

Planters Bank    19'

21',

71%

14',

23',

24%

51%

20A,

26A,

28%

43%

30',

34%

51

22

7

67%

39.

68.

38

19.

36%

19%

55 33% 41% 49', 47% 44 48% 67', 43 23 33 29 44% 52', 22% 41% 35% 115% 42% 50', 118%

8%

53%

37 41% 32', 19% 14% 20%

41

III',

150

41%

23 41% 33% 77% 32% 102% 27', 37', 26% 62 29%

33 54 33', 28 61% 37% 26', 52% 44', 25. 21%

ih

22%

31%

53

29%

24%

30'

27',

28%

37',

25',

22',

13'

15',

43%

38.

52.

55%

20%

67',

38%

16

72%

67

13%

27%

34%

38%

44%

42

34

56 35% 45',

stock

41 . 52'. 21% :t% 26%

39%

24

38'. 31 , 15% 52%

38 m

24

.56'.

;5m

32',

14%

.-20'

NEW YORK(API

-Midday stocks

Hiih

Low

Last

AMR Corp

Zl'-i

AbbtLabs

48%

47%

47

Allis ChBlm

I6'

16',

16'

Alcoa

43%

42'v

43'-,

Am Baker

i1\

17%

17%

AmBrands

48

48.

48.

Amer Can

40

39.

40

Am Cyan

54'

53',

54

AmEamily

22

21.

22

Am Motors

8

7,

8

AmStand

32

32

32

Amer T4T

68'-,

66

66'

Beal Food

26.

26%

26,

Beth .Steel

21.

21%

21%

Boeing

37%

37

37%

Boise Cased

37%

37%

37%

Borden

52%

52',

52',

Burlngt Ind CSX Corp

40

39.

40

67,

67',

67%

RETURNED KESTERNICH, West Germany (AP) - A crucifix sent to the United States nearly 40 years ago after being found in a demolished church by a U.S. soldier has been returned to West Germany, a town spokesman says.

By The Associated Press Eastern Belt

Sams Lock & Key Shoppe

ItOA OkkinsM Ave. Creenvilie, N.C. (ArrMt from Pepsi Plant)

757-0075

AGCIDENT SCENE ... Members of the Greenville fire/rescue department give emergency treatment to Janie Scott Byrd Tuesday

afternoon after a collision at the comer of Summit and Fourth Streets. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Soy 6 Injured In 3 Collisions

Six persons were reported injured and an estimated $8,200 damage caused in a series of three traffic col-

New Storm Gains Power

MIAMI (AP) - Tropical Storm Barry gathered strength today as it slowly swirl^ over the Atlantic Ocean about 240 miles east of Florida, with forecasters noting the storm was most likely to hit Cocoa Beach, site of next weeks launch of space shuttle Challenger.

Barry, the second tropical storm of the 1983 season, was upgraded from a tropical wave to a tropical depression, then to a tropical storm by the National Weather Service, within six hours Tuesday evening.

The storms highest sustained winds were 55 mph, with somewhat higher winds in squalls and conditions were favorable for its winds to strengthen further today, the weather service said.

Hurricane forecasters aboard an Air Force reconnaissance plane reported the center of the storm was about 240 miles east of Melbourne, Fla.

Barry's location at 6 a.m. today was latitude 28.0 north and longitude 76.6 west. It \ as drifting to the north-.lorthwest at about 5 mph, and was expected to continue that motion through today.

Hurricane forecasters said it was still too early to tell whether the system, which formed off the coast of Africa within the past 10 days, would affect the southeastern United States.

Its very slow, drifting north-northwest, and conditions are changing to the north of it, forecaster Bob Sheets at the National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables said Tuesday.

lisions investigated by Greenville police Tuesday.

Officers said heaviest damage resulted about 4:27 p.m. at the intersection of Fourth and Summit Streets, when a car driven by Steven Edward Garrett of 1404 North Overlook Drive collided with a car driven by Janine Scott Byrd of 108 Chipaway Drive. The force of the impact, police said, caused the Byrd car to

careen out of control and collide with a city bus driven by Melvin Douglas Harrison of 1203B Myrtle Ave.

Investigators, who said Ms. Byrd, Harrison and four of the eight passengers on the bus were injured, estimated damage at $700 to the Garrett car, $2,500 to the Byrd vehicle and $500 to the bus.

Garrett was charged with driving the wrong way on a

Local Student Volunteer

Grayson Morris of Greenville was in San Fran-cisco Aug. 6-20 as a volunteer worker in the offices of the . Hunger Project.

A Hunger Project community volunteer since she ,|\ was 15, Ms. Morris, 17, was invited to stay with Hunger Project staff member Carol McIntosh and work in the offices of the organization set up to provide the context for eliminating hunger in the world by 1997. Her work began the night she arrived, she said, and continued throughout her visit, sometimes up to 20 hours a day.

A rising senior at the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, Ms. Morris said she will work in the Hunger Project office next year the full three

Women Staff

JIDDA, Saudi Arabia (API - Saudi Arabia has a new hospital staffed entirely by women: the 30-bed Si(idiqa Maternity Hospital.

Female patients are always more at ease detailing often intimate medical complaints to a woman doctor than to a male physician, said Dr. Siddiqa Kamal Pasha, technical director of the new hospital.

months of her summer vacation before entering college. She is the dau^ter of Abbott and Dee Morris of Greenville.

Many Victims Of Collapses

CAIRO, Egypl (API-The governor of Cairo says 1,424 people were killed, injured or left homeless in the collapses of buildings in Egypt last year.

A spokesman for Governor Youssef Sabry Abu Taleb confirmed press reports about the governors statement, but said a breakdown of the catearles of victims was not available.

Last weekend, 36 people were killed and 26 injured in collapses in Cairo and the resort city of Alexandria. Most of the buildings that collapsed were constructed illegally, without building permits.

DRILLING ACCORD

MEXICO CITY (AP) -Cuba and the Soviet Union have signed an a^eement to cooperate in drilling for petroleum in the next fewyears, the official Cuban news agency reports.

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Gldsboro....... .....

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1,453,870 183.55

Greenvl... ..........

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1,391,872 187.17

Kinston ,

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1,294,282 179.39

Robrsnvl.............

313,628

587,738 187.40

Rocky Ml.............

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1,001,624 173.47

Smithfld.............

. 426,742

767,115, 179.76

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261,030

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Windsor..............

367,385

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Total................

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13,452,278 181.69

Season Total ........

.........78,365,921

130,846,666 166.97

BARGAINS

ON RECENT PURCHASES

2 Pair Binoculars (Pirate Prlde Specials)

2 Wicker Chairs 2 Wicker Single Head Boards 1 Singer Sewing Machine (Uke New)

1 Yashica 35 mm Camera

2 Canon 35 mm Cameras 10 Nice Stereo Pieces

1 Remington Electric Razor (Like New)

1 Portable AM/FM Cassette 1 Violin

1 Fiddle (they tell me there is a difference)

1 Pair Pioneer Rear Deck Speakers (Ust $iso)

1 Beautiful Set Silverplate Flatware (Service for s) 4 Office Chairs (Reception Room) Like New 1 Portable Electric Typewriter (just serviced)

1 Schwinn Ladies Bicycle (io speed-just serviced)

1 12 String Alvarez Guitar & Hard Case 1 Photo Enlarger

3 Rugs (1 Danish Shag, 1 Braided, 1 Loop)

24 Nice Lamps

AND HUNDREDS OF FASCINATING ITEMS

On The Corner 400 Evans St 7S2-3S66 The Most Unique Shop In Eastern N.C." Thousands of Unique Items China-Crystal-Brass-Copper-Pewter-Coilectiblesetc.

one-way street.

A truck driven by Ronald Redmond of Route 5, Greenville, and cars operated by Patricia Jenkins of 618 Hudson St., and James Norman Graham of 604 McKinley Ave.,.. collided about 12:23 p.m. at the intersection of Farmville Boulevard and Bancroft Street.

Damage from the collision was set at $2,000 to the truck, $150 to the Jenkins car and $1,500 to the Graham auto.

Mary Harrington Pezzulla of 1605 Canterbury Road, was charged with following too close following investigation of a 5:31 p.m. collision on Evans Street, 200 feet south of the Deck Street intersection.

Police said the Pezzulla car collided with a truck operated by James Alton Jones of 2708 Tryon Drive, causing $50 damage to the truck and $800 damage to the car.

MASONIC NOTICE " Queen of the South Lodge 77, Ayden, will hold at meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Masonic Hall on West Avenue. All members are urged to attend.

REVIVAL

Revival services will begin tonight at eight oclock at Morning Glory Apostolic Faith Holiness Church. The services will continue through Friday evening.

JOY SERVICE A joy service will be held Sunday at 11 a.m. at Emanuel Temple Pentecostal Holiness Church of the Lord Jesus Christ No.l.

Obituaries

Harrell

BETHEL - Mrs. Mary Harrington Harrell, 79, of Bethel died Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Hosptial.

Her funeral service will be held Thursday at 3 p.m. in Roberson Baptist Church, Robersonville, by the Rev. J.C. Brown. Burial will be in the Pine Lawn Cemetery, Bethel.

Mrs. Harrell was a native of Pitt County who spent her life in the Robersonville and Bethel communities. She was a member of Roberson Baptist Church and Golden Light Temple No. 556 of Robersonville.

Surviving her are a son, Willie Frank Freeman of Washington, DC.; eight sisters, Mrs. Maggie Moore of Sharpsburg, Mrs. Ardener Brown of Washington, D.C., Mrs. Rosa Carmack of Bethel, Mrs. Velma Walker of Baltimore, Md., Mrs. Lillie Pendleton of Norfolk, Va., Ms. Cora Lee Adams of Philadelphia, Pa., Mrs. Rosa Farmville and Mrs. Lou Alice Daniels, both of Greenville; three brothers.

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area yesterday, computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 79. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 79 percent of your hot water needs.

James (Jack) Wilkins of Bethel, Andrew Adams of Norfolk, Va., and the Rev, J.H. Adams of Washington. DC.; three grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

The family will receive friends toni^it from 8 to 9 p.m. at Bethel Temple Holiness Church, Bethel. Funeral arrangements are by Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.

Tripp

Mr. Dan Lee Tripp, 61, died at Veterans Hospital, Durham, Tuesday. The funeral service will be conducted Thursday at 3 p.m. at Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Vanceboro. Burial will follow in New Salem Church Cemetery.

Mr. Tripp was a native and lifelong resident of Vanceboro. He was a farmer and logger.

Surviving are two sons, James Lee Tripp and William R. Tripp, both of Augusta, S.C.; one sister, Mrs. Naomi Smith of New Bern; and eight grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at Wilkerson Funeral Home in Vanceboro today from 7-9 p.m.

WaUace

Mr. Manoh Wallace of River Road, Grifton, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Marion Wallace of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott and Company Funeral Home, Ayden.

Words Of Thanks

I would \\ke to express my sincere thanl<s and appreciation to the Doctors and Staff of PCMH during my stay there.

Special thanks to my doctors; Dr. Leonard, Dr. Bowman and Dr. Williams. Also, for the prayers of Rev. Luther Brown and Rev. Charles Dickens and all others. They were greatly appreciated. Many thanks to family and friends for the beautiful flowers and cards. But. a very special thanks to Almighty God who kept me in His care both day and night.

Many, many thanks to each and everyone.

L    David    L.    Smith .

Card Of Thanks

Our most humble thanks is extended to all and each of you for your gracious expression of sympathy during this period of grief for our loved one, Mr, Paul Gorham. The family thanks you for your many prayers, flowers, good food, cards and, most of all, for your Christian accommodation, encouragement and support. May the blessings of God touch the lives of all of you,

THE GORHAM FAMILY

In Memory Of Willie Dixon Deceased April, 1976

Today we thought of you Yesterday we did too Iri fact no day passes That we doii't think of you Unseen, unheard but always near Still loved, still missed And very dear.

Happy Birthday

Lula Dixon

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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 24, 1983Short Toss Wins In Pan Am Shot Put

CARACAS, Venezuela (AH) - You have to go back to 1955 to find a winning shot put at the Pan American Games that covered so little ground.

Luis Delis of Cuba won the first event on the Pan Am track and field program Tuesday with, a toss of 59 feet, 10>^ inches, a distance that some high schoolers would sneer at. It was the weakest gold-medal shot put since American Parry OBrien won with a 57-8^ in the 1955 games.

How did it happen?

At least in part because of a spreading drug crackdown, in which 11 weightlifters were caught with steroids in their bodies and eight of them -including Jeff Michels of Chicago - were stripped of their Pan Am medals.

After th5 strict drug testing was made known, 12 American track and field athletes abruptly left South America for home.

Two of the 12, Jesse Stuart of Hitchcock, Texas, and Ian Pyka of College Park, Md., were shotputters who had been expected to finish one-two at Caracas. Stuarts best performance is 68-5 and Pykas career best is 67-1V4.

The only American medal in two track finals was a bronze in the 10,000-meter run, by Mark Nenow of Lexington, Ky.

Nevertheless, U.S. athletes still have a wide lead in gold and overall medals, despite the pall cast by the drug scandal.. The United States has 89 gold medals and 184 overall, followed by Cuba with 5S and 117, Canada 10-76 and Venezuela 3-38.

The American gold total was reduced by three with the elimimation of Michels weightlifting triumphs in the 243-pound class. Cuba lost six golds as triple winners Daniel Nunez, a world record-holder at 132 pounds, and Alberto Blanco also were stripped.

Both countries got the losses back Tuesday as U.S. wrestlers won four gold medals and the Cubans five in freestyle wrestling, plus the surprising victory by Delis.

Cyclist Rory OReilly of Palo Alto, Calif., won the first event of the day, the one-kilometer race against the clock in 1 minute, 5.54 seconds.

U.S. teams continued to look strong in baseball, beating the Dominican Republic 11-2; in mens softball, ending Canadas unbeaten record with a 6-1 victory; mens basektball, with a 111-97 victory over the Canadians; and in womens basketball, with a 100-82 decision over defen-ding-champion Cuba.

For two hours Tuesday night, things stopped in this city of V/z million as the championship in soccer, was decided. The game was a thriller, with Uruguay winning 1-0, over Brazil for its first Pan Am gold medal.

But the drug news did not stop with the 11 wei^tlifters and the dozen American departures.

The Chilean delegtion announced that its top cyclist, Fernando Vera, had been suspended for a month because a test showed steroids in his system. Vera said he had used steroids two months ago to help repair an atrophied muscle.

The Pan Am Games organization brought forward the

Sports Colendor

Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

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biggest crackdown on drug use in international sports history, using a top-of-the line laboratory testing system for steroids and other drugs that was developed in Cologne, West Germany.

When the the first four weightlifters were caught Monday, team doctors and coaches met with Americas

track and field athletes.

We knew about the situation, about testing, Mike Marlow, a triple jumper from Los Angeles, told ABC Radio as he prepared to leav Caracas early Tuesday with 12 teammates. We knew that a strict test could find anything - caffeine, alcohol, anything.

Only one of the 13 who left, long jumper Randy Williams, whose wife had just had a baby, officially had an explanation.

F. Don Miller, executive director of the U.S. Olympic Committee, said the withdrawal from the games should not be taken as an implication of guilt, or in-

Andujar Bounces Back With Four-Hit Shutout

By The Associated Press

Im just doing the same thing I did last year. Im not doing anything different, said Joaquin Andujar.

Well, not quite.    >

You need luck. If you dont have luck, youre in trouble, he added. Last year I had better luck than this year. Obviously.

Last year Andujar was one of the stars of St. Louis world championship pitching staff, winning 15 games and leading the Cardinals staff in earned-run average at 2.47. This year Andujar has lost. 13 games and his ERA is 3.93.

But on Tuesday ni^t, he turned things around, pitching a four-hitter as the Cards routed Atlanta 7-0 for their sixth consecutive victory. David Green and George Hendrick provided the power with home runs.

Elsewhere in the National League, Houston swept a twi-night doubleheader in Pittsburg 6-5 and 2-1, San Francisco defeated Philadelphia 3-1, Los Angeles beat Montreal 6-3, New York ripped San Diego 8-3 and Cincinnati downed Chicago 4-2.

I knew it had to change, Andujar said after winning for the first time since July 1. AYU have to believe in God and your teammates. If you believe in that, you have to win sometime. I wanted this game. We needed it.

Its getting late for us, he added. The club has to play perfect to get to the World Series. If we get starting pitching like this for the next month, well be all right. Catcher Glenn Brummer called the victory the start of the playoffs right now. Theres going to be a four-team race (with Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Montreal). Its going to be very exciting. Hopefully, well end up winning.

In the bottom of the fourth inning. Green jolted Atlantas Pete Falcone for a two-run homer and Hendrick followed with a solo shot.

Astros 6-2, Pirates 5-1 The last time Houston swept Pittsburgh in a doubleheader the Astros were called the Colt .45s. It was 1962. the teams

first year in the league. It had lost four in a row before stunning the Bucs.We were looking to break out and we picked a great time, said Manager Bob Lillis.

Well be back tomorrow, said Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner. This isnt the end of the season. The loss dropped Pittsburgh one-half game behind first-place Philadelphia in the East.

In the first game. Pirates starter John Candelaria took a 5-1 lead into the top of the ninth inning. But he gave up a three-run homer to pinch-hitter Denny Walling, then a succession of relievers failed to kill the rally. Rod Scurry giving up a two-run single to Ray Knight for the game-winning hit.

Joe Niekro and Bill Dawley teamed for a seven-hitter in the second game, when the Astros scofed twice in the third inning on a walk, Terry Puhls RBI double and Dickie Thons run-scoring single. Giants 3, Phillies 1 Darrell Evans capped a three-run bottom of the eighth against Phils reliever A1 Holland with his 26th home run, a two-run shot. Mike Krukow allowed just one unearned run and eight hits over eight innings and Greg Minton earned his 15th save.

We lose five in a row and were a half game up, said Phillies Manager Paul Owens. At least we have one thing going for us - our opponents.

Steve Nicosia, with his third consecutive pinch hit RBI single since joining the Giants from the Pirates last Saturday, tied it 1-1 before Evans slammed his 26th homer of the season.

Thats probably the hardest ball Ive hit all year, said Evans. In that situation. I was going up to hit the long ball, and thats what I did. Dodgers 6, Expos 3 The Dodgers rode two-run homers by Ken Landreaux and Greg Brock in the seventh inning to their seventh consecutive victory and moved within two games of first-place Atlanta in the West, the closest theyve been since July 17.

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terpreted in any similar manner.

But William E. Simon, president of the USOC, said upon arriving in New York with the athletes that they had chosen not to compete after being told of the strict drug tests And Miller and Evie G. Dennis, mission chief of the U.S. delegation, also made it plain that use of anabolic steroids or any other drugs by

American athletes would be punished.

A statement said the USOC stands behind the decisions of the athletes who will not compete, but in the same sentence the committee said it stands "even more firmly behind this long-needed awakening of all of amateur sports to the dangers of reliance on banned substances which are used to increase

performance in the arena of sport."

Simon made it clear that the sophisticated testing would be used again at the Olympics in Los Angeles next year

He called athlete-drug users "cheaters," and added, "We have to make sure to the best of our ability that, in the Olympics Games in 1984, that athletes will not be participating in this abuse."

Montreals Bryn Smith held LA hitless for 5 1-3 innings. Then, in the bottom of the seventh, after Landreauxs homer put the Dodgers ahead 3-2, Smith hit Mike Marshall with a pitch. Marshall charged the mound, both benches emptied, Marshall and Smith were ejected and Dan Schatzeder took over and gave up Brocks blast.

No way was he throwing at him, Montreal Manager Bill Virdon said of Smith. And Expos catcher Gary Carter insisted: I called for a fastball. It just got away. Sure, he was upset after giving up the home run. He wasnt concentrating. The ball got away.

But Marshall wasnt buying that explanation. He had such good control. He was really shutting us down. He had pinpoint control, then that...

MetsS, Padres 3

I would have just as soon struck out in the eighth and gotten a shutout, said Walt Terrell, the Mets rookie right-handed pitcher. Instead, Terrell hit a three-run homer in a six-run eighth - his third hit of the game and third homer of the season - before giving up the Padres three runs in the bottom of the . ninth.

No, he said, 1 wasnt tired from running the bases, I just made bad pitches in the ninth. I had made good ones all night til then.

Reds4,Cubs2

In Chicago, another rookie pitcher, Cincinnatis Jeff Russell, hit a two-run homer and stifled the Cubs on six hits through seven innings to ruin the previously perfect record of their new manager, Charlie Fox, now 1-1 since replacing Lee Elia.

All I did was swing at it, said Russell. "Ive been a good hitter since my high school days when I played shortstop, left field and first base.

Cliff Wiley, a 400-meter runner from Baltimore, said he agreed with his teammatesdecision to leave

"If they had competed here and gotten caught and banned," he said, "they would have been stupid, and we dont have any stupid athletes."

The names of all 11 offenders here have been turned over to their national Olympic committees and the international weightlifting federation for possible sanctions besides the loss of Pan Am medals and records

Anabolic steroids are synthetically produced hormones, originally developed to help the aged But doctors found that the steroids can add bulk to muscle, and athletes -especially weightlifters and tracks shot putters and hammer throwers - have been found to be use the drugs.

But their chances of competing in the Olympics are now limited by the intensity of the testing. Some steroids reportedly are detectable for a year or more.

Of the 12 track athletes who left after being told of the tests, six competed in either the shot put, hammer or discus.

In addition to Stuart and Pyka, tbey were discus throwers Paul Bishop of Southgate, Calif., and Greg McSeveney of Norwalk. Calif., and hammer throwers Dave McKenzie, the American record-holder from Fairfield, Ore., and John McArdle of Eugene. Ore.

"Each and every one had

(Please turn to page 19)

Out At Home

Dale Berra of the Pittsburgh Pirates is tagged out at home plate by Houston catcher John Mizerock during the fifth inning of the second

game of Tuesday s doubleheader in Pittsburgh. Berra was trying to score from second on a Johnny Ray single to center field. (AP Laserphoto)

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Viking Camp is 'Cautiously Optimistic'

By JIMMY DuPREE Rdlector Sports Writer

HOLLYWOOD - "Cautious optim^ is the key phrase DH. Coiley head football coach Gerald Gamer uses to describe the 1963 Vikings. In his third year of "rebuilding" the program, he thinks Conley will be improved over last year's squad which posted a deceiving 1-6-1 record

"We were in a lot of close ballgames last year," Gamer said. We held Ayden-Grifton pretty ck^, and a fumble late in the game against West Carteret cost us. In two years weve lost six games by seven points or less.

"What we do early in the season is very important. Were hoping to get a few rolls of the ball our way

Several positions are still up for gralK prior to the Vikings season (^ner Friday night at Greene Central, with sophomore Joel Cox and junior Steve Mills battling for the quarterback slot in the 1-formatton attack.

"Joel split time on the jayvee team last year at quarterback," Gamer said.

"Hes a very good passer, but Mills is the better runner of the two. Its still a toss-up; it ail depends on what happens in the last few days of practice.

Senior Leander Maye (5-10, 168) was shifted from fullback to tailback, with junior Donald Blackwell at fullback. Cocaptain John Brown and Steve Wilkerson will alternate at wingback, bringing in the plays from the sidelines.

On the offensive line, the strongest returning starter is all-conference tackle Stacy McCarter (5-11,225), who was chosen team captain. Senior Kenny Dixon (6-0, 231) lines up at the other tackle slot, with junior Ricky Rice (5-10, 193) at center. Senior Robbie Gurganus (5-7,152) and junior Billy Crawford (5-7,160) stand in at guard, with Chris Via earning the left end position.

Freshman Brian Joyner and junior James Carmon are competing for the other end position.

"We have a lot more experience now, Garner said. "Most of these kids have been in our program for a couple of years now; most came

through our jayvee team. We only have two starters back on offense (McCarter and Brown) and three on defense (McCarter, Brown and Steve McCarter).

"But looking at it from a realistic standpoint, its not that bad. Were finally getting some home-grown products with the right attitude

McCarter and Dixon also hold down the tackle slots on defense, with Larry Thomas (5-8, 148) and Gerald Harper (5-10,215) at guard. Maye and Via are listed as starters at end.

Brown and senior David Daniels are at comerback in the secondary, with junior Leonard Johnson at safety. Blackwell and senior Todd Hudson won starting^ berths at linebacker.

"Defense was the bright spot in our scrimmage (against Roanoke), Gamer said. We had one sustained drive of 70 yards on offense, and they scored on our second team defense.

"We have more strength up front on defense this year; the kids have really done a good

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Athletes .who believe sports folklore that anabolic steroids increase muscle bulk and strength and thus improve performance, will have to cope with sophisticated testing equipment which can trace use of illegal substances months -possibly even a year - after they have stopped taking them.

"The athletes havent kept up with advances in the scientific community, said Dr. Tony Daly, medical director of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee.

Eight weightlifters, including triple gold medal winner Jeff Michels of Chicago, were stripped of medals at the Pan American Games this week and 12 United States track and field athletes abruptly left Caracas Tuesday, returning home prior to their scheduled competition.

Daly, a member of the International Olympic Committees medical commission, said he believed more sophisticated equipment will discourage drug use by athletes. I think the message will be sent out to youths that athletes do get punished if they use drugs

The UCLA School of Medicine will conduct laboratory testing for the 1984 Olympics at Los Angeles and, according to Daly, the examinations will be done with state-of-the-art equipment that can detect drug use long after an athlete has stopped using it. Until now, athletes have been able to avoid detection by halting the use'of drugs 10 days to two weeks before testing.

Daly said there is no scientific evidence that

anabolic steroids provide positive benefit for the athletes. But sports folklore says they help, "he said.

That folklore suggests that steroids, synthetic derivatives of testerone, the male sex hormone, cause muscle cells to produce more protein, resulting in larger muscles. But David Lamb, a professor of physical education, health and recreation at Purdue University, said that some scientists question the beneficial effect on athletes with normal levels of testerone.

And Daly questions long-term effects of their use. What happens 30 years from now to the people who are taking it is, in my mind, the main reason for stopping their use," he said.

Reported side effects of steroid use include at least temporary increases in facial hair, a deepening of the voice, altered liver function and sterility. Whats more, says Dr. James Parkes, team physician for the New York Mets, supposed benefits of taking the drugs are "pure nonsense

There is no good experimental work to show that using these substances helps at all," Parkes said. The effect is strictly psychological."

According to Parkes, an athlete can derive as much benefit fn^m the caffein contained in two cups of coffee as he could from using steroids.

There is some evidence that caffein enables the body to break down the products of fat more efficently. That, and a balanced diet with adequate fluids and carbohydrates for energy would help more than steroids.

Time For Execution By Virginia Cavaiiers

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer

CHARLOHESVILLE, Va. (AP) - The learning phase of coach George Welshs regime is over at the University of Virginia. Now, its time to execute.

In Welshs first year, the Cavaliers went 2-9. Although some might blame it on Virginias weakness, some players have revealed that other reasons might have existed. Most often, they speak of the transition process that didnt quite occur.

"Last year, it was so new to us, senior strong safety Rich Riccardi said. "It was hard to figure out what was going on.

A lot of people were curious as to what was going on. what kind of restrictions we had. Everybodys accepted it and agrees on it. There doesnt seem to be any dissension, he added.

Wide receiver Quentin Walker paints a different picture of 1982, one of upper classmen resenting the fact that a new coach is going to put reins on their social lives.

It was a little hostility for some guys because we were under a system much more

lenient, Walker said. Some of the older guys wanted to revolt against it. It took a long time to adjust, maybe to the middle of the season."

Before Welsh took over, discipline by the hand of former coach Dick Bestwick was somewhat loose. Recent newspaper articles have rumored that players would get into the party spirit the ni^t before a game. Walker said hed heard of it, but Riccardi said he was in his hotel room and didnt know if anyone actually was at less than peak efficiency on game day.

Nose guard David Bond said maybe things were a little too lax before Welsh got to Charlottesville.

Coach Bstwick gave us too much freedom and a few of the players really abused it, he said.

Those days have ended. Welsh has put restrictions on his team as part of the effort to drag them out of the depths of the Atlantic Coast Conference. Theres nothing else the players can learn about Welsh. Now, they must take from him.

We were learning what

was going on last year, Riccardi said. When I walked into camp this year, I already knew what defenses they were going to run.

Coach Welsh is tougher as far as curfews, no drinking in public until the season is over," Riccardi added; I think the team accepts that. Theyre little things that are nee(ied. He seems to stress that more.

Tailback Antonio Rice has noticed the difference between last years problems and this years determination.

Our intensity level is way up. At times last year, we drifted apart when things got tough, Rice said. Now, the guys know winning is not out of our reach."

Welsh wont predict just how much better his team will be, especially after the disaster of his first season in the ACC. But the number 6 did come up in conversation.

job lifting weights since last season. Its ha^ when youre a linebacker and you cant get any lateral movement because the lineman in front of you has been blown off the line and is falling into you.

Overall, our defense looked good last yea^but we were

hurt by the big play. We gave up 24 points a ^me last year and only avera^ scoring 11, so we cant afford to give up the big play .

Garner picks Havelock and White Oak as the top teams of the Coastal 3-A Conference, with White Oaks Stanley

Monk (6-1, 205) as the premier tailback in the conference.

"Weve got a tough schedule; we need an early win," he Said. Our youngsters have a lot of enthusiasm, we just hope they progress As far as depth is concerned, were

mighty thin. We cant afford many injuries.

01650 kids try hard, but some of them havent been playing long lOUgh and their anticipation has a long way to go. But this has been the most pleasant ^up to work with; the chemistry is better this

year than it has been in the past.

A lot of people are impatient; they want a winning program. Were trying to build a program at Ct^ey, and that takes time. Well be improved over last year, but time will tel! how much."

Tests Can Show Steroid Use AAonths EarlierConley Vikings

D.H. Conleys Vikings travel to Greene Central on Friday to open the 1983 football season. Members of the team are, first row, left to right: Dalvin Jackson, Leonard Johnson, Jesse Hardy Billy Crawford, Steve Mills, Pierre Phillips, Steve .Wilkerson, John Brown, Mark Barton, Larry Thomas; second row, James Mobley, Donald Blackwell, Tony McLawhom, James Carmon, Willard Haddock, Joel Cox, Brian Joyner, Chris

Via, Robbie Gurganus, Martin Anderson, David Daniels; third row. Coach Gerald Gamer, assistant coach Glenn Morris; Jeff Greene, Ricky Farrow, Gerald Harper, Todd Hudson, Stacey McCarter, Leander Maye, Ricky Rice, Kenny Dixon, Kevin Evans, assistant coach Alan Wilson and assistant coach Johnny Merritt. (Reflector Photo)

Knights Tabbed In Big East

ByW(X)DYPEELE Reflector Sports Editor

WILSON-Tim Karrs is the third straight new coach to greet Northern Nash High School footballers in the past three years, but hes hoping that the revolving door thats been created at the school will be slammed shut with his arrival.

And perhaps it just might be true. Yesterday, the other coaches of the Big East 4-A Conference voted Northern Nash as the team to beat In this falls championship race.

Coaches balloted the teams in order, with the exception of their own teams, and Northern Nash was picked on four of the seven possible ballots as the championship choice. Based on a 1 j^int for first place, two for second, etc. basis. Northern collected a low total of 12 points, getting no votes worse than third place.

Rose High School finished as the choice for second with 17 points and three first place votes. However, the Rampants were picked to finish as low as sixth on at least one ballot.

Wilson Beddingfleld was the third place choice with 22 points, followed by Rocky Mount with 27. Wilson Hunt was picked for fifth place with 28 points, followed by Wilson Fike with 35. Northeastern of Elizabeth City was picked for seventh place with 41 points, while defending champion Kinston finished last with 42 points, despite receiving one vote for first place.

I dont know how that could have done that (voted Northern first), Karrs said afterwards. I think theyre trying to put the first year jinx on me

Karrs said that the biggest problem Northern faces is trying to get rid of the lack on continuity in its prop-am. Hopefully, three years from now I can stand here and say that we now have a good program," he said.

Karrs said that his team has been working hard in pre^ paration for the 1983 campaign, but the frequent changes of coaches has been a hardship on them. Some of them have had to play under

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three different coaching philsophies. But our biggest plus is the way they have worked so far this fall.

However, one of our big problems is that we are a rural school and we have so many kids involved in agricultural work that are missing practices.

Karrs said only seven let-termen return from last

this year."

Barger said he didnt think the Bruins could continue to depend on the breaks, but will have to start making a few breaks of their own. But he also noted that with the great balance the league is expected to have that outside help is going to be important for all the teams.

Chief returning veterans

years team. Were inexperi- include quarterback Darren enced and we dont have great Bynum, running back Ricky

depth. We dont have any quarterbacks who have taken a snap in a varsity game.

Top returnees include tackles Joe Wilson and Tom Asbell, receiver Don Gaylord and running back Jarrad Moody.

The Knights run out of the multiple-I and on defense will use a mixture of formations. We have good speed, so weve got to take advantage of it.

Beddingfields Ray Barger said that while it was nice to be considered a contender, the Bruins are going to have to make it count on the field. Weve been our own worst enemy over the past few years. We lost a lot of close games last year, and I think it was due to our attitude. We didnt think we could yin. Were trying to get rid of that

Barnes, and offensive line that returns all but one tackle, led by Woody Mercer and center Greg Hill. Defensively, the Bruins return such people as nose guard Dennis James, Andy Edmundson and Billy Boswell, both part-time starters at linebacker, and Mercer at defensive end.

We have to be consistant on offense. We threw 20 to 25 times a game last year, and had little In the way of the running game due to the inexperience of our line and the lack of size there. But we have the experience there now.

Another plus should be the return of Neal Farrell to handle the kicking duties. Against Rose last year, Farrell kicked a school record 45-yard field goal.

Rocky Mount usually finds

its way to the top of the heap in the Big East, and generally is the favorite. But the Gryphons were picked for fourth this year, and it doesnt bother new coach George Kelley a bit.

Kelley actually isnt new to Rocky Mount, but served as an assistant for six years prior to taking over this fall.

Its an advantage to hire within the staff, Kelley said. "The kids know me and we dont have to make many changes. We are adding one more formation on offense and making one change on defense, but that would have been done regardless of the coaching change.

While Rocky Mount doesnt return many veterans, Kelley feels the team has a chance to be good. We only have one offensive and three defensive starters back. And those numbers dont make for a good nucleus.

Kelley said that if the Gryphons learn from their early mistakes, the team could become a contender. We have the athletes to finish well, but learning from our mistakes will definitely be the key, since were so lort on experience.

Quarterback Roney Harris may be one of the keys, too. He threw for over 1,000 yards

on the junior varsity squad last year and Kelley feels he will be good with experience. Others expected to be key players are Lamont Wiggins and Derrick Byrd, defensive ends - two of the three starters on defense returning.

We have four good receivers, but all four are young. If we can get the ball to them, I think we can move it. Kelley said the Gryphons threw the ball 44 times in their scrimmage against Jacksonville, a trifle too much.

t

And Rose Coach Ronald Vincent, asked about being picked second in the conference race, said, Ill take it right now.

Second place this year again gives that team the right to enter the Division 1 playoffs with a shot, at the state championship.

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Australia II Designer Says It Takes More Than Wings

Bair Gives Tigers Relief

NEWPORT, R.I. <AP) -The designer of Australia II, the 12-meter yacht that has been nearly unbeatable in this summers Americas Cup trials, says winged keels attached to other boats should not substantially improve their performances.

It takes much more than wings, Ben Lexcen said Tuesday when asked to comment on an announcement a day earlier that the keel of Britians Victory 83 had been altered to accommodate them. You just dont decide to put wings on a boat and expect to win with it.

Lexcen is not prepared to term the British decision a disaster because that syndicate has tested the concept on its trial boat Australia. But he said Australia lls keel was designed specifically to accommodate the horizontal wings.

Theyve been testing them on Australia most of the summer, so they have some idea of the effect, but our keel is much different than any of the others.

Exactly what differences exist, Lexcen wont say. But drawings of Australia II s underside based on descriptions of yachting officials who supposedly have seen it, show the keel to be bulbous in nature. A conventional keel is a smooth appendage poinung straight down from the hull.

If the keel isnt designed with the wings in mind they could actually slow the boat down, Lexcen said.

Peter deSavary, who heads the Victory syndicate, points out that Victory 83 was designed by Ian Howlett with the possible conversion of its keel in mind. But deSava^ is not ready to claim the wings will enable Victory 83 to equal the performance of Australia II.

Their first test came Mon-, day when Australia II beat

Victory 83 by one minute, 21 seconds in the final race of the challenger semifinal series. The boats, survivors in an original field of seven, are scheduled to meet starting Sunday in a best-of-seven series to determine which foreign yacht will try to wrest

the Cup from the Americans next month.

We dont consider that it improved the boats performance, deSavary said. He did not say whether the wings would remain on the boat when the challenger finals begin.

Veteran sailors say Australia II, whose validity as a 12-meter is being questioned by American Interests seeking a ruling from the International Yacht Racing Unions Keel Boat Technical Committee, is faster heading upwind.

Close Quarters

American 12-meter yachts Liberty, left, and Courageous, right, sail close together after tacking for position during their race Tuesday morning

off Newport, R.I. The two boats are competing to defend the Americas Cup against a foreign challenger in September. (AP Laserphoto)

By The Associated Press

Doug Bair, a six-year bullpen veteran, provided the Detroit Tigers with some much-needed relief - by making his first start in 368 major-league appearances.

One day after his 33rd birthday, Bair bailed out Detroits starting staff - Milt Wilcox is disabled and Dave Rozema was unabled to pitch - by handcuffing Texas on four singles in six innings as the Tigers defeated the Rangers 2-0 Tuesday night.

I said to myself in the fifth inning, If we win this game, this guys pitching tonight may be the most important for us all year, said Manager Sparky Anderson, who added that he might give Bair another start next week.

I have no desire to start. Bair said. I enjoy getting someone out in a crucial situation. 1 can help the ballclub more as a reliever than as a starter.

The victory enabled the third-place Tigers to climb with V/z games of front-running Milwaukee in the American league East when the Brewers lost to the Seattle Mariners 5-0. The Baltimore Orioles lost to Toronto 9-3 and remained one-half game out, while the Blue Jays trail by 1>'2, although they are one percentage point behind Detroit.

Elsewhere, the Kansas City Royals pounded the Chicago White Sox 10-2, the Oakland As whipped the New York Yankees 9-3, the California Angels downed the Cleveland Indians 5-2 and the Minnesota Twins nipped the Boston Red Sox 3-2.

Bair, who was acquired from the St. Louis Cardinals earlier in the season, walked one and retired nine straight batters at one point. Aurelio Lopez pitched three hitless innings for his 17th save.

Detroit took a 1-0 lead against Charlie Hough in the fifth inning on consecutive doubles by Glenn Wilson and Chet Lemon. In the seventh.

SCOREBOARD

_Bowling_

Guys & Dolls

Western Sizzlin 43    13

Team#l...............38    18

Holiday Shell..........30    26

Tar Landing Seafood... 28    28

Strikers...............27    29

Team #8...............23    33

Well Take It...........20    36

Alley Oops............15    41

High game, Pat Cannon 209, Danny Wooten 223; high series, Sharon Matthews 564, Cecil Keel Jr. and Doyle Matthews, 581.

Tuesday Bowlettes

Rockettes.............26    18

Ruths Station.........25    19

Plaza Gulf.............m    2Vk

Nine Lives.............21    23

Inspirations...........23/i

UCMS................17    27

High game, Cathy Henry 203; high series, Cathy Henry 515.

Boseboll Standings

By The AmcUted Press AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pci. GB

Milwaukee    71    53    .573    -

Baltimore    69    52    . 570    ',t

Detroit    69    54    .561    1'^

Toronto    70    55    , 560    I'/i

New York    67    56    545    3'.^

Boston    60    64    484    II

Cleveland    52    73    .416    l9/i

WEST DIVISION Chicago    69    55    .556    -

Kansas City    60    62    .492    8

Oakland    62    65    .488    8ts

Texas    59    65    476    10

California    59    66    472    10'^

Minnesota    54    72    , 429    16

SeatUe    48    77    384    21

Tuesdays Games Toronto 9. Baltimore 3 Detroit 2, Texas 0 Minnesota 3, Boston 2 California 5, Cleveland 2 Oakland 9. New York 3 Seattle 5, Milwaukee 0 Kansas City 10. Chica2

Wednesdaysuames Oakland (Conroy ^5 and M SmiUi 04)i at Geveland (Heaton 8-4 and Sorensen 69),2, (tn)

Toronto (Clancy 13-7) at Baltimore (McGregor 15-5), (n)

SeatUe (Clark 5-5) at New York (Guidry 14-8), (n)

Boston (Tudor 10-8) at Minnesota (CastUlo8-ni,(n)

Caiifomia (Forsch 11-8) at Milwaukee (Sutton 7-10), (n)

Chicago (Dotson 13-71 at Kansas City (PeiryfrlZ), (n)

Detroit (Morris 15-8) at Texas (SmHhn7-l2).(n)

Thuiiday's Games Oakland at Cleveland B<&ton at Minnesota Seattle at New York California at Milwaukee Texas at Kansas City, 2, (t-n I Toronto at Baltimore, (n)

Chicago at Detroit, (n)

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet. GB

Philadelphia 63 59    .516    -

Pittsbura    63    60    .512

St Louis    61    61    .500    2

Montreal    61    62    .496    2<-i

Chicago    55    70    .440

New York    52    72    419    12

WEST DIVISION Atlanta    74    51    592    -

Los. Angeles    71    52    .577    2

Houston    65    59    524    8',

San-Die)    63    63    .500    U><,

San Francisco 59    67    .468    ll>,

ClnoinnaU    58    69    457    17

Tuesdays Games    _    ,,

c:nctnnaU4,ChicagD2 St.-Louts7. AUanUO Hduston6-2, Pittsburgh 5-1    ;

New York 8. San Diego 3    v

Lds Angeles 6, Montreal 3 Sail Francisco 3. Philadelphia 1 / Wedhteidays Games Cincinnati (Soto 14-9) at Chicago (Rainey 12-10)

Pbiladdpiiia (Carlton 12-12)    at    San

Francisco (Davis2-3)

Montreal (Burris 4-5) at Los Angeles (Pena 106)

Houston (Madden 5-1) at Pittsburgh (Rhoden 9-10), (n)

AUanta (Niekro 9-7) M St Louis (UPointll-7),(n)

York (Seaver 7-11) at San Diego (LoUar6-10), (n)

Ttaiday's Games Houston at Pittsbur!, in) .

AUanta atSt Louis (n)

Only games scheduled

logue iMdws

rTte Associated Prep

TANKFMMAM

Al APPA(70OTLY m?Of:UklORiml& B6(tJG>A HAVEN WH THE )JFU TEAMS.' CA51IW5, gEWEAPe. AlOP SUrtPLUSES-

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

BATTING (300 at bats): Boggs, Boston, .372; Carew, California, .362; Trammell, Detroit, .326; McRae, Kansas City. .325; Whitaker, Detroit. .322.

RUNS; E. Murray, Baltimore, 82; Molitor, Milwaukee, 82; R. Henderson, Oakland, 81; Cooper, Milwaukee, 80; Ripken. Baltimore, 80; Upshaw, Toronto, 80; Yount, MUwaukee. 80.

RBI; Cooper, Milwaukee, 105; Winfield, New York, 95; Rice, Boston. 89; Parrish, Detroit, 87, Simmons, Milwaukee, 85.

HITS: Boggs, Boston. 169; Cooper, Milwaukee, 155; Whitaker, Detroit, 155; McRae, Kansas City, 151; Ward, Minnesota, 146.

DOUBLES: Boggs, Boston, 39; McRae, Kansas City, 36; Parrish, Detroit, 35; Ripken. Baltimore, 34; Hrbek, Minnesota, 33; Yount, Milwaukee, 33.

TRIPLES: Gantner, Milwaukee, 8; Griffin, Toronto, 8; Winfield, New York, 8; 5 are tied with 7.

HOME RUNS: Armas, Boston, 28; Rice. Boston. 27; Cooper. Milwaukee, 25: Kittle, Chicago, 25; Winfield, New York, 25.

STOLEN BASES: R. Henderson, Oakland, 87; R. Law, Chicago, 58- J. Cruz, Chica, 49; Wilson, Kansas City, 47; Sample. Texas, 36 PITCHING (11 decisions): Haas, MUwaukee, 12-2, .857, 3.31; Righetti, New Yoik, 13-4, .765, 3.19; McGregor, Baltimore, 15-5, .750, 3.17; Schrom, Minnesota, 12-4, .750, 3.87; Tellmann, Milwaukee, 9-3, .750,2.95.

STRIKEOUTS: Morris, Detroit, 172; Stieb, Toronto, 144; Righetti, New York, 142; Bannister, Chicago, 134; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 122 SAVES: Quisenberry, Kansas City, 34; R. Davis, Minnesota. 24; Stanley. Boston, 24; Caudill. Seattle, 22; Lopez, Detroit, 17

NATTON^LEAGUE BATTING (300 at baU): Madlock, Pittsburg, 332; Hendrick, St. Louis. 329; Herr, St. Louis. .323; Lo. Smith, St Louis, .323, Dawson. Montreal, .322.

RUNS: Murphy. Atlanta, 105; Raines. Montreal. 94; Evans, San Francisco, 82; Dawson, Montreal. 81; Garvey. San Die, 76.

RBI: Dawson, Montreal. 95, Murphy, AUanta, 88; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 85; Guerrero. Los Angeles, 77-Hendrick, St. Louis, 73; T Kennedy, San Diego, 73.

HITS; Dawson, Montreal, i%; Oliver. Montreal, 148, Thon, Houston, 147; Buckner, Chicago, 143; Cruz, Houston, 143; R. Ramirez, AtlanU, 143.

DOUBLES: Buckner, Chicago, 33, KnighL Houston, 31; 6 are tied with 27.

TRIPLES: Butler, AUanU, 11; Cruz, Houston 8; 5 are tied with 7.

HOME RUNS: Dawson, Montreal, 28; Schmidt. Philadelphia, 28, Evans, San Francisco, 26; Mur

Buffalo

Miami

New England

Pittsburgh

Cleveland

Cincinnati

Houston

Denver Kansas City LA.Raiders San Diego Seattle

N.Y. Giants Philadelphia Dallas St. Louis Washington

Tampa Bay Chicago Minnesota Detroit Green Bay

LA Rams New Orleans Atlanta San Francisco

New York Jets 20, Cincinnati 17, OT Fridays Games Miami 38, Washington 7 Minnesota 19. Seattle 17

Saturd^s Games Philadelphia 27, Green Bay 14 Buffalo 17, Detroit 16 New Orleans 20, Houston 13 Tampa Bay 17, AUanta 6 New York 27, Baltimore 14 Kansas City 17, St , Louis 16 Pittsburgh 24. Dallas 7 Denver 19, Cleveland 10 San Diego 24 JSan Francisco 7 Los Angeles Rams 13, New England 7 Chicago 27. Los Angeles Raiders 21 Thursday, August 25 Pittsburgh at PhiiadelMia (n) Friday, August 26 Baltimore at Atlanta, (n)

Los Angeles Raiders at Cleveland, (n I Miami at New York Giants, (n)

New England at Tampa Bay, (n) Denver at M innesota. (n)

Los Angeles Rams at San Die, (n I Saturday, Augud 27 Seattle at San Francisco Washington at Buffalo, ml

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3 0 0

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51

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48

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33

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rsdaysGame

Cincinnati at Detroit, (n)

Green Bay at St. Louis, (n)

Kansas City at Chicago, i n)

New York Jets at New Orleans, (n) Houston at Dallas, in)

Tronsoctions

By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League

DETROIT TIGERS-Aequired Glenn Abbott, pitcher, from the Seattle Mariners on waivers. Sent Mike Laga. first baseman-outfielder, to Evansville of the American Association.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Reactivated Mike Morgan, pitcher. Optioned Matt Williams, pitcher, to Syracuse of the International Leae

BASMETBALL National Basketball Association KANSAS CITY KINGS-Cut Lorenza Andrews, guard-forward, Preston Neumayr, Bernard Hill and Aaron Haskins, guard

FOOTBALL National Football League

DALLAS COWBOYS-Cul Stephen Johnson, tackle 8d Darrell Songy de fensive back DENVER BRONCOS-Cut Victor Heflin, comerback Placed, Maomao Niko, guard, on the injured reserve list DEraOfT LIONS-Cut David Wamke, kicker and Juan Taylor, offensive ard Placed Phil Darns, defensive end. on the injured reserve list.

GREEN BAY PACKERS-Cut Ray Stachowicz, punter, Bill Myatt, quarterback, Vince Phason and Carlton Briscoe, defensive backs and Cleveland Crosby, defensive end. Placed Cal Favron, linebacker, on the injured reserve list.

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Placed Del Thompson, Daryl Posey and Ernie Goolsby, running backs and Mike Lewis, wide receiver, on the injured reserve list.

LOS ANGELES RAMS-Cut Henry Williams, defensive back MIAMI DOLPHINS-Cut Ed Slmonini. linebacker.

NEW ENGUND PATRIOTS-Cut Morris Bradshaw, wide receiver, Bob Fisher, tight end and rookie Mike Bass, kicker Placed Smiley Creswell, defensive end. on injured reserve list NEW YORK GIANTS-Cut Gary Shirk, tight end. Mike Rustemeyer and Tim

Atlanta, 26.

a awiivstsw, ms. zvaUTphV,

_ Guerrero. Los Anttles, 2l

STOLEN BASES: Raines. MontreaJ. 58; Wilson. New York, 41; S Sax, Los Angeles, 40; LeMaster, San Francisco, 36; wigfl^ San Die, 36.

PITCHING (II decisions); Perez, AUanta, 154. .765, 3.45; Falcone. AUanU, 8-3, .727, 3.78; Denny. PhUadriphia, 155, .722, 2.33; Montefusco, San Die. 94, .692, 3 30: Orosco, New York, .688. 1.17..

STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, PhUacMphia. 209; Soto, CincinnaU. 187; McWiUiams, Pittsburgh, 149; Valenzuela. Los Anles. 137; Ryan, Houston, 133.

SAVES: L Smith. Chicago, 20; Bedrosian, Atlanta. 18: Reardon. Montreal 18; Lavelle. San Francisco, IS; Minton, San Francisco. 15; S. Howe. Los Anles, IS; Tekulve, Pittsburgh. IS

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NFL Exhibitions

ByTlwAMOGlatedPras American

Baltimore N.Y Jets

Conference Earn

W L T Pet. PF PA 2    1    0    667 42    34

2    1    0    667 56 57

Lemon was hit by a pitch and scored on a double by Rick Leach.

This win was satisfying because I hadn't been helping the club in relief and. at a time when we didnt have anybody else able to start, 1 was able to come in and pitch six shutout innings, Bair said.

1 didnt give any thought to going out and pitching six innings of shutout ball or anything like that. Basically, Im a two-inning pitcher. I just took one inning at a time and decided not to worry about how many innings I went. Mariners 5, Brewers 0

A1 Cowens drove in three runs with a pair of homers and Ron Roenicke and Steve Henderson added solo shots to back Mike Moores two-hit pitching. Moore, who entered the game with a 5.19 earned run average, walked three and struck out five for his second shutout of the season and allowed only two runners to reach scoring position.

Blue Jays 9, Orioles 3

A two-run fourth-inning single by Barry Bonnell capped a five-run Toronto uprising aided by three Baltimore errors. Lloyd Moseby drove in three runs, easing the way for Luis Leal to end a personal four-game losing streak.

Willie Upshaw singled to open the fourth and took second on an error by pitcher

Mike Flanagan, who was 10-0 at home against the Blue Jays, on a bunt by Buck Martinez. Third baseman Todd Cruz then committed a two-base throwing error on Alfredo Griffins bunt and Upshaw scored to give the Blue Jays a 5-2 lead An RBI single by Damaso Garcia finished Flanagan and another run scored as second baseman Lenn Sakata made his second error of the game. Bonnell's two-run single made it 9-2 Royals 10, White Sox 2 Amos Otis hit an RBI double and scored in a three-run fourth inning and singled for his 2,000th major-league hit in a six-run sixth George Brett, breaking an 0-for-l3 slump, singled leading off the fourth inning against Jerry Koosman and scored on Otis' double to give the Royals a 2-1 lead. Otis scored on a double by White, who went to third on Leon Roberts single and scored on Don Slaughts grounder.

After Otis walked leading off the sixth, Koosman was relieved by Dick Tidrow, who threw nine pitches to four batters, giving up a home run to White, walking Roberts, surrendering a single to Slaught and a ground-rule double to Butch Davis, his first major-league hit.

As 9, Yankees 3 Mike Warren held New York hitless for five innings and gained his first major-league victory while Jeff Burroughs

Pan Am...

Moore, delensive laciues, Jed Wiska

fjuard Placed Billy Matlhew.s. mebacker, Larry Heater, running back and Karl Nelson, offensive tackle on injured reserve list. Traded Chris Foote, center, to the New York Jets lor an undisclosed draft choice ST LOUIS CARDINALS-Cut Femaiiza Burgess, wide receiver and John Gillen, linebacjier SAN DIEGO CHARGERS Cut Joaquin Zendejas, kicker SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Signed Larry Friday, safety Cut John Choma, lineman, Gary Wimmer, linebacker and Scott Collie, wide receiver Placed Brvan Ciark, quarterback, Robby Chapman, safety, Merv Lopes, wide receiver, John Macaulay, center and Mike, Wood, kicker. Bob Horn, linebacker, on the injured reserve list SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Cut Mike White, Michael Gray, and Mark Bell, defensive ends. Bob CTasby, defensive tackle, Pete Speros, ard, Reggie Butts and George Works, wide receivers, Ron Gaynor, quarterback. Carlton Peoples, comerback and Jerome Boyd, linebacker

United States Football League HOUSTON GAMBLERS-Named Bob Young offensive line coach.

PHILADELPHIA STARS-Named Jim Erkenbeck offensive coordinator, Carl Smith quarterbacks and wide receivers coach and Joe .Marciano special teams and tight end coach. Named Terry Bradway administrative assistant to the president and general manager.

Canadian Football League TORONTO ARGONAUTS-Aquired Joe Adams, quarterback, from the Saskatchewan Roughriders for future con siderations

HOCKEY

National Hock^ League

EDMONTON OILERS^^ed Tom Rowe, Bari Yachimec and Doug Kvie, right wingers. Ross Lambert and Mike Krensing, centers

N.C. Scoreboard

ByTbeAsaociatedPreti Baseball Carolina League

W inston Salem 10. Alexandria 4 Kinston 5, Harstown 4

Soutbern League Charlotte 7, Savannah 4

(Continued from page 17) their own individual reasons, said Bishop. The reason we all left at the same time was because thats the only plane we could get out of Caracas.

The Others were 400-meter relay members Mike Patrick of Centraba, 1., and Brady Crain of New York; javelin thrower Duncan Atwood of Seattle; pole vaulter Mike Tully of Los Angeles, and decathlete Gary Bastien of Auburn, Ala., in addition to Marlow.

Im disappointed because 1 didnt get to compete, Bishop said after arriving in Los Angeles. I wanted to. The whole situation down in Caracas was yery confusing. And, I think a lot of people were put on the line. They yvere put on the line because of the inconsistency in the in-, formation about the testing and what have you, about the facilities at the village and the places we were staying and just the whole situation down there.

The U.S. wrestling golds went to Barry Davis of Bloomfield, Iowa, at 126 pounds; Randy Lewis of Rapid City, N.D., at 137; Lee Kemp of Chardon, Ohio, at 163, and Greg Gibson of Stafford, Va., at 220.

Reserve catcher Jim Puzey had four hits, including a

two-run homer, and four runs batted in, to lead the U.S. baseball team past the Dominican Republic. The United States is 8-0, and meets Cuba on Friday. The Cubans ran their Pan Am-winning streak to 31 games with all-0 victory over Panama.

Vau0in Alvey pitched a three-hitter for the U.S. softball team as the United States joined Canada with an assured spot in the four-team championship playoff.

Wayman Tisdale scored 29 points as the American basketball team beat Canada to avenge a defeat at the World University Games last month.

Another teen-age star, Cheryl Miller of Southern Cai, led the U.S. women past Cuba with 28 points.

In tennis, Gretchen Rush of Trinity College advanced to the womens singles final with a 7-5, 7-5 victory over Silvana Campos of Brazil. She will play for the gold medal against Gigi Fernandez of Puerto Rico, a fr4, 6-2 winner over Heliana Steden of Mexico.

drove in three runs with a sacrifice fly and homer. Warren, making his third major-league start and fifth appearance, did not allow a hit unitl Roy Smalleys double to open the sixth. The 22-year-old right-hander allowed four hits and three runs in 6 2-3 innings Rickey Henderson had three singles for Oakland and stole four bases, giving him 87,

Angels 5, Indians 2

Brian Downing had a home run, two singles and two RBIs to back the six-hit pitching of Mike Witt and Luis Sanchez. Downing singled a run across m the fifth inning, homered in the seventh and singled again in a three-run ninth, which included Rod Carews two-run double.

Twins 3, Red Sox 2

Kent Hrbek drove in all three Minnesota runs, two with a sixth-inning homer, and A1 Williams combined with Ron Davis on a five-hitter Williams allowed two hits in seven innings before giving way to Davis because of a sore right elbow Hrbek drove in a run wUh a first-inning grounder and snapped a 1-1 tie - Bostons Tony Armas hit his 28th homer in the second -with a 420-fool homer in the sixth following a walk to Gary Ward.

Softball Event Information

A softball tournament will to be held at Qiieod, August 27-28.

Entry fee ts 160 and two new balls. Trophies will be awarded for first through fourth ptece teams.

For liMber Information, contact Gerald Gamer at 756-3440, or 758-6519 after 7 p.m.

THREE GOOD REASONS HOUSTON (AP) - Keith Fergus, (M of the stars of the PGA tour, was the No. 1 player on the University of Houston team during his last three years at that school.

Somebody asked him about his first year at Houston.

Oh, there was a very good reason why 1 wasnt the No. 1 player my first year, he said. In fact there were three reasons. Their names were Bill Rogers, Bruce Lietzke and Fuzzy Zoeller, all still in school and on the team.

mH:

Brushcutters

Available At

Memorial Dr. 752-4122

DONT MISS THE

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Saturday. Aug. 27 And Sunday Aug. 28. 1983

COMMODORE 1525E GRAPHIC PRINTER

Dot matrix 30 characters per second Tractor feed Serial Prints PET graphiifs connects directly to VIC20 or Commodore 64

Reg.

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PROWRITER 8510

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Letter quality IS 5 ' carriage 13 characters per second Bi directional Friction-feed Parallel and serial

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PROWRITER I11550

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tntariaces Avaifabf# To Configura Printers To Many Differant Microcompular System

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20 The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C

Wednesday. August 24.1983

Gtosmmwt/ By Eugene Sbeffer

ACROSS IDeep grooves S Massachusetts cape gRussian despot

12 English painter

13 New Guinea port

14 Steak order

15 Lincolns biographer

natyin

Sicily

18 Fall flowers

19 Garland

21 Stoolpigeon

22 Girdle

23 Sale notices

28 Strong desire

28 Bicuspid

31 Jumping amphibian

33 Fabled bird

35 Supernatural power: E.Afr.

36 Dogma

38 Chatter

idly

40 Health resort

41 Bass or snare

43 Offer

45 Briny

47S{rfieresof

action

51 Footless

52 Lunch favorite

54 Widows offering

55 Doctors org.

56 Choir section

57 Fail to bid

58 Family member

59 Peruse

DOWN

1 Singer Ponselle

2 Javanese tree

3 Pale tinge

4Jewishhome 24Janeor

festival

5 Bunch

6 Paddle

7 French painter

8 Arnolds crime

9 Tunnel workers

10 Rule, Brittania cwnposer

John 25Ball|rfcs for kids 27 Christmas drink

29 Faucet

30 Hawk parrot 32 Scoffs 34 Beach

shelters 37 Wine cask 39 Snipe or thrush 42 High tablelands 44 Scotch chemist    45    Coarse

hominy

46 Samoan seaport

48 Cle(^tras river

49 -es fabula

,. 50 Wearing shoes

Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 53 Parisian pal

CRYPTOQUIP

DEU MKHQLG YWMI QUUHMVHA YDU FHUYWAG:VIH VEUK FWLH.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip THE VACUUM RETAILERS WARM CONVENTION HAD A SELLOUT CROWD.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: U equals R. The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which eadi letter u^ stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Sii^le letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

ifUKing Feature Syndicate, Inc

FORECAST FOR THURSDAY. AUGUST 25,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Until 6 P.M. you can have quite a difficult time trying to get others to do things your way. Your later day looks better for accomplishing goals.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 191 Don't permit some worry to deter your progress in the activei outside world. Think along very constructive lines.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 201 An argument between your mate and a close friend can be settled nicely by you now. Socialize at home this evening.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21} Don't be foolish and get involved in any argument with an official and by tonight the matter clears itself up.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Study those new plans well and be sure they don't get in the way with work you are currently doing.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Your hunches are not good particularly regarding some talent you want to express in public, so go over your plans wisely.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) You have to be courteous not only with outsiders today but those who dwell with you in order to maintain harmony.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Plan your time well so that you can get work done and also have the opportunity to shop. A regular ally gives fine advice.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Early you want to plan for entertainment but then count the cost and change your mind. Attend to practical business.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Get away from home for a while until the altercation there blows over and handle other affairs of importance.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Get communications handled well, despite any private worries you may have, and also other important work ahead of you.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Think about friends and what you can do for them, and they for you today and dont be so concerned about money.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Go after what you need of a personal nature since there can be a delay in your career work. Gain the support of a friend.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wiU be one of those naturally gifted young people who can easily tell when others are in trouble and will do much to try to assist them, so you had better slant the education along lines of humanitarian work.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

Parking Ban In Wake Of Blast

PALERMO, Sicily (API -Police on Tuesday banned parking near the homes and offices of police officials and magistrates, nearly a month after a car bomb killed a tough anti-Mafia judge and three other people.

Tow trucks will patrol 83 sites where parking is

banned around the clock, police said.

On July 29, a car loaded with more than 200 pounds of dynamite exploded outside the apartment building of Judge Rocco Qiinnici, killing him, two police guards and a doorman.

GOREN BRIDGE

11 Paper quantity 16 Donkeys cry 26 Turner orCde 23 ABA member

BT CHARLES GOREX AMD OMAR SHARIF

01983 Tribuna Company Syndtcata, Inc.

CAREFUL DEFENSE EARNS DIVIDEND

Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH

AQ <7K9654 0 1065 4J104

WEST    EAST

753    49864 .

<^AJ2    701083

0 K4    0 972

98652    AA3

SOUTH

KJ102 7 7

0 AQJ83

KQ7

The bidding:

South West North East

1 0 Pass 1 7 Pass

1 Pass 2 7 Pass

2 NT Pass 3 NT Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: Eight of .

to offer much hope, so East shifted to a heart.

Had West risen with the ace of hearts, the contract would probably have romped home. Declarer could wki the third heart and, even though the diamond finesse fails, he cannot be stopped from making nine tricks.

We can do without many of the modern conventions. However, we do feel that the method of leads against three no trump employed by East-West has much to recommend it.

Wests lead of the eight of clubs was conventional -second best from a worthless suit. East won the ace, and it was obvious that to continue clubs was futile. Neither spades nor diamonds seemed

But West was a careful defender. He inserted the jack of hearts. If declarer had been able to see through the cards, he would have known that he could afford to duck. But that play could have been bad on many distribu tions where East had the ace of hearts. So declarer decided instead to win the king of hearts and rely on the diamond finesse.

Unfortunately, West held the king of diamonds. He reverted to ace of hearts and another, and the defenders took three tricks in hearts to go with their two tricks in the minor suits. They were one of the few pairs to defeat, three no trump in a large tournament field in England.

This type of situation occurs frequently. When holding two honors that are not touching, it is often right for third hand to play the lower of those honors.

Speaking of

Your Health...

Lester LCokMi,M.Di

Foot Disorders in the Eideriy

Disorders of the feet are the product of a long life (rf injury, misuse, abuse and poor care. The elderly pay a terrible penalty for this common neglect. It is estimated that 50 perdent or more ci the elderly populati(Hi have significant disability of the feet that is unrecognized and untreated.

Dr. Stephen F. Albert and Dr. Dennis W. Jahnigen of the Departments of Podiatry and Surgery at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Denver devote themselves to the diagnosis and treatment of foot disorders in older patients.

In a recent article published in pK excellent magazine Geriatrics, they wrote about their survey of more than 5,000 patient visits at their hospital. Although the veteran peculation is primarUy male, the results have comparable relevance to females.

In this vast study focus was made on Orders of the nails, fungus infectiem of the nails and the skin, corns, calluses, bunions and other anatomical changes. Ulcers rf the feet were particularly studied because of their potential dangers and hazards.

Arthritic foot disorders, gout, rheumatoid arthritis, injuries and osteoarthritis were all found to exist for many years without any local treatment. In many instances there was gross incapacitation. Many of the cases with pr^r treatment might have avoided such disabilities;

TIME FOR SHOPPING - A French paratrtxcer carrying his automatic rifle crouches to buy spices from a native inside NDjamenas central market. This paratrooper with the crest of the 1st French Marine Paratrooper Regiment, is one of the

2,(X)0-pIus French troops now on duty in Chad to support government forces of President Hissene Habre. (AP Laserphoto)

Racial Violence Said Increasing

STATESVILLE, N.C. (AP)

- Iredell County officials say they are concerned about increasing racial violence, and want those responsible to know it will not be tolerated.

Since last November, more than 30 acts of racially motivated violence and intimidation have occurred in

disorders of the feet.

The elderly must be encouraged to indulge themselves in seeking the counseling of podiatrists long before their problems become so firmly enibedded that they cannot be reversed.

-)--(--(-

An accomplished person came to my office recently with a severe bum caused by the improper use of a hot water bag. It occured to me that there are probably many people who do not know the safe way to prepare one for the application of heat to sensitive skin areas.

Water bags that are too hot or too heavy may defeat their c(xnforting purpose. The bag should not contain air. This can be e:q)^ed by pressure before corking the bag, making certain ^re is no leak that might bum the patient.

Wrai^ing the bag in a flannel cloth is protective and avoids a bum. It should be remembered that the skin of a sick patient may be far more sensitive and delicate than that of the one who is preparing the bag or testing it for excess heat.

Examine the skin after the bag has been applied for a few minutes. If there is unusual redness, ttien the water is probably too hot. Heat can be soothing. Excess heat can be hazardous.

Heat Curbs The Flying

Vascular ^disturbances due to arteriosclerosis were particularly hazardous and olteh were responsible for total in-capacitati(xi.

Disorders of the feet should be treated by the combination (rf the physician, the surgeoi and the specialist in podiatry. This is an ideal triad if tte elderly are to be spared the incapacitation that almost always accompanies severe foot disorders.

Dr. Richard Bass, an eminent podiatrist in New Yorii City, surveys the problem with great wisdran. In a communication to me he said, Foot disorders are not classed as elegant illnesses. It takes a good deal of caring and devotion and time to support the elderly who are burdened by the added infirmity caused by the neglect of

COVER-UP BULFORD, England (AP) - A British army administration officer has been dismissed from the service and sentenced to six months in jail after admitting in court he took home 74 classified documents to cover up his inability to handle his workload during the day.

GAUGING DROUGHT - Pittsburg (Kansas) farmer John Yogfir uses a tape measure to determine the depth of the cracked soU in hu drou0)ti>lagued soybean field. Tbe crack measured 10 inches deep. Iroo^y, tte field \riiich hasnt had any ximtiflcant raJnfall since July 4 lost soil earlier this summer    it recdved heavy rains. (AP Laserphoto)

Iredell and neighboring Alexander County, including two shooting incidents in Troutman last month, officials said.

On July 6 and 7, shots were fired at a black highway department workers home and Troutman Police Chief Joseph Walkers home. No one was injured.

I hope the word will get out that this element is not welcome here, said Joe Troutman, chairman of the county commission. Were not going to stand for this intimidation.

Ku Klux Klan leaders have denied any role in the shootings. But the Rev.

Burley Surplus

LAKE MATTAMUSKEET, N.C. (AP) - The heat wave across North Carolina has kept two young bald eagles that were released into the wild Friday from hunting for food, officials say.

After the birds were released, they flew to a clump of trees on the edge of the water at Lake Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge in Hyde County, said refuge manager Larry Ditto of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The birds spent most of the weekend lurched in these trees, he said. "They have not moved much, which is normal and is probably also due to the heat.

The birdsxhave not yet begun to hunt, but have also not returned to the release site looking for food, Ditto said. This is not unusual, especially in thise heat. We may try to float some dead hsh or other food near their perch if they dont begin hunting soon.

The young birds, obtained from Wisconsin, were placed in a special cage at the release site in mid-June. They were not allowed to see who was feeding them so that they would not associate food with man.

Leaf Is Sold

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -More than 30 million pounds of burley tobacco leaf, held in storage since the close of the 1982 market season, has been sold in the past week by the Burley Tobacco Growers (Cooperative.

Two sales, completed Aug. 19, were worth $100 million to the cooperative and reduced the groups stored supplies of processed leaf by 18 percent. Buyers purchased 500,000 pounds in the first sale and 30 million in the second.

The sales, coming when burley growers are fretting about the jwssibility of reduced earnings this season because the summer drought has stunted plants, were

greeted with smues.

This (30 million pound sale) is a real shot in the arm for us, the producer and the industry, A.R. Beckley, the cooperatives executive sec-retary-treasurer, said Monday. It comes at a time when any good news on the tobacco front is welcomed with opened arms.

Because of the recent sales, Beckley said, farmers probably will get a penny break on money earmarked for the no-net-cost program this year.

Earlier this year the cooperatives directors recommended an increase in farmers payments to the programs fund.

Charles Roman, president of the Statesville chapter of the NAACP, contends they are part of a chain of such incidents plaguing Iredell County in recent months.

In a letter to county and city officials, Roman called for special legislation to curb the racial activities of the Ku Klux Klan or any other groups which threaten the safety of the public or intimidate people.

In response to the letter, officials met recently to discuss ways to discourage racial violence in their communities.

This session gave the black community a forum to express how they ,felt, Troutman said. They felt we were not giving them the backing they should have had. Our genuine hope is that by airing these problems, we can let our police, Sheriffs Department and Highway Patrol know they have all the backing of the people of the county to enforce the law. Roman said he wants officials to come up with specific ways to restrict Klan activity in the county.

You cant stop them, but you can discourage them from coming here, he said. Weve got to make sure we dont let people from out of state pit us against each other here in Iredell County.

WE WILL GLADLY ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMPS & WIC VOUCHERS

FOODLAD & GWALTNEY SPECIALS PAIR UP FOR MONTH LONG AUGUST SPECIALS. PRICES ARE GOOD FOR 4 FULL WEEKS OF august. UP TO AUGUST 27,1983,

GWALTNEY SLICED

BACON

1 LB. PKG.

19

LIMIT 1 WITH $10.00 ADDITIONAL FOOD ORDER OR MORE

GWALTNEY .

FMIKS ;.-89

12 OZ. PKG.

GWALTNEY

BOLOGNA

89

12 OZ. PKG.

GWALTNEY

GREAT DOGS

GWALTNEY HOT OR MILC^ROLL

SAUSAGE

SPAINS SHOPEZE

1414 CHARLES BLVD.

OWNED 8 OPERATED BY ALTON SPAIN MONDAY-THURSDAY S A.M.-8 P.M. FRIDAY-SATUROAV 8 A.M.-8:30 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY

WEST END SHOPPING CENTER

OWNED A OPERATED BY: SHOP EZE FOOD STORES INC.

MANAGER-BURGESS STEVENS MONOAY-SATURDAY 8 A.M.-9 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M.4 P.M. VISIT OUR DELI FOR DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS





YOUR FRIENDLY NEIGHBORSAT

FRESH PORK

HECK BOHES TAILS, EEET, OR EARS.

YOU SAVE 10 LB.

KNOW WHAT IT is 10 FEED A FAMILY

FRESH CRISP

CARROTS

LB.

SWIFT PREMIUM

1 LB. BAG YOU SAVE 16' BAG

RIB EYE STEAK..

YOU SAVE $1.50 LB.

SWIFT PREMIUM FRESH

GROUND BEEF...

YOU SAVE 30' LB.

OLE TAR HEEL COUNTRY LINK

SAUSAGE. MS-

YOU SAVE 20 LB. $3.00 ON 10 LB. BOX

29

10 LB. BOX

LEAN TENDER

PORK CHOPS

CENTER RIB CENTER LOIN

$159

LB.

SWIFT PREMIUM

RIB STEAK

SALT PORK

FAT BACK

89

39

LB.

LB.

WHITE

GRAPES...

YOU SAVE 40* LB.

I

FRESH

RUTABAGAS

YOU SAVE 14* LB.

FRESH YELLOW

CORN .... .

YOU SAVE 7 EAR

LB.

LB.

EA

OSCAR MAYER LEAN N TASTY

12 OZ.

8 OZ. PKG.

6 0Z. . . PKG.

8 OZ. PKG.

OSCAR MAYER

HAM& CHEESE.

BEALES

COUNTRY HAMS.

FROSTY MORN

LARD......

RUFFLES BRAND .

POTATO = CHIPS

8 0Z. PKG.

YOU SAVE 20 LB.

25 LB. PAIL

$139

29

LB.

88

FOODLAND

BREAD $391

FRESH    ^

NECTARINES 49

YOU SAVE 20* LB.

LB.

m.

BRAND CAT FOOD    BRAND    CAT    FOOD

89

3'/i LB. BAG

QALLO SAUVIGNON BLANC. JOHANNISBERG. OR RIESLING

CHEER DETERGENT    "box^-    ^

YOU SAVE 31

22 OZ. $ 1 25

JOY LIQUID

P(fc

fu^ b.

y FAMILY SIZE

BOTTLE

250 CT.'BOX

25

1V2 LB. LOAVES

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

WINES.

FRITO LAY

LAYS.

BRAND VARIETY PACK

24 OZ. BOX

1.5 LITRE BOTTLE

5/16 OZ.

BAG

YOU SAVE 20

$|89

DELTA YOU SAVE 3*^^    4    H    OA

TOWELS ..    1

$|

PETER PAN SMOOTH OR CRUNCHY

PEANUT BUTTER .r.

WISK    YOU    SAVE    20'

DETERGENT

EATWELL

JACK

MACKEREL

       I

32 OZ. BOTTLE

15 0Z.I CAN

TWIN PET REGULAR, BEEF, CHICKEN OR LIVER

DOG FOOD.....

YOU SAVE 7*

CKMAVSOAP

APRIL SHOWER

PEAS

.5cni88*

BATH SIZE BAR

YOU SAVE 8* 'WELCH

GOAPE JUICE

12 OZ. , .CAN

FOODLAND

HOTDOG & HAMBURGER ROLLS

8CT.

PKGS.

CRUNCH )\\ NMUNCH

ALL FLAVORS 5 OZ. BOX

YOU SAVE

LIPTON TEA

KEEBLER R

ZESTA

CRACKERS...

KEEBLER BONUS PACKS

PECAN SANDIES OR RCHN CHIPS......

. . . . . 32 OZ. CANISTER KEEBLER REGULAR OR UNSALTEO

16 OZ. BOX

16 OZ. BOX

GORTON

FISH STICKS

DULANY speckled

BUTTER

BEANS YOU SAVE 20* 15 OZ.

PET RITZ

PIE

SHELLS

YOU SAVE 2 LB. .... . BOX

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99

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PET WHIP TOPPING

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8 02. CTN.

SHOP iZE

WEST END SHOPPING CENTER OWNED A OPERATED BY: SHOP EZE FOOD STORES INC.

MANAGERBURGESS STEVENS ; ' 40NDAY-SATURDAYI A.M. - 9 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M. 9 P.M. VISIT OUR DELI FOR DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS

8 0Z. JAR

HIGH POINT

COFFEE 49

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SHERBET $|69

Vi GALLON

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ur

5 0Z. CAN

$225

ASPIRIN FREE

ANACIN 3 30 . $|59

WE WILL GLADLY ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMPS A WIC VOUCHERS. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. NONE SOLD^oTSRIeRS. PRICES EFFEC-TIVE: GROCERY-MEAT-PRODUCE-AUGUST 25, 26, A 27,1983.

SPAINS

1414 CHARLES BLVD.

OWNED 9 OPERATED BY ALTON SPAIN MONDAY-THURSDAY 8 A.M.-8 P.M.

FRIDAY-SATURDAY 6 A.M.-8:30 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY





Trump Tower Mall A Showcase Of Elite Stores

By JUDIE GUVE Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) - The portly man with silver hair struck a casual pose against a gleaming brass rail, then motioned his wife to move over two steps to make sure her snapshot included the indoor waterfall.

These tourists werent photographing familiar sights like the United Nations or Lincoln Center, but a shopping mall that is the citys newest and undoubtedly one of the worlds priciest -Trump Tower.

The $150 million project, a joint venture by real estate magnate Donald Trump and the Equitable Life Assurance Society, rises like a glistening onyx jewel 68 stories above Fifth Avenue between East 56th and East 57th streets.

The tower, which includes 49 floors of private condominiums and 13 floors of office space, stands on the site of the old Bonwit Teller building and dwarfs its nearest neighbor. Tiffanys.

Customers entering the six-story-high atrium are greeted bi cbimson-coated doormen wearing white Prussian spiked helmets and crisp, white gloves.

Inside, a tuxedo-clad pianist plays Cole Porters Night and Day on a rust and gold trimmed baby grand.

A similarly suited violinist awaits his cue while browsers stroll past to a mirrored, brass-trimmed escalator that climbs past an 80-foot waterfall and looks down upon an indoor bistro with decks of lush ^eenery.

The 40 stores inside the mall, which is finished in a warm, peach-rose marble called Breccia Pemiche, are as exclusive as the buildings design.

, Jeweler Harry Winston has a boutique inside the tower, as does Asprey of London, the noted leathermakers. Ludwig Beck of Munich, which features fine porcelain, linens and traditional Bavarian clothing, is making its first venture into the United States. The Lina Lee fashion boutique of Beverly Hills is making its East Coast debut.

Although nearly all the stores have items that cost less than $100, most merchandise carries three-and four-digit prices.

Shoes at Charles Jourdan begin at $110; a small gold ring at Buccellati, a noted gold and silver merchant, costs about $1,000.

The Harry Winston shop plans to cater to young working women who can afford to buy their own jewelry, says spokeswoman Norma Smith, adding that the price for such a trinket will be in the $3,000 to $5,000

range.

More eclectic tastes may prefer a lifesize Boehm porcelain statue of a wild American turkey for $15,000 or a green-and-gold trimmed porcelain chess set that sells for$ll,000 at Ludwig Beck.

Despite the sometimes astronomical prices, or perhaps because of them, the atrium has attracted a kaleidoscopic clientele since it opened in February.

Men wearing Bermuda shorts with cameras slung across their chests mingle with nattily dressed businessmen. Women in jogging shorts and sneakers pushing toddlers in collapsible strollers lunch next to impeccably dressed women a^rned in diamonds and gold.

Celebrities Jane Fonda, Pia Zadora and Joan Rivers have reportedly been spotted in the marbled atrium.

This is definitely a place where the poor can rub shoulders with the rich. said celebrity-struck Ella Lightfoot of Piscataway, N.J., who moments earlier had stopped a stranger to point out a woman she thought was Jackie Onassis sirolling down the hallway.

It was someone else, but Mrs. Lightfoot was undismayed. Im sure if I hang around loog enough Ill see the real Jackie walk by, she said

Most store owners, who pay monthly rents of 1150 to $400 a square foot, plus a percentage of sales over a set anwunt, were not overly concerned about the curious.

We encourage browsers. People shouldnt be intimidate by our repidation, said Ms. Smith Harry Winston. Besides, its ^ to let people dream about that special little something

spokeswoman Terry Pandel said she estimated that the store would have to sell about $7,000 worth of merchandise a day just to

cover the cost of its prime, ground level location.

I think were doing it already. It shouldnt be a problem, she said.

But other store owners hope that the luxurious condominiums, scheduled to open by Sept. 1, will bring in a better and perhaps more

international sort of customer.

The 263 condominiums are priced at $500,000 for a single bedroom apartment to $12 million for the penthouse triplex, reportedly purchased by a European countess.

Right now we dont have the type of client we ultimately hope to attract, said Bill Brown of Ludwig Beck. But like any new venture we realize it will take time to cultivate the right customer.

Some customers gaped when they checked certain pricetags. But the Lightfoots remained undaunted.

Just to walk throu^ here is reason enough to drive into the city, Mrs. Lightfoot said during lunch at the bistro.

This is heaven.

Her husband, Victor, agreed.

Leaning back in his rattan chair, he sipped at a frosty glass of iced tea and said, I wonder how the other half is living today.

HowTbDipInto Fresh Ingredients,

Smothered In Fresh SourCream,

i

NT'

Without Leaving^durChip In The Dip

TRUMP TOWER - The elegant Trump Tower Mall of 5th Avenue in Manhattan has become one of the citys newest tourist attractions. Customers entering the six>story

atrium are greeted by crimson^ coated doormen and entertained by a tuxedo-clad pianist playing Cole Porter tunes. (AP Laserphoto)

Heres how our Breakstones GcxtmetDips end up with a taste that's easy to love and a texture thats easy to dip. We start with real, creamy, fresh, natural sour cream. Next we add sp'ecial ingredients that make each of our five gourmet dips so special. Mounds of mushrooms and green herbs; or toasted onion bits; or crunchy bacon and onion-, or a spicy

blend of Jalapeno pepper and natural Cheddar cheese; or for sea-food lovers, real Chesapeake Clams (and lots of them).

Then each is blended to be smooth and creamy, not too thicknot too thin.

So, if youve got gourmet tastes, sink your chips into our delicious dips. The only thing thatll crack is the smile on your face,        Kraft, inc. i%3

EnIOY BREAKSTONES GOURMET DiPS.

Tobacco Prices Mostly Steady

By The Associated Press

Flue-cured tobacco dropped or remained mostly steady Tuesday on North Carolinas three tobacco belts, the Federal-State Market News Service reported.

Grade prices were a little lower on the Eastern Belt. Most grades lost from $1 to $5 per hundred pounds from Monday, but a few were unchanged to sli^tly higher.

A season high average price of $182.63 per hundred was paid Monday for 7,601,345 gross pounds. This average exceeded the one for last Thursday by 88.37. Marketings for the season rose to 70,962,068 pounds averaging $165.43 per hundred.

On the Old and Middle Belt, most heavy volume grades slipped $2 to $5 from Mondays levels. Top price remained $205 paid for selected offerings of cutters. Volume of sales was moderate at most points Tuesday.

Sales on the belt Monday amounted to 6,244,222 pounds and averaged $157.01 per hundred - up $4.92 from last Thursday. Season sales reached 27,033,070 pounds returning $148.68.

Grade prices held fairly steady on the South Carolina and Border North Carolina

tobacco markets. Changes from Monday were chiefly $1

to $3 with gains and losses about equal.

The highest average for this season was recorded Monday when 5,342,306 pounds returned $181.21 per hundred - up $9.46 from Thursday. Season figures totaled 56,088,762 pounds averaging $161.14    >

r

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I Breakstones Gourmet Dip'

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Save 15^0n Any

Ml Grocei Kiall, Inc wH reim-buiM you loi ttii, lace value of-this coupon plus 7' handling al kwanct provided you redeemed It on your retail sales of the named productts) and that upon request you agree to furnish proof of purchase of sufficient product to cover all redemptKms Coupon

IS void where laied.prohiMed. or    '

restricted by law. and may not be    |

assigned or transferred by you    

Cash value 1'20' Customer must    I

pay applicable tax For redemp- | tion. mail to Kraft. Inc Daiiy '

Group. PO Boi 1799 Clinton. Iowa 52734

Otter eipim 2 29 84

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Redeem these coupons at any store selling these products.

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Four Killed In Plane's Crash

Someday they may buy it

liV itll be from u

1

y itll be from US. harles Jourdan

ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. (AP) - Four people were killed today when a plane practicing touch-and-go landings crashed at the Elizabeth City Coast Guard Air Station, Navy officials said.

Tom Connor, a Navy spokesman in Norfolk, Va., said the plane was a C-lA twin-engine lurbq}rop bas^ at the Norfolk Naval Air Station.

None of the identities of the victims was released, pending notification of relatives.

Licensed TM &    i960.      _

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TO 8ETAHER As our *q*ni kc*||( lltit coupon on tti* pwtclwt* of Ih* KMcihtO pvoduct G*n*c*l Mnis will i*rit*m *ch coupon you to KCtpr for Ih* f*c* vdu* plus 7C h*ndl,ng cluig* M*il Ihit coupon 10 G*n*<*l MUh Inc Boi 900 Mmn**polit hAmiwso)* 99460 tor r*<i*mpi,on Coupons wdl not b* honor*d if prtttnisd Ihroufh Ihird p*rti*s not tp*cihc*llY suthonwr) by us Any *ry*mpr to rrOfOfr) this couyion otOorwne thon js ptovnlod hcww, sA*W cons/wiw* A*ud : prormg Qinniihn you ourtlmoO mat Ot ujbmnoo on rttnasi <0 coiporol* hndoiai

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I

Tracing Of Ancestors Is Big Challenge

By CHARLES WOLFE Associated Press Writer

LEXINGTON, Ky, (AP) -Clayton Cox and Theodore Walter recall that the search for their ancestral roots in eastern Kentucky began with simple questions.

But their digging for answers grew into a hobby that now consumes their evenings, weekends and vacations.

The hobby is genealogy. It inspires people to tramp through old cemeteries, pore over moldy records in dusty courthouse basements and shower letters on distant relatives in distant places who might know something about where they cametrom.

I had an aunt of mine ask me for some information from my grandfathers Bible, said Cox, an accountant. She wanted to mark some graves.

That was 16 years ago! Cox has the Bible, long separated from its bindings but preserved in a cigar box.

The box is hard to spot, though, among the thousands of books, ledgers, card files and cartons that clog the basement of his South Lexington home.

His wife, Elizabeth, is equally dedicated to the hobby. She is a member of the Kentucky Genealogical Societys board of directors.

Waltel-, a Lexington attorney who is president of the society, said he had begun researching the various branches of his family in Johnson County 24 years ago.

I never knew my granddaddy Walter because he died about 13 years before I was born, he said. I began to ask questions. One thing led to another and I began to acquire books.

Just about any book I could find on the Big Sandy (River area), I collected. It wasnt too long before I became kind of an authority on families up in there.

Walter said he had researched 13 families of his ancestors, many of, whom migrated west to Kansas, Oklahoma, Washington and California. He has published three family histories.

He spends Tuesday nights in Frankfort as a volunteer worker in the state archives, helping new hobbyists get started.

Genealogy is in your top 10 hobbies, Walter said. People dont realize how big it is, but youve got a continuing number of people continually seeking who their ancestors were.

Its like working a puzzle, said Cox. This is the biggest puzzle you can get into. Its never-ending and it becomes a challenge to you after a while.

Cox is compiling the list of his Caudill ancestors, whose descendants are scattered throughout eastern Kentucky.

The Caudills came west by way of Lawrence County, but spellings changed along the way, so Cox also has Caudells, Caudles and Cor-dles to contend with.

His labor will produce a thick directory priced at about $40 a copy and Cox said he hoped to sell enough to relatives to recoup his expenses.

That will take a v/hile, however. This business is time-consuming.

Cox said he and his wife had spent a two-week vacation in the Letcher County courthouse at Whitesburg, thumbing through 286 volumes of marriage records -most of them in the 300- to 400-page range - and copying all the Caudill entries. Then we had to come back here and try to piece it back together.

Acceptable If Done Discreetly

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)

Mothers may breast-feed <4heir children on Belgian buses if it is done discreetly, according to Communications Minister Herman De Croo.

There are no regulations forbidding a woman to breast-feed her child during a trip on the bus as long as she does it discreetly, De Croo said in reply to written question from a senator.

The senator complained that a woman in Ghrat, 28 miles west of Brussels, was asked recently to get off a ^us because she was breast-feeding achild.

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BUDWEISER

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REGULAR OR LIGHT

612 0Z. CANS

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8*16 02. BOHLES

6<

Plus Deposit

3 LITRE BTL.

CARLO

ROSSI

WINE

CHABLIS, RHINE

JUMBO ROLL SCOTT

TOWELS

1 PER CUSTOMER WITH 10.00 OR MORE ORDER A COUPON. UTmar>e GOOD THRU SAT.,

AUG. 27-M.    1    ^

AUG. 27T^    1    'c

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PRICES GOOD THRU SAT.. AUG. 27TH NONE TO DEALERS *WE RESERVE THE RIGHT D    TO    LIMIT    QUANTITIES    COPYRIGHT    1983,    WINN-DIXIE    STORES.    INC.

24 CT. BOX LIPTON

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99.

lo.oo or more

13 ' ORDER A COUPON.

GOOD THRU SAT..    AUG.    27TH.

SAVE 504

3-LB. CAN CRISCO

SHORTENING

fSMOKED HAM

(REG. OR BUTTER)

LEAN AND ROUND VIRGINIA HONEY GLAZED JUMBO

BAKED HAM

DONUTS

SAVE 804

HARVEST FRESH EXTRA LARGE

HOMEVDEWS

V2-LB.

DOZ.

8-PC. SATCHEL SOUTHERN STYLE

FRIED CHICKEN 3.99

8-PAK FRESH BAKED FRENCH

HARD ROLLS ... .89

AVA'LABLE IN DELI BAKERY STORES ONLY' SEE STORE ADDRESSES AT BOTTOM OF AD

SUPERBRAND HOMOGENIZED

MiLK......

SUPERBRAND '/tS

SKIM MILK.

GAL.

.JUG

89

69

32-OZ. JAR DEEP SOUTH

MAVOMMAISE

WITH 10.00 OR MORE ORDER (LIMIT 1)

THRIFTY MAID

16-OZ. CORN. GREEN BEANS. CARROTS. MIXED VEGETABLES. WHITE POTATOES. APPLE SAUCE OR BEETS AIS-OZ. (TURNIP COLLARDS. OR MUSTARD) GREENS 8-OZ. PINEAPPLE

HARVEST FRESH

YELLOW

CORN

10-OZ. SIZE TOTINO'S

PIZZAS

(AU VARIETIES)

EARS

FOR

HARVEST FRESH CUCUMBERS OR

bell peppers 5 ~..99

HARVE9TPRESH

MECTBRIIIES .. i>..69

NARVItT PRBBN BARTLETT

PEERS ........ 9..60

1-LB. PKG. IN QTR8. SUPERBRAND

MARCARIME

3.99

LB. PKG. W.D. WHOLE HOG

SAUSAGE

10-OZ. CUP SUPERBRAND

WHIP TOPPING .. .99

9-OZ. BOX FREEZER QUEEN

BOIL'M'BAG 2 ..99

3#AK/12-OZ. OR 9-PAK/9-OZ. CANS A9TOR

ORANGE JUICE 2.55

e-/i-OZ. CAN SLUE RAY (OIL OR WATER)

TUNA ........  .59

10-LR. RAG KINGSPORD

CHARCOAL .... 2.59

34-^%-OZ. RTL. FRNH START

DETERGENT ... 2.99

W.D. RRANO U.S. CHOICE TOP

ROUND STEAK r.2.99

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED JUMSO PAK

FRYER THIGHS ia.69

FILLET OF

FLOUNDER ... ta1.19





r    The    Daily    Reflector, Greenville, N.C.

hiy. ^ ^----------- .......... '

IT

Wednesday. August 24,1963

I'ii.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BEEF CENTER CUT

Round

Steak

HOLLY FARMS FRESH

Fryer Breast... ib

HOLLY FARMS FRESH

combo Pac Lb

U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BONELESS BEEF

Cubed steak

U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BONELESS TOP ROUND

London Broil

U.S.D.A. COVT INSPEaED QUALITY CONTROLLED GENUINE

Ground Round

FRESH DOMESTIC SLICED AND TIED

Lamb

Shoulder Roast. ld

BULK PACKAGED COUNTRY STYLE

Sliced

Bacon t

Lb.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BEEF CAP ON BONELESS

Sirloin Tip Roast $

3 Lbs. Or More

CENTER CUT

Pork Steak

Lb.

SERVE N SAVE

Wieners

12-

Oz.

Pkg.

RATH HOT OR MILD

Pork Sausage

1-Lb.

Pkg.

$"118

88

68*

HOLLY FARMS CUT UP MIXED

Fryer

Parts

COUNTRY CLUB

Canned

Ham

CHABLIS BLANC, VIN ROSE OR

Gallo

Rhine

1.5-

Ltr.

$319

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Kroger Cake Mix

18.5

OZ.

BOX

55<

REGULAR OR DARK

Tuborg Beer...

612-oz.

N.R. BtlS.

$219

MT. OLIVE FRESH

Kosher Strip Pickles

24-

OZ.

Jar

$<119

Health & Beauty Aids

SHAMPOO FORMULA MISS CLAIROL

Hair Color

ST..I

marathon maacara ,

fiirfi) ' hIH<'

f Wj

COVER GIRL MARATHON MASCARA OR

DCpq fOOA STYLE I. II, OR III

200 CONDITIONER OR

Shampoo

' Seafood Shoppe'

FROZEN BUY ONE GET ONE FREE

Stuffed Flounder

1V2-Lb.

Size

SERVE N SAVE COOKED

Salad

Shrimp..   pw

50-60 COUNT FROZEN IN SHELL .

aiSSp . . . . .

FROZEN BULK PACKAGED

5sr.........

NONE SOLO TO DEALERS

OPEN 2a HOURS EVERYDAY

600 Greenville Blvd - Greenville 756-7051

T

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I

ii





The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C

r~ -

Between now and Aug. 27we wiu redeem all nationi manufacturers cents off coupons up to 50* for double their value. Offer good on national manufacturers coupons only. (Food retailer coupons not accepted.) Customer must purchase coupon product in specified size. E)(plred coupons will not be honored, coupons for free merchandise excluded from this offer. Offer does not apply to Kroger or other store coupons whether manufacturer Is mentioned or not When the value of the coupon exceeds 50* this offer is limited to $l .00. if double the value of a coupon exceeds the value Of the item, this offer is limited to the retail price. Limit one cigarette and coffee coupon per customer. Limit one coupon for

FOR EVERY $10.00 PURCHASE WE WILL DOUBLE 5 MFCS COUPONS - EXAMPLE:

pO Purchase    5 coupons

$20 Purchase 10 coupons $100 Purchase 50 coupons

coupons will be doubled, you may the second coupon but it s face value remains at face value.

manufacturers

COUPON

MFC

CENTS

OFF

YOU SAVE AT KROGER

Coupon A

20

40*

Coupon B

39*

78*

Coupon C

50*

1.00

Coupon D

75*

1.00

ASSORTED VARIETIES THIN N CSPY

Jeno's

Pizza

10-Oz.

Pkg.

Wednesday. August 24,1983    25

"-V

THOMPSON WHITE

Seedless

Crapes

TROPICANA OR KROGER

V2-Cal.

Ctn.

V2-Cal.

an.

COUNTRY CLUB

ice Milk

89*

QUARTERS

Kroger Ma^arin

3=99*

KROGER

Old Fashioned    ^ 24 nor;

Bread...  2l^88^

LIBBY WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE CORN. SWEET PEAS OR CUT

Green    .

Beans.......... .5ns^1

COST CUHER HOT DOC OR

Hamburger    ^ fsf%t

Buns .....2p?g99^

CuUen dittudi

HEINZ REGULAR OR ONION

Barbecue Sauce  BtV/9^

Bmtud

Mjiinn s;rw7

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Shasta soft Drinks

PAPER

Viva

Towels...

6

12-Oz.

cans

1

29

COST CUHER

Apple Juice

COST CUHER

Aluminum Foil.....

25

Sq.

Ft.

Jumbo

Roll

79*

IN OIL

COST CUHER .

Chunk. Light Tuna

6.5

02.

Can

45*

63*

SWEET RIPE

Honeydew

Melons

Ea.^163

CALIFORNIA RED OR

Blue Plums

.79* 2^*1 .49*

Sttut Fixtit-

FRESH

Florida Avocados

FRESH

Crisp Celery ... <

TENDER FRESH

Boston

Lettuce

MACCIO

Bunch Carrots..

SLICER SIZE

Fresh /I Cucumbers. I

CREAMY

White

cauliflower

99<

STofta Specials -

BEAUTIFUL

Gerber . Daisies

99

onestop Shopping

KROGER INSTANT LIGHTING

Charcoal

YOUR CHOICE!

Hershey candy

MC T65 ALL PURPOSE ADJUSTABLE $*999

wrench

PCS

in Greenville Call:

756-7393

Your Summer Fun

Headquarters!

CHIPPED

sssr......si99

$3*9

RAEFORDS

Turkey

Breast u>.

FRESH BAKED

French a <#119 Bread..

5-PIECE WISHBONE

SSen

YELLOW OR WHITE

American

Cheese

Lb.

$2

50*

SMOKED GERMAN

Leona Cheese

Lb.

so*

i

I





26 Ifii Udily HeflecKx OfeenvMie NG

vi/eriesay. August 24. iab3Little Known Outpost Trains Salvadoran Soldiei^^

By CHARLES J. HANLEY Associated Press Writer FORT GULICK, Panama (AP) - Seasoned American hands are running hundreds of young Salvadoran soldiers through firing ranges, classrooms and jungle trails on Panamas Caribbean coast, training them in tactics designed to crack the back of El Salvadors insurgency.

The 37-year-old U.S. Army School of the Americas, tucked away on this rain-drenched little post beside the Panama Canal, is a

little-known U.S. military foothold in the region.

But the School of the Americas has long been a key instrument of U.S. policy in the area, tightening professional ties between the U.S. military and Latin Americas uniformed elite, and today its role grows with each new explosion of civil war in Central America.

In the past three years, the annual enrollment has more than tripled, to 2,441 students from 10 Latin American countries, almost half of dhem from El Salvador. The

Public Notices

NOTICE

Having quallfltd as Exacutrix o( tha astafe of William Hyman Taylor lata of PItf County. North Carolina, this Is to notify all parsons having claims against tha astata of said deceasad to prasant tham to tha undarslgnad Exacutrix on or bafora

February 3. 1914 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All parsons indebted to

said estate please make Immediate ayment

This 1st. day of August. 1983. Dorothy May Mills Taylor P O Box 40 Simpson. N.C. 27879 E xacutr IX of the estate of

William Hyman Taylor, deceased. August 3.10.17. 24,1983

FILE

01731

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

COUNTY OF PITT AND TOWN OF GRIFTON,

Plaintiffs

tollowing described real estate, lying and being In the Town of Grifton, Gntton Township, Pitt County, North Carolina and more particular ly described as follows:

Being Lot No. 52 of the W C Chauncey Subdivision as revised ot a subdivision ot the J.C Gaskins Estate, as described and contained In certain map made by J.L. Foy. R.S., which map is registe Re

conlalnad in certain map made by

2.S., which map is registered in the tegistar of Deeds described and contained in certain map made by J.L. Foy, R.S., which mM is registered in the Register of Deeds Oftlce of Pitt County in Map Book S.

Page 155, reference to which is

hereby made tor a further descrip tion, the above numbered lot being 4 part ot the W.C. Chauncey Subdivi

Sion as revised of a subdivision ot the J.C. Gaskins Estate, subdivided December, 1947, for Walter and Gurley Auction Company of Kinston.

N.C., and resurveyed September 9, 1952, by J.L. Foy, R.S., reference Is

hereby made to said map, recorded in Map Book 5, Page 155 for a more complete conveyed to Ralph Brown by deed from W I. BIssette and wife. Raye Dawson BIssette, dated Jecember 5, 1963, and recorded In |ook D-34. Page 126, Pitt County

 The following described lot

or parcel of lahd being in the Town of Grifton, Pitt County, N.C., and more particularly described as follows: Being Lot No. 51 of the WC Chauncey Subdivision which is a revision of the Subdivision of J.C Gaskins Estate as shown on that

map recori 155 of Pitt

Ing the same

wn

Har^

27l1V52.

ded in Map Book 5, Page County Registry and be me lot of land deeded to

liam Harp and wife, Lucille J.

Harp, by W.C. Chauncey on October

This is the same property con veyed to Modern Homes Construe tIon Company by Trustee's Deed, be

Ing formerly' th'e property of Ralph Brown and wife, Louise Brown,

dated February 7, 1967, and record V3i, Page 386, Office of

ed in Book S    _____________

fhe RMisfer of Deeds, Pift County, North Carolina.

This Sale is made subject to all outstanding town and county taxes and all local improvement assessments against the above

described property not included in the Judgment in the above entitled

cause.

This the 29 day of July, 1983. RUSSELL HOUSTON, 111 Commissioner P 0 Box 939 Griffon, NC 28530

August

Telephone: (919) 524 4521 10, 17. 24,31. 1983

FILENO 82Cv01719 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DLVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

COUNTY OF PITT 8. TOWN OF GRIFTON,

Plaintiffs

KNOWN 8. UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OR DEVISEES OF ROSA McLAWHORN. DECEASED, TOGETHER WITH ALL THEIR CREDITORS 8i LIENS HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAIM & ANY & ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF ROSA McLAWHORN,

DECEASED AND DeLYLE M EVANS, GUARDIAN AN

AND ATTORNEY,

LITEM FOR THE

KNOWN AND UNKNOWN HEIRS ^EV----

AT LAW OR DEVISEES OF ROSA McLAWHORN, DECEASED, TOGETHER WITH ALL THEIR CREDITORS^ 8. LIEN HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAM 8. ANY & ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE dIcEAS^D    McLAWHORN,

Defendants

NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue ot an order ot the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, North Carolina, made and entered in the above entitled cause, the undersigned Commissioner will on the 2nd day ot Seofember. 1983,

SHOP-EZE

Weal End Shopping Center Phone 756-0960

I

Thursday Luncheon Special Baked Ham

*2.49

Boiled Ham

*2.89l6

tpertef Mfvetf wHh 2 freth UMm 6 roNa.

offer for sale, and sell for cash, to the last and highest bidder at public auction at fhe courthouse door in PItf County. Greenville, North Carolina, at 12 (X) o'clock noon, fhe following described real estate, ly-Ingand being in the Town of Griftop. Gnfton Township, Pitt County, North Carolina and more particular ly described as follows:

BE GINNING at a stake on the side of Main Street at Addie Brook's cor

ner, ar^d runs parallel with the said s' lir

Addie Brooks' line 292 feet and 10 inches, thence West 47' j feet to J.W. McLawhorn's line, thence Sooth 292 feet and 10 Inches with said McLawhorn's line to Main Street; thence East 47>'3 feet with Main Street to Addie Brook's corner, this

being the beginning, containing three-eights (3/8) of an acre, more

. Th

or less. This being whaf is known as. (he Bryan Gardner lot In the Town of Grifton, and being the "FIRST TDArT" jij appears In that deed to

Gladys Brooks Hodges in deed of record in Pitt County Registry in Book B-20 at page 549. to which

MODERN DIVERSIFIED IN DUSTRIES, INC successor to Modern Homes Construction Com pany, and KNOWN 8. UNKNOWN HErRSATLAWOR DEVISEESOF ELOISE GUNTER, DECEASED, TOGETHER WITH ALL THEIR CREDITORS & LIEN HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAIM, & ANY 8. ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF ELOISE GUNTER, DECEASED DeLYLE M EVANS, GUARDIAN AD LITEM AND AT TORNEY, FOR KNOWN & UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OR DEVISEESOF ELOISE GUNTER, DECEASED, TOGETHER WITH ALL THEIR CREDITORS AND LIEN HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAIM 8, ANY 8, ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF ELOISE GUNTER, DECEASED Defendants

NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an order of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, North Carolina, made and entered in the above entitled cause, the undersigned Commissioner will, on the 2nd day ot September. 1983. offer for sale, and sell for cash, to the last and highest bidder at public auction at the courthouse door in Pitt County, Greenville, North Carolina, at 12 00 o'clock noon, the following described real estate, ly-

reference is hereby made.

This Sale is made subject to all outstanding town and county taxes and all local improvement assessments against the above

U.S. Army now wants to . double the training staff.

Over the years, the school has graduated 42,557 soldiers of 22 countries, from courses ranging from squad-leader training to year-long general staff studies.

The alumni, many remembered in brassplate honor-roll plaques in the headquarters marble foyer, have included platoons of future Latin American military strongman, among them Gen. Leopoldo Galtieri, the former Argentine junta chief who launched the Falklands war last year; Brig. Gen. Gustavo Alvarez Martinez, the Honduran military leader now readying his country for possible war with Nicaragua; the late Gen. Omar Torrijos and his two successors as commander of the Panamanian national guard, which controls this country; and hundreds of others who have filled the officer ranks in military-dominated countries from Guatemala to Chile.

The school commandant, Col. Nicholas A. Andreacchio, a crew-cut, back-slapping former tank commander, is sensitive to suggestions he is running a school for dictators.

In my experience.

dictators and oppressors dont need any training, the 50-year-old colonel told a reporter.

What needs to be nurtured are the democratic things, said Andreacchio, who is married to a Salvadoran. And it seems that more and more in Latin America the military is giv-ing power back to civilians....So Ill take the Iblame for the bad things if 1 can take credit for the good things, too.

Since he took charge a year ago, Andreacchio says, he has established an ethics course and extended the instruction of Geneva Convention rules to all students. Apparently some needed it.

There was a recent case of a trainee who was asked what you do with a wounded prisoner, and who answered, Shoot him, the colonel said. So theyve got to be taught that, besides the moral responsibility, theres, a professional responsibility dead men give you no information, and if you start killing them, pretty soon there wont be anyone surrendering.

The mission of the school, which is housed in a dozen tropical-style buildings on this 1,843-acre installation, is

to train the leaders, spokesman Maj. John Taylor said.

Whether the school wiil exist after next year is officially uncertain.

The 1979 treaty turning the old Canal Zone over to Panama stipulates that Fort Gulick revert to Panama in October 1984. The Panamanians are expected to agree to allow the school to continue operating under U.S. Army control and with U.S. financing, but it still could become a contentious issue.

That place is a death ^university, Erasto Reyes, leader of Panamas leftist Socialist Workers Party, charged in a Panama City interview.

It is a school for oppressive regimes. They teach them how to put down popular insurrections, to

Surgery For Gov. Hunt

described property not included In it In tne above entitled

the Judgment cause

This the 29 day of July, 1983. RUSSELL HOUSTON, III

Commissioner P.O Box 939 Grifton, N.C. 28530 Telephone. (919) 524 452) August 10, 17, 24, 3), 1983

FILE NO 83CvD1733 FILM NO

IN THEJ^EJjl^ERALgCOURT

DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

COUNTY OF PITT AND TOWN OF GRIFTON,

Plaintiffs.

KNOWN 8. UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OR DEVISEES OF LOUISE BROWN, DECEASED, TOGETHER WITH ALL THEIR CREDITORS 8. ' LIEN HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAIM, 8. ANY & ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF LOUISE BROWN, DECEASED: ELAINE BROWN JOE RALPH BROWN and wife, MRS JOE

RALPH BROWN (if there by any), AND STATE OF NORTH

CAROLINA, lienholder, DeLYLE M EVANS, GUARDIAN AD LITEM AND ATTORNEY, FOR KNOWN 8. UNKNOWN HEIRS OR DEVISEES OF LOUISE BROWN, DECEASED, TOGETHER WITH ALL THEIR CREDITORSANOLIEN HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAIM, AND ELAINE BROWN Defendant

NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an order of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, North Carolina, made and entered In the above entitled cause, the undersigned Commissioner will, on the 2nd day of September, 1983, offer for sale, and sell for cash, to the last and highest bidder at public auction at the courthouse door in Pift County, Greenville, North Carolina, at 12:00 o'clock noon, the

following described real estate, ly ing and being in the Town of Grifton, Grifton Township, Pitt County, North Carolina and more particular

ly described as follows:

Being all of Lot No. 31 as shown on

that m^, a supplementary map, of the W.C Chauncey Subdivision as

revised of a Subdivision of the J.C. Gaskins Estate, made by John L. Foy. R S., dated October 31. 1954,

recorded in Map Book 6, at page 91. Pitt County Public Registry, to which map reference is hereby

made for a more accurate and perfect description of said land. And further being (he same and identical

land as conveyed by Anna F. Chauncey, et al (o Ira Brown, et al, by that deed dated October 6, 1961,

Chaunce'

o Ira Brown, et al.

and recorded in Book R 32,'at page 154, in the office of the Register ot Deeds of Pitt County, to which reference is hereby made.

This Sale is made subject to all outstanding town and county taxes and all local improvement assessments against the above

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunt will have gallbladder surgery after an expected ^ial legislative session on the states new discovery law is over, aides said.

Zebulon D. Alley said Hunt wuits to have his gallbladder taken out after the legislative session, which has not yet been scheduled.

Hed like to get it (the special session) wrapped up, said Zebulon D. Alley, Hunts chief legislative lobbyists. Im sure hed like to have this attended to before he goes in for surgery.

Hunt is expected to call the Legislature back to Raleigh soon to work on changing the discovery law.

Hunt had his appendix taken out in January, and at that time doctors told him he was suffering from gallstones and would need to have his gallbladder removed.

Hunts deputy press secretary, Brent Hackney, said the governors staff had been on standby, waiting to hear when he wants to go to the hospital. No decision has been made on that.

Hackney said whenever Hunt goes in to be operated on he will probably be confined to bed for a couple of weeks at least, and then require another week or two before returning to "full stream.

described property not included In the Judgment In the above entitled

cause.

This the 29 day of July, 1983 RUSSELL HOUSTN, III Commissioner P O, Box 939 Grifton. NC 28530 Telephone: (919) 524 4521 August 10, 17, 24,31, 1983

ON THE LINE - Barbara Rogers of Fall River (Mass.) watches as her cat attempts to go out on the clothes line. After a few attempts, kitty decided it was not a great idea and climbed back inside. Barbara says the cat looks out the window a lot but this was the first time she tried to venture out on the line. Barbara explains that a dog was barking nearby and kitty just wanted a better look. (AP Laserphoto)

THREEZONES

ATHENS, Greece (AP) -Swedish Premier Olaf Palme, on a three-day visit to Greece, called yesterday for three nuclear-free zones to be established in Europe; in the Balkans, Scandinavia and Central Europe.

For information on the services provided by the City Public Works Department, call 752-4137.

The

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treat the people as the enemy.

The army says it could move the School of the Americas to the southern United States if necessary. But Andreacchio says the millions of dollars the school brings into the faltering local economy may be enough reason for the Panamanians to keep it here.

Instruction is entirely in Spanish, conducted by a permanent staff of about 70 U.S. Army men and 36 instructors from Latin American armies, including officers from two military regimes officially out of favor with the United States -Chile and Guatemala.

The United States pays all the bills - about $3 million this year in direct costs, plus $1.5 million that the students governments return from their U.S. military assistance funds.

The Salvadorans have been streaming down to Fort Gulick for grounding in techniques of long-range patrolling that are supposed to give their army new momentum in its war against leftist guerrillas.

Most of the arrivals are NCOs, many of them 18- or 19-year-old veterans of four years of fighting. Telltale bullet or shrapnel scars streak their bodies.

On one recent afternoon, two U.S. Army sergeants pushed a double column of 50

Salvadorans up a jungle road on a five-mile forced march. Some of the trainees, plodding along at a trot, appeared near collapse. Their camouflage-smeared faces glistened. The temperature verged on 100 degrees.

A 19-year-old Salvadoran sergeant who first saw action

four years ago as a 15-year-old t(^d a reporter the 14-week squad-leader course was invaluable \

What were getting here is what we neededtraining on equipment, theory and practice, he said. When we get back, our job will'be to train the others. ,    -

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The Daily Reflector Greenville N C

BENJI ON TV - Canine star Benji, and co-star Joe Rainer take some time out from their filming. After two years of negotiations, Benji will air on CBS this fall, not as a cartoon, but as the only live-action series on Saturday morning network television. (AP Laserphoto)

Asner To Seek A Second Term

HOLLYWOOD (UPD-Ed Asner, controversial first-term president of the Screen Actors Guild, has elected to run for a second term as head of the actors union.

The former star of the Lou Grant TV series will head a slate of 12 candidates for the unions three national offices, four Hollywood vice

presidents and 12 Hollywood board seats.

TV Log

For complete TV programming Information, conault your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Reflector.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

Starring REB BROWN CORINNECLERY

PITT.fUM SMOPfINO CINTI

ENDS THUR!

3:00-7:10-9:00

ENDS THUR!

WEDNESDAY

7:00 Joker's Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Archie 8:30 Movie n:00 News 9 11:30 Movie 2:00 Niqhtwatch THURSDAY 2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina I 8:00 News 10:00 Pyramid I 10:30 Childs Play I 11:00 Price is 12:00 News

WITN-TV-Ch.7

WEDNESDAY

7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Real People

9 00 Facfs of Life 9:30 Buffalo Bill 10:00 Sf Elsewhere 11:00 News

11 30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1 30 Overnight* 2:30 News THURSDAY 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 All in the

10 00 Diff. Strokes

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

WEDNESDAY

7:00 Sanford &

7:30 B Miller 8:00 Fall Guy 9 00 Harnptons 10:00 Dynasty 11:00 Action News 11:30 ABC News 12:30 Sfarsky 8.

1:30 Mission 2:30 Early Edition THURSDAY 3:00 Gen Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 Wonder W. 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 Sanford &

7:30 B. Miller 8:00 Eye On 8:30 Too Close

9:00 RMgie 9:30 It fakes Two

10:00 20 20 11:00 Actions News 11:30 Nightline 12:30 Starsky 1:30 Mission 2:30 Early Edition 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J. Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7:00 Good Morning 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News 9:00 Phil Donahue 10:00 Happening 10:30 Sanford & 11:00 Too Close 11:30 Loving 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Life

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

WEDNESDAY

7:00 Report 7:30 Old House 8:00 Magic of 9:00 Tundra Wolf 10:00 Gold from 11:00 AAonfy Python 11:30 Doctor in

5:00 Mr Rogers 5:30 Reading R. 6:00 Dr. Who 6:30 Wildlife 7:00 Report 7:30 Old House 8:00 Previews 8:30 W. America

Star Comic Said 'SelMaught'

Wednesday August 24 1963    27

12 :30 Young and '1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding L 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A. Griffith 6:00 News 9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Magnum P I 9:00 Simon &

10:00 Knot's 12:00 News 12:30 Late Movie 2:00 Nightwatch

By FRED ROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - The telev 'on executive who helped create NBCs original cast of cutups and sketch artists on Saturday Night Live says the shows current sensation, Eddie Murphy, is unique because his comedic acting is completely self-taught.

The stars on the original show were all brilliantly prepared repertory players, says Dick Ebersol, who helped develop Saturday Night Live in 1975 and now is executive producer of the retooled version, which starts another season this fall.,

Danny (Aykroyd) and John (Belushi) were the best character actors. They could perform completely outside themselves, says Ebersol. But what makes Eddie so different is that hes a natural actor and a stand-up comedian who can react to live audiences.

The 22-year-old Murphy is hotter than this summers heat wave. Without any formal training, he became an instant movie giant, winning raves in hie first two films: last years 48 Hours and Trading Places this summer.

Ebersol says Paramount was so taken by Murphys on-camera naturalness that the movie studio guaranteed him $1 million for a follow-up film even before a single box-office customer had paid for 48 Hours.

Then, after Trading Places, Paramount signed him to a five-picture, $15 million deal. Now, hows that for natural talent?

Murphy also holds another distinction from the SNL alumni. Hes the only star who gained movie fame AND THEN Stayed with the program after the expiration of his original contract. Even

though his first contract was for three years and the deals with the SNL originals were for five seasons, Ebersol boasts that Murphy 'The Movie Maker hasnt forgotten his TV roots.

Of the original SNL ensemble, Chevy Chase left after two years, Belushi and Aykroyd left the year before the end of their five-year contracts, and Gilda Radner and Jane Curtin stayed the full five years but didnt renew.    /

Eddie said he signed again for two reasons, says Ebersol. He said he was having fun doing SNL, and that -he liked working with his friends.

Remarkably in this day of TV holdouts and holdups, Murphy, as the SNL headliner, could have demanded the NBC Peacock as ransom for his renewal -but he didnt. His recently signed agreement gives him the same salary as the other, more anonymous SNL

Catherine Bach A Figurehead

10:30 Sale of the 11:00 Wheel Of 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Whitney the 4:30 Little House 5:30 Dark Shadows 6:00 News 6 30 NBC News 7:00 Jeffersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Gimme A 8:30 MaMa's 9:00 Hill Sf.

9:30 Cheers 10:00 The Firm 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Ovet-night 2:30 News

Bette Davis On Recovery Road

NEW YORK (AP) -Actress Bette Davis is described by her agent as doing fine now after two months of treatment for a neurological disorder and an operation that a newspaper says may have been for cancer.

The agent, Robert Lantz, said Tuesday the 75-year-old actress is planning to get back to work just as soon as possible. Shes already reading scripts for her new TV series,Hotel.

The New York Daily News, reporting the operation may have been for cancer, also said Miss Davis suffered a mild stroke.

A New York Hospital spokesman, asking not to be identified, would confirm only that she was discharged on Monday.

DANA POINT, Calif. (AP) - Beauty alone didnt qualify actress Catherine Bach to be chosen as the model for the figurehead of a schooner, but officials of the Nautical Heritage Museum admit it didnt hurt.

Museum Executive director Steve Christman says Miss Bach, who plays Daisy Duke in the TV series The Dukes of Hazzard, met ^ several criteria as a model for the legendary Amazon queen Calafia as figurehead of the Californian. The vessel is a recreation of the 1840s Coast Guard Cutter Lawrence.

For one, he said Tuesday, Catherine is a descendant of Southern Californias Verdugo family, and thus has a connection with historical California. He also said, She is an outstandingly beautiful woman.

The 145-foot Californian, being built at the Spanish landing site in San Diego, is scheduled to be launched in May in time to represent California in the 1984 Olympics Official Tallship Parade in July.

FISHING TREATY

SAN JOSE, Honduras -(AP) - Honduras has signed a fishing treaty that the-Reagan administration hopes will end a long-running dispute over tuna fishing rights in the Pacific Ocean.

264 PLAYHOUSE

INDOOR THEATRE 6 Mitos Wsst Of Grsenvllle On U.S. 264 (Firmvllto Hwy.)

ENDS

TONIGHT

NEVER

SO

STARRING (PENTHOUSE GIRLI LONI SANDERS BROOKE (Dmp Throit) WEST MARIA (Dmp Throat) TORTUGA

RATEDX 756^)848 Doors Opon Showtime 6:00    8:45

troupe members. For each episode, hell get the standard $7.500 for performing and $6,000 for writing.

Its important to me that everybody makes the same amount of money, says Ebersol. The show has always had that policy.

Ebiersols concern was that unequal pay might tilt the fragile balance of egos and jeopardize the shows harmony. He su^ested that Murphy make his best deal with NBC in other areas, such as prime-time specials and TV movies, but allow him to maintain pay parity on Saturday Night Live.

Characteristically, Murphy didnt rock the SNL boat. And he turned down NBCs extras, except the chance to co-host NBCs Emmy-Award telecast Sept. 25. (Incidentally, his oneother TV appearance will be on HBO, In October,, hell perform his raunchy comedy act, which is not ready for prime time -at least not NBCs.)

Murphy, however, did get one significant concession from NBC. Because his movie career will take up so much of his time, hes being allowed to tape his appearances on half of this seasons 20 shows.

Although there have been filmed and taped segments before, never has a cast member mailed in his weeks performance. Murphys tapings will be done during one week in September before a living - not live

- audience, says Ebersol.

Eddie is special. He never went through that six months of craziness which happens when everybody else becomes a star, says Ebersol. Before our final show last season I made a point to tell him that not once did he make the other members of the cast feel uncomfortable.

That doesnt mean Murphys ego is missing. Hes got a gigantic ego. says Ebersol. But his ego is always coupled with whats

the best movie, best material and best sketch for him. Other people counted minutes on the air.

Since he was 14. Eddie has known he would be the best and the biggest. Hes known his strengths. He wont put himself into something unless it has what he calls whoooosh material," capable of getting belly laughs. Thats why hes been so successful in the movies. Hes picked the right characters with the right scripts."

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At 7:55 a.m. following "Carolina Today" Monday, Wednesday, Friday

At 4:55 p.m. following "The Waltons" Tuesday, Thursday.

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28    U.iiiy HoHc'twi Gl-eiiville NC

Wednesday August 24 1983

PUBLIC NOTICES

FILENO 2CVD1720 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY

COUNTY OF PITT AND TOWN OF GRIFTON,

Plainfdfs

KNOWN & UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAWOR DEVISEESOF HENRIET TA DUNN, DECEASED. TOGETHER WITH ALL THEIR CREDITORS aND LIEN HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAIM, & ANY & ALL OTHER PESONS CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF HENRIETTA DUNN, DECEASED DeLYLE M EVANS, GUARDIAN AD LITEM AND AT TORNEY, FOR KNOWN & UNKNOWN HEIRS OR DEVISEES OF HENRIETTA DUNN DECEAS ED, together with AL THEIR CREDITORS AND LIEN HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAIM, & ANY & ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF HENRIETTA DUNN, DECEASED,

Defendants

NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of'an order ot the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County North Carolina, made and cnfercd in the above entitled cause, the undersigned Commissioner will, on the ?iid day ot September. 1983, offer lor sale, and sell for cash, to the last and highest bidder at public auction at the courthouse door in Pill County, Greenville. North ( arolina. at 12 00 o'clock noon, the lollowing described real estate, ly mg and being in the Town of Gr'lfton, f.rifton Township, Pift County, North Carolina and more particular ly described as tollows Adjoining the lands of R. H. Gar ris N L Bruton, and others; situated on Water Street in the Town oi Grilton, being known as the Pitt man lot and containing 1 acre, more or less This being the Identical lot conveyed to Sam Simmons by deed

iV-- ......

PUBLIC NOTICES

the same land conveyad by Paul R Waters, Trustee, to the North Carolina Joint Stock Land Bank, by deed dated May 2, 1933 and recorded in Book M 19, page 363, in the Register of Deed's office of Pitt County, North Carolina.

This Sale is made subject to all outstanding town and county taxes and all local Tmprovement assessments against the above ciescribed property^not Included in the Judgment in the above entitled cause

This the 29 day of July, 1983 RUSSELL HOUSTON, lit Commissioner P O Box 939 Griffon, NC 28530 Telephone: (919) 524 4521 August to, 17, 24, 31, 1983

TILE NO: 83CVO 1045 FILM NO:

NERAL

dated 1917, said deed being of record in Book J 12 at Page 244 in the public registry ot Pitt (Tounty, and being

PEANUTS

IN THE GENI COURTOF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY JOHNNY CARL BROWN,

Plaintiff

VS

CONNIE LOU BROWN.

Defendant TO CONNIE LOU BROWN NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PRfXESS BY PUBLICATION

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed In the above entitled action. The nature ot the relief being sought is as tollows

1 Custody of the minor children,

2 Visitation rights in the defen dant.

3 Division ot personal property,

4 Restraining Order.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than September 20, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking, service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the 8 day ot August, 1983. WILLIAMSON, HERRIN, ST0KES8.HEFFELFINGER By/s/R CHERRY STOKES ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF 210 S, WASHINGTON STREET P O BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL: (919) 752 3104 August 10, 17, 24, 1983

PUBLIC NOTICES

FILE^^8^VO-*i2

IN THJ GENlRAL

DlsfRICTcBuT DIVlllON STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT PLANTERS NATIONAL BANK 8. TRUST COMPANY.

Plaintiff,

ROb'eRTA JOHNSON,

BUSTER HARDEE, d/b/a HARDEE SCAR SHOP,

PR^EsI ?Y ISblISS'Ron

TO Robert A Johnson 212 Harrell Street Greenville. North Carolina 27834 the above named defendant TAKE NOTICE fhaf a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: Complaint for amounts due on a Promissory Note.

You are required to make defense to such pleading nof later than forty (40) days after the first publication of the date of this Notice, as set forth below and upon your failure to do so, the parties seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the 8th day of August, 1983. DIXON, DUFFUS AND DOUB By Randy D. Doub Attorney for Plaintiff P.O Drawer 1785 Greenville, NC 27835 1785 919/758 6200 August 10, 17. 24, 1983

FILE NO 83-CVD-905 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL

DIsf^.'^lBGiiWlllON

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT PLANTERS NATIONAL BANK 8. TRUST COMPANY,

Plaintiff,

ROBERTA JOHNSON, and STEP^HEN HOLLIS COBB,

PMfissiSfi&N

TO: Robert A. Johnson 212 Harrell Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834, the above named Defendant:

i a fi-i I MAP SAlP TO that ri'MP Kir.

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PUBLIC NOTICES

TAKE N01ILE, mat a pleading seeking relief against you has baen filed in the abova-enfitled action. The nature of the reliof being sought is as follows: Complaint for amounts due on a Promissory Note.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than forty (40) days after the first publication date of this Notice as sot form below, and upon your failure to do so, the parties saoking service against you will *^PlY *0 *h* Court for the rtllof

***T^ls the 8th day gf August, 1983.

DIXON, DUFFUS AND DOUB

Sr.SS.i

P.O. Drawer 1785

Graanvilla, NC2783S 1785

919/758 4200 August 10. 17, 24, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Administratrix of the estate of Edgar Augusta Smith lata of Pitt County, North Carolina, mis is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administratrix on or boforo Fab. 10, 1984 or this notice or samo will be pleaded in bar of thair recovery. All parsons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 8th day ot August, 1983.

JoAnn S. Harris P O Box 15248 ^

Durham, North Carolina 27004 Administratrix of the estate ot Edgar Augusta Smith, deceased Aug. 10, 17, 24, 31, 1983

NOTICE    ^

Having qualified as Ad mlnlstratrix ot the estate ot Willie Thomas Maeks late ot Pitt County,

North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present

the

them to the undersigned Ad mlnlstratrix on or before Feb. 17, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate

please make immediate payment This 15th day ot Augusf, 198-Lina Manning Meeks Route 1, Box 27

Greenville, N C 27834 Administratrix of the estate ot Willie Thomas Meeks, deceased Auq 17, 24, 31- Sept 7, 1983

NOTICE OF SALE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT OFFICE OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS NOTICE Is hereby given that the Community Development Office ot the City ot Greenville will until 11:00 AM, E ST, on the 8th day ot September, 1983, at City Hall. 201 West Fifth Street. Greenville, North Carolina, receive sealed bids tor the

purchase and development of the following described property located in the Central Business

District Project Area known as Project N C R-64, Greenville, North Carolina.

Disposal Parcel C-3A, Central Business District -N C R 44, BEGINNING at an existing Iron pipe in the southern right of way line ot Eighth Street, this Iron pipe Is 119.53 feet S 78 deg. 44 mln. 54 sec. E ot the Intersection ot the

southern right Of way line of Eighth Street and The eastern right of way line of Evans Street. From this

beginning point runs then along the southern right ot way line ot Eighth Street S 78 deg. 44 mln 54 sec. E 52.57 feet to an Iron pipe set, runs then N 11 deg. 14 mln. 08 sec. E 74.55 feet to an iron pipe set, runs then N 78 deg. 27 mln. 43 sec. W 52.71 feet to an existing iron pipe; runs then N 11 deg. 22 mln. E 47.28 feet to an existing Iron pipe in the southern right of way line ot Eighth Street, the point ot beginning containing 3,549.4 square feet.

The above describefd land is subject to the land use regulations and controls as contained In the

Redevelopment Plan tor said pro iect and the covenants as contained In the declaration on file at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina.

Bidder may be any person, firm or corporation who agrees to con form In all respects with provisions of bidding documents, including Redeveloper's Statement for Public Disclosure, Form HUD 4004, and Redeveloper's Statement for Cfuall ficatlgns and Financial Responslbil Ity, Form HU-4004A, copies ot which may be obtained upon request at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina. Any further Information or copies ot the proposed disposal agreement

may ba obtained at City Hall. In general the property Is being sold for redevelopment as tollows: Ols

posal Parcel C-3a, O & I, Office and Institutional. Bids shall be accom panled by cash, cashier's check, or

2 certified check payable to the ommunlty Devel<ment Office of the City of Greenville in an amount equal to five (5%) percent of the bid price.

Bids shall be opened at ii:00 AM, E ST, on fhe 8th day ot September, 1983, at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville. North Carolina. The Community Development Office reserves the right to issue a nonwarranty deed. All sales or other tranters of land Shall be subject to the approval ot the City Council ot theClw ot Greenville.

Contact the Office ot the Community Development of the City of Greenville tor further details. Community Development

.Office ot the City ot Greenville August 17. 24. 1983

S^TA'

IE GENERi

IN THE

________INA

NTY ALCOURT

SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION FILE NUMBER 83CVS 1004

Stacy Lynn Hagan Plaintiff

Barry Strlckler, Individually and dba J J's Music Hall Defendant To: Barry Strlckler TAKE NOTICE THAT a pleading seeking relief has been filed against you in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought Is as follows:

1. Monty damages for personal Injury to plaintiff which injury occurred the 26fh day of February, 1982, on the premises ot J J's Music Hall.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than Oct. 6, 1983, said date being forty (40) days from publication. Upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the 22nd day of August, 1983. Gwynett Hilburn Attorney tor Plaintiff 113W Third Street PO Box5043

Greenville. North Carolina 27834

August 24. 31; September 7, 14,1983

002

PERSONALS

GREEN PEANUTS tor sale. You pick em' and boll them! 50* a pound. 744-4052

I, Helen Marie Dunn Everett will no longer be responsible for any debts contracted by anyone other than myself._

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

FREE! Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall tor tree gift to be given away weekly. No

purchase necessacY

010

AUTOMOTIVE

WANT TO BUY from original owner 1980, 81, or 82 car with air.

-

Oil

Autos For Sale

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Wayl Authoriied Dealer In Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114

1970 RANGER PICKUP, oood con ditlon. 1978 Plymouth Fury, top condition. 1974 LaSabre Bulck. good condition. Call 754 4094._

012

AMC

1974 GREMLIN 3 spaed. 4 cy

Good conditio;; TOOH 238/

llftdtr

013

Buick

1979 BUICK SKYHAWK Air excellent 'condition. 83,000 firm. 758 7559, 752 5001 or belore 5 call

7St4i2iMK>y-ttlL _____

014

Cadillac

1974 CADILLAC SEVJ Call757 3294att(W4p.m

iC SEVILLE 84400.

015

Chevrolet

I NOVA CHEVY II drag strip ly. Super trick wheels, S53D 1h of M^ls, sell for 8350 all.

1948

bod

WOf*

1973 MALIBU - 2 door hard top. ^good.'^s

hterlorT^^al 754-

Drives" ver^^^ijo^. Needs front 1974 VEpA -Primal, mljes, new

cover. Sacrif

752 4852.

latter 7 p.m.

1974 CHEVROLET MONZA, 2+7. 5 speed, good mechanical condition.

rm/jnSoOdai

1978 MALIBU CLASSIC waoon, 305 V 8, automatic, air, AM FM stereo with cassette, tilt wheel, cruise control, luggage racki 83100. 754-0174,

1979 CHEVROLET Customized Van. Call 744 3141 and ask for Dick. 1981 CITATION 4 door, V 4. Asking 84,000. Call 752 5747 bafora 1 p.m 758 0008 attar 2 P.m

1982 Caprice Classic. 4 Extra Clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet In Aydgn, 74t,-3141

1982 Celebrity. 2 door. Extra Clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet in Ayden. 744 3141._

1982 228. Folly equipped. Excellent condition. $12,300 or best offer. Call 919 752 4451 atter 7p.m._

018

Ford

1971 FORD LTD AM/FM radio, air, power brakes and steering, excellent condition. 754 9770.-

1974 PINTO Statlonwagon red. Excellent condition. First 8750. 754 0108.

1975 GRANADA Good condition. Air conditioning, AM FM radio, cruise control. Krice 81,200. Call 752 5818 attar 4 p.m._

1977 T-BIRD Power steering and brakes, air, AM FM stereo tape. Clean. Good condition. 82500. 752-

833fL

1977 THUNDERBIRD Gray. Call 3SS?l??gftqr7,B,flL,

1979 FORD LTD WAGON, 302 V 8, AM FM stereo, cruise control, rack, automatic, air, 84295.

1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade (or late model Pickup truck. 757 0451, asK for Mr. Carrawav.

020

Mercury

1971 MARQUIS, 8500, price negotiable. Call 758-7071 after 3p.m.

021

Oldsmobile

1975 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS Supreme, air condition, new tires, AM FM stereo cassette, excellent

condition. 82195. 754-2723.

1976 OLDS VISTA CRUISER Wagon 9 passenger. 1 owner, low mileage.

757 0577. _

1978 oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme. Excellent condition. 7^0778 days; ntohts 754 8404.

1981 OLDS OMEGA Brougham. AM FM stereo, cruise control, extras. Excellent condition. 84900. 754-8029 efter2p.m.

1982 CIERA Brougham, 2 door diesel. Low mileage. Exte warranty. Loaded. Snver burg Interior. 810,000. 754 7494

', V-4 _ xtended -burgundy

022

Plymouth

1979 PLYMOUTH FIRE ARROW

26,000 miles. Extra clean. 758-5117 after 4 p.m._

023

Pontiac

1979 Firebird. Very good condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet in Ayden, 744-3141.    __

1979 GRAND PRIX Automatic, power brakes and steering, air, cruise, AM-FM, new tires, low mlleaoe. 752 9510 after 4._

024

Foreign

CLASSIC MG, 1952, red convertible replica, axcallant condition. Will consider best offer. Only seriously Interested need call, 919 9V7-1678.

DATSUN 280ZX 2-1-2, 1979. Blue, 58,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition. 88200. Call 754-6334 days or 754 1549 niohts.

MAZDA 436, 1979. 2 door. Good condition. S3700. 825 0745.

SAAB, 1973. Excellent condition most sail I 81400 or best offer.

TOYOTA COROLLA, 1977, SR5 LIftback. 82900. Call nlohts 757 1934. TOYOTA SERVICE 4 cylinder tune special, 820. 4 cylinder valve adjustment, 814. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bali's Fork Garage, 754-3794.

VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT, 1980, air, straight, 30,000 miles, 83800. Call 757 1184._

VOLVO, 1970, 4 door, 4 spaed, 144 series. Restored, new paint and seats. 81295.    758    7972    after    4

1970 FIAT CONVERTIBLE 8400.

1970 TR3. Needs body work. Any reasonable offer. 758-742 between 9 and 3. ask for Cindy.

1970 TR6, mechanically sound, Monza exhaust, Cibie lights, 2 new tires, needs interior work, 82100 firm. 752-5908.

1970 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE

Good condition. First 8750. 754 0108.

1971 SUPER BEETLE Volkswagen. Good condition. Call 752 3205 attar 5

EJTL

1975 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe. Good condition, new radlals. 754-

im

1976 AUDI POX Good running condition, air, sunroof. 82,000. 35-2253

1977 DATSUN B 210, 5 speed, air, AM FM, 1 owner, 82200. ^11 after 4 p.m., 752-8927.

1979 TOYOTA COROLLA 2 door, automatic, AM/FM radio, low mileage. Good condition. Call 754-4882._

1981 DATSUN 210. 4 door, automatic, AM/FM, 24,000 miles. SS.OOO. 758 4321 after 5p.m.

1981 DATSUN 310 4 door with air, AM FM stereo, 31,000 miles, new Radial tires. Call 754-7839 aHer 4.

1902 AAAZOA 426 LUXURY 14,000 miles, air conditioner, sunroof. AM/FM stereo. 88300. 758-8953 after

Sp.m._

029 Auto Parts & Service

SLANT 4 325 with transmission. Remanufactured. 81,000. 754-1927 fiiifiLL

eVvPcI^

819.95. on and _ most models). We i

AUTHORIZED

4 cylinder tune-ui Id fllfer

K '

ast. Toy TradeStree*t!7& 3228

tr change 812.' (most models). We're keepiira your Toyota "Chaap-To-Kaep'. Toyota

TOYOTA SERVICE 4 cylinder tuna special, 820. 4 cylinder valve ad-[ystment, 814. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage, 7S9?794,__

030 Bicycles For Sale

BROWN 3-SPEED bicycle 835.

TWO to speed bicycles. S5S and 885. 6. 75^7980._

After <

032

Boats For Sale

BABY BEAR FISHER woodstove. Excellent condition. 8235 . 81800.

MUST SELL. 14' Cobra lit^rglass boat with 75 horsepower Johnson motor and extra nice trailer and much more. You must see to appreciate at this prica, only 8995.

apprecw

7iir0492

SKI BOAT, IS' checkmate, 85 horsepovner Mercury. Just rebuilt with trailer. 83.000. 7<4 7494._

19' MFG CAPRICE, 1977 200 Johnson, tilt and trim, tandum galvanized trailer, CB, depth finder, top and side curtains, all In excellwt condition. 84500 758 3300 days

1975 RIVER OX 70 horsepower Johnson with tilt trailer. 81800.

IF THERE'S somethlngyou want to rent, buy, trade or sen, check the classified columns. Call 7S3-4t44 to place your ad. _ _

034 Campers For Sal*

SMALL cox CAMPER Slaaps 4.

may ba pulled with small car. Call 752 4471 or 752-1503,

TRUCK COVERS All sizts. c Leer Fiberglass and Sport tops. 250 unfls In stock. O'Br

RaNtgh, H C m 71

colors.

tsman

lants.

<

034 Campers For Sale

051 HelpWantwJ

059 Work Wanted

1971 23' SWINGER motor home. Needs some work. 12,000 or make qNer 754 4833, ask tor Bob

LEGAL SECRETARY tor local law firm. Must have loan closing expe rience and accurate typing abilfty For more details call Gloria. Heritage Personnel Service. 355 2020.

TYPING PROFESSIONAL Short or long term assignments accepted Term papers, books, abstracts, letters, etc. Has IBM Selectric typewriter Reasonable rates! Ref erences furnished upon request Phone 754 7162 after 8 p m or early morninos before 8 am

1973 WINNEBAGO. 23', 39.000 miles, self-contained, 2 air condl tionars, ganarator, awning, good SJtltlpflu,!aufiP.-7M2390, . .

LICENSED PHYSICAL Therapist assistant. 125 bed ICS/MR facility needs qualified applicant to work with multi handicapped children Good benefits, salary negotiable.

1977 3T COACHMAN Full bed In ^k. Full bath. Air. Extra clean. Cfil)7l?.._...... ........

060 FOR SALE

1981 COACHMEN: 35' with told-out great room, bedroom, fully furnished with air, awnino. 744-4827.

pleasant working environment. If interested, send resume to Mr. Jan Harper. Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center, PO Box 407, La Grange. NC 28551 or call (919 ) 778 3047.

061 Antiques

036 Cycles For Sale

JO LE'S 8i SCOTT'S ANTIQUES

1312 Dickinson Avenue. Greenville. NC 10 to 5, Monday through Friday Good selection of Oak furniture and much more!

CR80 - DIRT BIKE Excellent

condition. 758-9650.

MOBILE HOME SALESPERSON needed. Business is booming! Must be willing to work hard for $30.000 or more per year. See manager, Tradewind Family Housing, 705 West Greenville Boulevard

HONDA, 1980 CM200T. excellant condition, good prica. Call attar 4

p.nr,.,

064 Fuel, Wood, Coal

MOPED, Ilka new. Top of the line AAotobecane. 8399. Call 355-2140, leave mqsaagf.

NATIONAL COMPANY - Good benefits working out of the Greenville. NC^area. AAS In electronic or millitary school re quired. Servicing mechanical and electronic equipment. EOE Send replies to Mechanical Services, PO Box 1947. Greenville. NC 27834.

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood for sale J P Stancil. 752 6331.

1971 HONDA TRAIL 70. Engine in good condition. 500 miles on rebuilt engine. New chain and back sprocket. Good for trails. 752 4844 after 4.

SQUIRE WOOD STOVES Sale thru Labor day Tar Road Antiques. Winterville 754 9123. nights 754 1007

1978 HONDA 550K, 10,000 miles, 81100. Call 355 2414 after 4.

NEED DAY CARE TEACHERS with early Childhood degree - only need aoplv. Call 758-2884.

065 Farm Equipment

1978 YAMAHA 450 SPECIAL, new tires, battery, chain and sprocket. 8895. Call 754-1444.

NEED EXPERIENCED brick masons to work at Cherry Point. Top pay plus. Work available for 5 months starting now. Call Jim Jones. 1 447 4921. EOE

FOR ORDERING TOBACCO during these cool nites, an Electro Magic steam cleaner or hot high pressure washer is the answer Model 100B steam cleaner at $999 95 and the 2500D hot high pressure washer with 500 PSI tor cleaning that equipment also, only $999 95 Others in stock to choose from and don't forget service work available. A^i Supply. Greenville, NC 752

1981 HONDA Interstate 1100. Loaded. Like new. 84400.758-2913.

1982 YAMAHA MOPED Very good condition. 8425 firm. 754-5944 after 6 p.m.

OFFSET PRESSMAN Inexperi enced need not apply. Send resume and reference list to P 0 Box 928, Greenville, N C 27834.

1982 YAAAAHA 750 VIraop, lots of extras, low mllaage, 834%. 355 3809 days; 753-2348 nlaliis.

OIL COMPANY OPENINGS Of (shore rigs and refineries No expe rience. 830,000 plus a year. For information call (312) 920 9475, extension 1074 P

039 Trucks For Sale

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR,

317 John Deere with 48" mower deck new motor. Call 754 6100.

PART TIME WORK available Ex perience in retail sales Is helpful. Seeking industrious and creative worker. Send resume and reference list to P 0 Box 928, Greenville, N C 27834.

CJS JEEP, 1977. Low mllaage, extra clean. 758-5117 after 4.

2 - 10,000 BUSHEL grain bins tor sale or rent Located approximately 4 miles West of Winterville Call 754 5097 or 754 9315

FOR SALE: 1978 Chevy Van. Good condition. Call evenlnos, 752 1192.

FOR SALE: Cover for pickup truck with 8' body. 8100.758 107.

PERSON TO DO delivery, shipping and receiving. Apply in person. Carolina Office Equipment Com panv.

2 ROW ROANOKE tobacco har vester with both heads Ready to go in field. 758 0702 days, 742 0310 niohts.

1953 WILLIS JEEP Runs good. Price neootlable. 754 7703.

1975 CHEVROLET 1-ton, dual whaal, 14,000 gvw, E/W skid mounted, 550 aalfon tanker with 16 horsepower Briggs and Stratton motor. 754-7544 attar 4 p.m., all day weekends.

PROGRAM DIRECTOR Position. Beaufort County Developmental Center Incorporated has an im mediate opening. Position entails administrative/management in adult developmental activities program and administrative management work in group home for MR adults operated by the Center Minimum qualification require ments; Master Degree in special educations mental retardation, vocational rehabilitation or related human services with 3 years of experience in the field of mental retardation, or 4 year degree in related human service fllledT with a minimum of 5 years experience in the field of Mental Retardation and Administrative managment. Send resume to: Jack C Wynne III , Executive Director, 1534 West 5th Street, Washington, NC 27889. Application must be submitted by August 31, 1983. Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer Inservlce.

OU FURNITURE

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

Shop now during Factory Mattress and Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one halt. Next to Pitt Plaza 355 2626

1978 FORD VAN with bed. AM/FM stereo, power steering, power brakes, sdko. 795 4976.

1979 CHEVROLET Silverado, loaded. 12-15 LT tires, 58,000 miles. Excellent condition. $5,195. Call 753 5253.

COMPLETE BEDROOM SUIT with double mattress and box springs, headboard, footboard, dresser with mirror, nightstand. $250. Call 355-2424 or 355 2931.

1979 JEEP CHEROKEE Chief. Power steering and brakes, tilt wheel, air, AM/FM stereo. Good condition, lall 754 9041 after 7 p.m.

EARLY AMERICAN couch and end table, good condition. $200. Call 752 7394.

1980 FORD VAN 150. Chateau trim. 84900. Call 752 5747 bafore 1 p.m., 758 0008 after 2 p.m.

FURNITURE FOR SALE: Desk, $55. Bunk beds, $45. Dinettes $80. Solas. $100. Beds. $20 and up. Coffee tables and end tables, $12 and up. Desk, $55 and up. Mar J$ & Westbrook, 12M South Evans Street, Monday thru Friday, 12 til 6 p.m.

1981 4x4 Luv, AM/FM, air, 4 speed, 25,000 miles, silver and baby blue. 758 2817.

1982 S10 PICKUP Blue/white; power steering and brakes; tilt, cruise, power windows, liner in bed, AM/FM cassette. Call 752 8334 9m; 7M-4W4 0l9hli.

PROGRAAAMER Minimum 1 year experience In RPG programming In IBM System 34 or M. Only experl enced need apply. Send resume to PO Box 1879, Goldsboro, NC 27530.

KING SIZE BEORODM suit. $400 Table and 4 chairs, $125. Couch and chair, $125. Call Jim, 758-1121 days, 757-3441 eveninQs.

040 Child Care

LIVING ROOM FURNITURE for

sale. Call 758-0124after 6 p.m.

REAL ESTATE COURSE OFFERED

Through CENTURY 21 of The Carolinas and CENTURY 21 Bass Realty to an individual who has a real estate license and willing to work full time. The basics of listing and selling residential property, corporate calling, prospecting and more will be taught. 40 hours beginning Monday, August 29, 1983 For more information call Madalyn McGuffin at 754 4464 or 746 27()2.

rPKlTllDV 01 Rjicc DAJhItu

RESPONSIBLE child care person needed for tgdler and infant In my home near GrImesland. Must have own transoortatlon. Call 758-5054.

MATCHING couch and loveseat. coffee and end table, new. $250 firm. Call 758-9122 evenings.

SOFA BED, $150. Maple table with 2 leafs, $100. 4 matching ladder back chairs, $15 each. ReclTner, $75. Call 754 9355 after 5:30.

046 PETS

AFFECTIONATE Siamese kittens tor sale. Call nights or weekends, 753 2255,

1 SOFA with matching chai/, i double bed, 1 king size waterbed. ) reclining chair, 7M 4808.

1 3 CUSHION rust and gold plaid Traditional sofa, $40. Gold Early American hide a bed, $65 758 0587.

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER Pups. Wormed; shots. 880. 793-2222,

AKC REGISTERED German Shep herds. 8 weeks old. 3 solid black females 875, 2 black and brown

\Cn 1 UK T ^1 DdSS KvCiliy>

REED'S JEWELERS is now ac cepting qualified applications to join our retail sales force. Excellent salary plus commission. Full time hours available. Qualified applicants need only apply In person at Reed's Jewelers, Carolina East Mall. No phone calls olease.

7 PIECE CONTEMPORARY living room suit. Perfect condition. $750 or best offer. 754 3945 after 6.

mflje* 9I./JO

AKC TOY POODLES, Miniature Schnauzers, Yorkshire Terriers, and Yorkle Poos. Clipping and grooming for all breeds. Call Bullock's Kennel. 758-2481.

067 Garage-Yard Sale

THE TOOL MAN formerly ot Poorman's Flea Market and New Fair Ground Flea Market Is now located at Old Fair Ground across from airport. Tools, electronics, jewelry, handmade and imported wood furniture and glass, toys. Monday through Friday, 9 to 6, Saturday 7 to 6.

BIRD HUNTERS SPECIAL AKC black female Lab. Moving. Free to a good home. Ready to nunt. Call 35f4441.

RESPONSIBLE LADY with childcare experience is needed to fill a part time church nursery position (Sunday morning and Wednesday night). Please call 758 4027or 752 0387 after 6p.m.

CHOW CHOW puppies for sale. 8 weeks old. Call 752-3S49.

SALESOPPORTUNITY

Salesperson needed. Auto sales ex perience preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-MERCURY-GAAC

756-4267

For Aooolntment

FERRET FOR SALE, 845.758 4857.

YARD SALE, Saturday Weathlngton Heights, Winterville Beginning at 6 a.m.

GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups AKC Registered, exceptional blood line Includes founders champions. 1-43-4244 niohts.

072 Livestock

PEEK-A-POO puppies tor sale, 1 male. 1 female. Calf 754 7431.

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237.

PITT BULL-BOXER puppies. V male, 875, 4 females, iX. Call 758-3276 or 758-0041.

073 Fruits and Vegetables

REGISTERED Golden Retriever pups, 4 weeks old, ready to go. Call Washington, NC 1-944-2480 or 1 944-40(.

SARAH COVENTRY

Needs five ladies with phone and car for part time. 944-6450 or 527-6024.

GREEN PEANUTS for sale. You

pick em' and boil them! 504 a DOund. 746-4052.

SEALPOINT SIAMESE KITTENS for sale. 835. Call 754 2458.

SEC RETAR Y/Promotio'n Coordinator. Experience in television copywriting preferred. Excellent organization, communication and secretarial skills required. Send resume to PO Drawer 4044, Greenville, NC 27835. Equal Opportunity Emolover.

KEIFFER PEARS dtor sale, all 754-0330.

UNREGISTERED Golden Retriev er puppies. Call after 4 p.m., 757 3524;

074 Miscellaneous

WHITE purebred German Shep ^^^pples for sale, 9 weeks old.

A 2 SEATER ULTRA LIGHT Tide! Daily except Monday. Cost $20 per person. For more information, call 746 4878 or 355 2970.

14 WEEK OLD Cocker Spaniel. AKC reoistered. Call 758 8534.

SECRETARY part time, approxi mately 20 hours per week. Must have NC real estate license. Call Ann Bass, 754 5848.

A 1 \/ f\ F* A ^ AAI 8* (All IW W/\l 1 ^ A Al

2 MALE BEAGLE puppies, 850 each. 758-4814.

AIR CONDITIONER, 18,000 bTU. Sears. Excellent condition, like

nouu TaII 7^*>.')A10

051 Help Wanted

SIX REASONS WHY YOU CAN BE AAORE SUCCESSFUL WITH THE MUTUAL OF OAAAHA COMPANIES

FULL PRODUCT LINE with health, life, and soon, homeowners insurance to otter your clients. Nearly everyone you call on is a prospect.

UUNLIMITED INCOME How much you earn is entirely up to you. ADVANCED TRAINING Our comprehensive program is among the finest In the industry. FIRSTYEAR BONU You can qualify tor up to 84,125 In additional income.

ADVANCEMENT OP-PORTUNITIES We need people with managemnet potential to fill key positions.

NATIONAL ADVERTISING SUPPORT Our program produces thousands of leads to call on. See if you can qualify. Call me today for a confidential interview.

LeeW Weaver

1-527-4155

Affiliated Companies: United of Omaha The Omaha Indemnity Company. Equal Opportunity Comoanies M/F

flew. VxOII /J* JOIT.

ALL AIR CONDITIONERS priced for quick sale. Window and central units. Call 744-2444.

ABOVE AVERAGE person to work In sales with medical and retail. Must have some sales experience. Please call 758 4144 for appoint ment.

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air

conditoners, freezers, rartges, waShers and dryers are reduced for quick sale. Call B J Mills, Authorized Appliance Service, 746 2446 at Black Jack.

ASSISTANT MANAGER for growing company opening in Greenvule In September. Should have management experience. Food and retail experience helpful. Good salary and benefits. Send resume to Cookie Company, North Hills Fashion Mall, Raleigh, N C 27409. Attention: Dan Funk.

ANTIQUE LADY ANN wood cook stove. Purchased in the early 1900's. Call 754 4381 and makeoffer. .. '

APPROXIMATELY 2,000 Silas Lucas handmade bricks, 754 509Z or 754 9315.

ATARI VIDEO COMPUTER 6ame

with one cartridge. $50. 754 7712,

BACK TO SCHOOL means back to the piggy benk! Earn the money you need as an Avon repre sentative. Call 7S2 7004.

ATARI 2400, 13 cartridges, 4150 Used flute, excellent condI1ion,4200. 758 1549

CAREER OPPORTUNITY for homemakers. Nation's number 1 toy-gift party company now hiring demonstrators. Set your own hours now thru December. Absolutely no investment. No collecting. No de liverlno. Call 753-2534or 754-4410.

SEVERAL NICE OFFICE chairs, $35 to $45 Phone Goldsboro 734-2497 dav or night.

TORO ;

End Of Season Close Oi^ CLARK & COMPANY

Of Greenville, Inc. 756-2557 I

COMING SOON Locksmith needed to work Inside. Experience preferred but not necessary. Send resume to Locksmith. PO Box 3173, Greenville, NC 27834.

COMMERCIAL ARTIST/Layout Person. Part or full time. Experience in negative stripping is needed. Send resume and reference list to P 0 Box 928, Greenville, N C 27834.

BOSE SERIES 1 speakers, walnut cabinet, $350 firm. AR turntable with Staton Cartridge. $60. Teac An-40 Dolby unit, $40. Miscellaneous scuba gear. After 6, 754-7980.

STARTING A 9 MONTH secretarial course on August 29. Greenville School of Commerce, 752-3177.

CREDITCLERK

Is needed by a retail firm. Duties consist of taking and processing credit applications; monitoring credit stalus of existing customers; taking appropriate timely Information'as needed on delinquent accounts and partorming any and all other duties relating to credit. Previous credit or legal axperiance Is desired. If intarestea write: Credit Clerk, PO Box 486, Greenville. NC 27834.

WANTED part time telephone solicitors. Work at home. Good pay schedule. Call 754 8555 between 10-12 only.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL

Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763 9734.

VVANTEO DRYWALL finishers. Call 758 0792.

BUFFET, 850. Love seat, 855 Rocker, $15. Exercise bench and weights, 875. 752 1329.

WANTED: PART TIME maid Be tween 9 a.m. and Noon. 15 hours per week. Must be dependable with reliable transportation. Calls excepted only between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. 754-2247. References required.

BUYING-INSTANTCASH

TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold & silver, diamonds, cameras and equipment, typewrit ers, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games 8, cartridges, power tools, musical instruments, microwave ovens video recorders, bicycles. We also loan 88 on above items. Southern Pawn Shop, located 405 Evans St, downtown. 752 2444

WANTED: SALESPEOPLE Local established company has opening for energetic person to work outside sales In Eastern NC No over night travel. Company benefits and good commission. Call Jill at 758-3171 to set up confidential interview be tw0cn9 And 11 A.m.i or3to5D.m.

DAYTIME EMPLOYMENT Apply In person from 10 to 11 or from 3 to 5, Taco Bell.

DELIVER TELEPHONE BOOKS

FULLORPART DAYS

Men or Women over 18 with automobiles are needed in Greenville. Farmville, Ayden, Bethel. Fountain and Snow Hill. Call 752 4337.

YOUNG AND AMBITIOUS person to learn finance buisness. Send resume to H & H Discount, PO Box 4044, Greenville, NC 27834.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.

CASH

From the oldest, most reliable buyer of gold, silver and any items ot value

COIN & RING MAN

On The Corner

059 Work Wanted

DENTAL HYGIENIST WANTED

Call 752-S124

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates.jp Stancil, 752-4331.

EXPERIENCED SALESPERSON

for one of North Carolina's leading industries. Salary plus. Call Jim at 754 7138.

CERTIFIED CHIMNEY SWEEP 2S years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Call Gid Holloman, 753 3503 day or night.

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do vour house cleaning. 752-3758. DORM SIZE refrigerators. 4.8 cubic foot, 2 years old, 2.5 cubic foot, ) vearold 754-0937 after 5:30 p m

EXPERIENCED FABRICATORS

neadad. 3 years minimum exparl anca In miscallanaous and structu ral fabrication required. Call 754-2374 for appointment. 8 to 4:30, Monday through Friday.

CHILD CARE in my home Licensed. Any age. 758 5950 or 355 4822.

DORM SIZE refrigerator, good condition, S125 or best offer. 754 4167, ask for Sherry or 744-3370 after 4.

EXPERIENCED male lead and harmony vocalist/guitarist desires to join established country band or form a band. Serious inquires only. 753 3890 ask for Jerry.

EXPERIENCEDDESK CLERKS ANO NIGHT AUDITORS NEEDED

Apply at Room 104, Holiday Inn on Thursday from 1 4o.m.

DRAPES, poles, cornices, and some furniture. 722 Hooker Road, 754 4264

FURNITURE REFINISHING by Wayne Jones. High quality work. Guaranteed. 4 years experience. 825 1079 after 5 p.m.

EARLY AMERICAN sofa and chair, 84S. Chair, SIS. 758 1026 weekdays after 4 o m.

FIRST CLASS siding mechanic.

One that can get the job done 'take charge oerson . 752 5912.

GENERAL CLEANING any day per week Call 757 3968 mornings or 752 0702 9 a.m. Tuesday, Wednes day, and Friday.

FARM TRAILER 4x4. good tor hdullno wood. First $150.75^0108.

INTERIOR DESIGNER or salesperson. Experience preferred. Salary plus commission. Send re sume with references to Interior Designer. PO Box 1947, Greenville.

FOR SALE: Used ultralight Double Eagle, Eastway Aviation, Ayden Flight Park, Avden. 744-3842.

GRASS CUTTING, trim arognd sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 7341

FOR SALE: Atari 400 home com puter. never used, still In box plus cartridfle 782 4044 day or night

JERRY'S SWEET SHOP, Pitt Plaza Is taking applications for chaerlul and anargetlc full time counter Mrson. Apply in person Jerry's, Pitt Plaza.

GRASS CUTTING at reasonaWe

ArlrRkft All civ* wjbrHst TaII

HANDYMAN Specialty. Carpentry, landscaping, painting, minor electrical and plumbing, driveways.

FOR SALE: 10 speed Scorcher bike. 20 geuge shotgun. Junior tennis racket never been used Call754 7838ifter5D m.

JOIN QUR NEW COMPANYI

CENTURY 2) Tipton 8, Associates has openings (or licensed NC Real Estate brokers. Enthusla^ and drive Is a must. Call Rod Tugwell today, at 754 4810.

patios and minor home problems. Eddie 752 3000davs; 754 2904 niohts.

FOR SALE: Long white wedding gown arfd hat with long train, both adorned with lace end pearls Size 11 12 Purchased for over 8300. will sell both (or 8150 firm. Call 752 9888

LONG BROTHERS ROOFING AM types of rooflna commercial and residential. 25 years experience. Free estimates. Call 355 49*.

FRIGIOAIRE dryer, vvhlte cop pertone stove. Sears mitre saw Call 754-4778 after 9 p m. or Mondays anvlime.

LEGAL SECRETARY Minimum 2 years exparienca. Lanlar word processing experience reguired. Send resumes to Secretary, PO Box 1947, Graenvlllt, nT27834

McCarter cement

Contractors. Quality work very low pricesi Over 36 years experience. Driveways, walkways, patios, car oarages. 757 0533.

HOTPOINT FROST FREE refrigerator with icemaker. color gold. 4' } years old. 8400 Hotpoint washer am Sears Kenmore dryer, color gold, 4 years old, S300 a pair

WlAfr.......... .X-

LEGAL SECRETARY Loan clos Ing ekparlancf ntcassa^ry. Sand PO Box 1505, uraanvllla.

PAINTING Interior and exterior. Free estimates. References, work guaranteed. 13 years experience 754^73 after 4 p.m _

I





The Daily Refleclof. Greenville N C

074

Miscellaneous

ICEMAKERS Sale 40% oti Bar^f Retrioaraflon, 2227 Memo rIalOrlva. 756 4417__

STIHL

Chain Saws

Selling Chain Saws Since 1963

CLARK .COMPANY

OfCreenville, Inc.

756-2557

KENMOpRE DISHWASHER, like new, $275. Green and gold plaid sofa, $75. 11.500 BTU air condi tioner, $150. Upright piano, $300 756 7693

LARGE LOADS of Sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756 4742 atter 6 p.m., Jim Hydson

MUST SELL I Frigidare frost free refrigerator, 17 cubic feet Whirlpool stove. 524 4849 or 746 6340

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper AAowers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

ONE BURROUGHS L5000 posting machine. Can be seen at Jefferson's Florist. 752-6195.

QUEEN SIZE sott waterbed mat tress, used condition. $25

tress, used very little' Excellent 752 5324.

ROLL-A-WAY bed with headboard, box spring and mattress Call 756 2364._._

CASH NOW

FOR

Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voilins, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china,, crystal and an tiques...anything.of vallue.

COIN & RING MAN

On The Corner

SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shamjpooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._

SHARP, SONY & GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69 88._

SNAPPER

End Of Season Close Out

CLARK .COMPANY

Of Greenville, Inc. 756-2557

SOFA, black chair, metal dining table with 4 chairs and 3 speec ' hwinnblke. 757 1868 atter 5 p.m.

SUNN 60 WATT base amplifier, all controls, 4 months old. Cost over $500. sacrltice for $350. 746 3667

TOSHIBA STEREO receiver, 55 watts per channel Sony speakers, Sony turntable. $250. 752 1175 after

TYPEWRITER IBM electric with ball element. Excellent condition, only $400. Phone Goldsboro 1 734 2497 day or night

USED APPLIANCES for sale. Re frigerators, freezers, stoves.

Ige    _______ . _

washers, and dryers. '$75 and Heating, air conditioning, oluml Ino. and electrical service. 752-9333

id up. lump

WASHERS AND DRYERS $125 and up. Guaranteed and like new Call 746 2446.    _

Weight equipment - 250

pounds with bench. Best offer. Call 55-2744 after 6 p.m._

WELDING OUTFIT Hoses, re gulators and tip with metal case. arand new. $150 After 6, 756 7980.

WHITE GAS STOVE 7 years old. $100. Call 355 6306 atter 5__

WILL REMOVE OLD barn tor material. Call 746 3341, 758 5828, ask for Jim._

WOULD LIKE to buy used window and central air conditioners that need repair. 746 2446

YASHICA ELECTRO 35 Camera with electronic flash and accessories, in very good condition, $85. 752 3400 atter 6 p m._

1 BOOTH with shampoo bowl, 1 Hydraulic chair tor sale. Call 758 0600. _

18,000 BTU Sears air conditioner. 3 years old. Energy efficient. Call 758-4814 after 5._

1970 S S

NOVA body Crager S S I, new tires, $350 all. Call

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

074

Miscellaneous

1976 CHEVROLET truck, power steering and brakes, air, low mile age, $2695 or best otfer. 1 carat man's diamond cluster ring, $1250 or best ofter. Doberman Chow mix ed female dog, free to anyone who will give her a good home. 756 8979.

3M Overhead Projectors. Bulbs. $75.00 Call 756 2682

New

30 GALLON fully equipped aquarium with Oscar included. $110. 758 6882__

6 X10' WOODEN TRAILER As is $150 or best offer. 758 0472 or 752 3262_

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

ARNEL 24 X 60 DOUBLEWIDE

Large family room with\woodstOve, central air, microwave, and lots of

extras Excellent condition. $22,500 Call752 7860after5 30

FOR SALE Mobile home 50 x 10. $1500 cash. Call 756 7138

GOOD SELECTION of used homes at Azalea Mobile Homes $495 down, 90 day warranty. See Tommy Williams. 756 7815.

MOBILE HOME for sale. 60x12    3

bedrooms. 1 bath Asking $2900 Call 757 3503 anytime.

NEW 14 WIDE - low down payment. Payment under $150 per month. Only at Azalea Mobile Homes. 756 7815

NEW 14x70. 2 bedrooms, cathedral celling, total electric, tutly furnished Payments under $200 Only 1 to self at this price. Call 756 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville.

NEW 60x12. 2 bedrooms, total electric, bay window, fully furnished. Small down payment. Payments under $155 a month. Call 7M 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville.

NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing

New double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of less than $245 per month. Also FHA and conven lional financing availablel.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard  _756-0191

NO MONEY DOWN VA financing Two day delivery. Call Conner Homes, 756 0333.

NO MONEY DOWN

August Special Only

SINGLE WIDE....$8,495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17z995

(Loaded)

Anything ol Value In Trade Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry No In laws VER30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE

CALL NOW! 756-4833

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 705 West Greenville Boulevard REPO 70 X 14. Save $4,000. 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Pay $495 down and assume loan. See John Moore, Azalea Mobile Homes, 756 7815.

USED CONNER Mobile Home. $295 down and take over payments. Call 756 7138._

USED MOBILE HOMES As low as $295 down Assume payments. Call 756-4687, ask tor Lenn.

USED 44x12. Excellent condition. New furniture, small downpay ment. Payments under $125 a month. Call 756 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville._

12.75% FINANCING on selected homes. Call Conner Homes, 756-0333.

14 WIOES for as low as $170 per month. Call or come by Art Dellano Homes, 756-9841.

1964 MIDWAY, 10x45    ______

furnished. Air. Good location. 7 4857.

PartiaH^

1975 REDMAN, 12x65, central air, washer/dryer, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths. 756 8896after 6p.m._

1976 24x70 DOUBLEWIDE 2 full baths, 4 bedrooms. Must sell -building home. Sacrifice $19,000. 1 238 3251. _

1979 CONNER No equity Take over payments $108/month. 2 bedrooms, on lot. One owner. 756-0333.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TRUCKLOAD

MATTRESS SALE

Now In Full Swing!

ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE    LOW OVERHEAD EXPENSE

We Can Save You Money!

UMIE'S FURNITURE & APPLIANCE

264 West 3 Miles to Frog Level, turn left and '4 mile on left

Phone 756-6027    Open Mon.-Sat., 10 am-6 pm

Prepshirt Is Now Accepting Applications For

EXPERIENCED SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS

SINGLE, DOUBLE, OVERLOOK, SERGING ANO BUND HEMMING OPERATORS

Good benefits. Apply in person atPREPSHIRT MANUFACTURING

North Greene Street

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS

Estimated Occupancy Sept. 15, 1983

Off Highway 111 Acroaa from Hardees f Ayden. North Carolina

1-Story, (Tdar-sidcd Colonials

Fully carpeted with range / refrigerator furnished

Washer I dryer hook-ups

Energy-efficient individually controlled heai pump

Spacious, wcll-maintaini d grounds and ouldoor sioragc

1 - Bedroom from 8180

2 - Bedroom from 8195    3 - Bedroom from 8215

Call for information and appointment:

Teresa Stallings, Manager

Daily 15 p.m.    ^

AYDENS NEWEST APAKTMENT COMMUNITY

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

1979 TAYLOR 14 x 70, 2 bedroom, central air. New carpet, new furniture. 757-0451._

1979 14x60, 2 bedroom. 1 bafh. some equity' and assuma paymants of $155. Call Lawrence af Art Dellano Homes, 756-9841

1980 BRIGADIER mobile home. 2 bedrooms, bath, appliances, furniture, living room, central heating and air. AAobile home in very good condifion. Call 946 4213, ask for Gwenn or 946-0077 ask for Terry._

1980 14 X 58 Champion mobile home, 2 bedroom. G<m condition and a great location. Cal Keep trying

:all 756 7077.

1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068.

1983 14x70 OAKWOOD Set up on beautitui treed lot In Birchwood Sands Park. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths, and appliances. Equity n^tiable Take over payments of $287 monthly. Call 756 9247 days. 823 2577 after 6 p.m

1984 REDMAN doublewide. Microwave, stereo, paddle fan, fireplace, garden tub, storm windows, masonite and shingle roof with 5 year warranty. $25.W5. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841

24X52 USED doublwide. Must see to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes, 756-9841

60x24 REPO' 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Low down payment and assume loan See J T Williams at Azalea Mobile Homes, 756 7815.

076 Mobi le Home I nsurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smithy Insurance and Realty. 752

077 Musical Instruments

ANTIQUE UPRIGHT PIANO Good condition. $400 or best offer. 825

0765.

CLARINET, Vito, used 1 excel lertt condition. 758 1927.

year.

FOR SALE Armstrong Flute, Model 104, used 1 year, excellent condition, flute care kit, new, $150 for both. 746 4577__

SAXAPHONE, BUNDY II, alto. Excellent condition. $300 firm. 756 1992 after 5:30.

USED PIANOS boy and sale. Piano 8. Organ Distributors. 355-6002.

060

INSTRUCTION

WILL TEACH PIANO in my home. Call 758 2782 after 6 p.m._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

062    LOST AND FOUND

LOST IN THE Stancil Drive area. 1 year old tabby colored cat with white chest and paws. Green collar with IMS Name is Cricket Re

ward. 7g 7690._

LOST SAAALL gray and white long haired male kitten in front section of Shadv Knoll AAobile Estates on Sunday August 14. Answers to name ~ ty T ition

758 7562, if you know

whereabouts._

LOST: GOLDEN RETRIEVER female puppy. Black collar white tip on tail. Lost in the vicinity of

. Augu

Rocky. This kitten needs medical attention. Please call Jeri High, of his

Rotary Avenue, August 12. Reward!

758 7427._

LOST: grey fabby kitten. 4 months old, white paws. If found please notify TKE. 951 East 10th Street. LOST: Man's brown trifold wallet Downtown area. Return to Greg Smith. 752 0770

085 Loans And Mortgages

NEED MONEY FAST? Call 756 8100 or come by National Finance Co.. 300 A Plaza Drive

093

OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale. Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other

interests. Call 758 0702._

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT for sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seal restaurant. 30 seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary

Quintard 758 5156 after 5._

INTERNATIONAL steel building manufacturer awarding dealership in area ^x>n. No inventory invesf menf. Great Potential. WedgCor,

303 759 3200 tor apolication._

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8, Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, NC 757 0001, nights

753 4015.__

PART TIME OR FULL TIME business, very profitable. $15.000 buys everything needed. 752 3400

after 6 p.m._

RESTAURANT for sale. 100 seat capacity, building, land, and equipment. Turn key operation. Located less than 10 minutes from (tewntown Greenville. Call 758 0702 or 752 0310

TO BUY OR SELL a business. Appraisals. Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752 3575.

WANTED:    INDEPENDENT

distributors of beauty products in terested in adding a new high profit line of health products. Call 355-2446, leave message._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNE North Ci

Y SWEEP Gid Holloman arolina's original chimney

sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces Cad night, 753 3503, Farmville

100

REAL ESTATE

102 Commercial Property

COAAMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for rent available In Industrial Park on Staton Court Building has 9000 square feet with 5400 carpeted tor office space. 12 month lease re quired. Call Clark Branch, Real tors, 756 6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147.    _

106

Farms For Sale

APPROXIMATELY 22 acres of land near Ayden. 'j cleared, 'z wooded.. $23.500, Call The D G Nichols Agency, 752 4012, or David Nichols, 355 6414._

FALKLAND AREA Approximately 49 acrbs. 31 cleared Approximately 8,200 pounds of tobacco allotment Good location. Call The D G Nichols Agency, 752 4012, D G Nichols, 758 2370 or David Nichols. 3556414

too ACRE FARM - 1 mile from Sunshine Garden Center. Suited for farm or development 756 5891 or

752 3318.__

64 ACRES; 50 cleared. 14 wooded. 200 feet road frontage, no allot ments. $80.000    752    0398    (day).

756 5708 (night)._

109

Houses For Sale

BEAUTIFUL WHITE bridk home in the country. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump. Located on over 1 acre (also available for lurchasq 2 adjoining acres).

ossibly Federal Land Bank financ ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500, nights 756

OUR CLASSIFIED STAFF knows it's Important to please you. And we receive hundreds of testimonials every year

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FURNITURE STRIPPING

Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal Equipment lormer-ly o( Dip And Strip All items relumed within 7 days

TAR ROAD ANTIQUES

Call For Free Estmate 756-9123 Days, 756-1007 Nights

VOLKSWAGEN

1913 CLEIIIUIICE SilLE

Rabbit LS

Jetta 4 Door

Scirocco

109

Houses For Sale

A LOT OF HOUSE for the money, this older home in Ayden features 3 bedroom and 1 bath downstairs and a partially finished upstairs with room for 2 bedrooms and 1 bath. $27,500. Call Alita Carroll, Aldridge 8. Sotifherland, 756 3500 or 756 8278 for more information._

M 000 Over Allowance on your trade, PLUS up to ^1500 discounts

All 19 nnlels nisi lie sold lliis monUi NO REASONABLE OFFER REFOSEOloe Pechles Volkswagen, Inc.

Greenville Blvd.    756-1135

Serving Greenville To The Coast For 19 Years

M Safe BuyBOOUsedCars

1983 Pontiac Trans Am

Pewter. T-tops, power windows, cruise control, tilt wheel, stereo radio, 5,000 miles. Excellent buy.    '

1983 Ford Mustang GT

Red. T-tops, 5.0 litre engine, 7,000 miles, fully equipped.

1983 Ford Conversion Van

New. Raised roof, sport wheels, custom paint. Save thousands!

(2) 1983 Lincoln Town Cars

Coach roof, leather interior, spoke wheels, like new, low mileage,

1983 Mercury Lynx RS

Fuel injection, 5 speed transmission, 7,000 miles, RS package.

(2) 1982 Lincoln Continentals

Low mileage, fully equipped. Save thousands!

1982 Lincoln Town Car

White, red velour interior. 22,000 miles.

1982 Mercury LN-7

3,000 miles, like new, fully equipped, sport package

1982 Lincoln Mark VI

4 door. Loaded, 20,000 miles.    ,

(2) 1981 Mercury Cougar XR-7

Local orie owner cars. Low mileage.

1981 Mercury Grand Marquis

Green, 26,000 miles, local one owner.

1980 Buick Century

4 door. Maroon, fully equipped, new tires.

1980 Lincoln Mark VI

2 door. Local one owner, low mileage, extra clean.EAST CAROLINA

UNCOLN-MERCURY-GMC West End Circle    GrecnvUle,    N.C.

trucks

756-4267

ATTRACTIVE MODULAR HOME on brick foundation. Over 1.400 square feet. Spacious kitchen, kitchen island ano breakfast area. 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, good size den. all appliances remain. Low $40's Call Davis Really 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997___

NEW OFFERING by owner lege Court. Over 2.000 sqi An formal areas Den with

Col guare feet

fireplace, large playroom, 3 bedrooms. 2'/z baths, large eat In kitchen with pantry. Large fenced in backyard with storage building. $71,500 Skip Bright, 752 3603 or 752 6186

QUALITY can be easily delected ih this well decorated 3 bedroom, 2 bath home Large corner wooded lot, provides attractive setting lor the bay window in kitchen, a beautiful greatroom with fireplace, woodstove Price reduced to $68.500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997.    _ _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ARMY SURPLUS

CAMPING SPORTING MILITARY GOODS OvHf tOOO Dtftpfpnt ifpms    !

Now and Used

ARMY-NAVY STORE

1501 S Evans

109

Houses For Sale

SAVE AAONEY this winter shop and use the Classitied Ads everv day!

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Wednesday Augusi 24 1983    29

109

Houses For Sale

BELVEDERE By owner 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, den with fireplace central air 202 Harmony Street Call evenings and weekends 756 4343

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WANTED IMMEDIATELY

HEAD SEWING ROOM SUPERVISOR

OR

STITCHING ROOM FOREMAN

Nationally known company, maker of ladies blouses and mens shirts, is in search of a hands on type of person that can motivate people and instruct people with their sewing problems.

This individual should know how to perform all operations on the above garments with emphasis on quality and production. This This individual will also be responsible for scheduling and keeping the entire sewing room in balance.

Those that qualify to the above should send resume stating work history and salary requirements to:

P.O. Box 303 Greenville, N.C. 27834

Company offers excellent salary and benefits package. All resumes held in strict confidence.

Greenvilles Finest Used Cars!

(Located At Honda Store)

1983 Honda Accord

4 door, 5 speed transmission, 12,000 miles, one owner.

1980 Chevrolet Citation

4 door. 4 speed transmission. One owner car,

1980 Volkswagen Sport Truck

Red. 5 speed transmission, like new. Real nice.

1980 Ford Granada

2 door. Red and white, one owner, wire wheels, automatic, AM-FM stereo.

1980 Honda Accord LX

Bronze with velour interior. Automatic, air condition, stereo with cassette, digital clock, hatch release. Local one owner car.

1980 Jeep CJ-5

Renegade. Blue. Just like brand new.

1980 Pontiac Grand Prix

2 door. Beige, brown top, low mileage, one owner.

1980 Datsun 210

30,000 miles, 5 speed transmission.

1979 Honda Accord

4 door. 5 speed,, 12,000 miles, one owner.

1979 MGB Convertible

Like new, 47,800 miles, green with black convertible top, AM-FM stereo.

1978 Ford Fairmont

4 door. 6 cylinder engine, automatic transmission. Like new.

1978 Ford Fiesta

2 door. Red, 4 speed transmission, AM-FM stereo, one owner.    .

Bob Barbour    !-% , -r^ -i

rnmn    DobBarbour

uJUlU    V(M.\'() \.\K'Jl-l-p Keii:uill

1977 Honda Accord

2 door hatchback. Silver, automatic, air condition, low mileage, one owner

1974 Opel Manta

2 door, 43,000 miles, automatic, air condition, burgundy.

(Located At Volvo Store)

1982 Datsun Pickup

MVP package, low mileage, nice truck,

1982 GMC S-15 Pickup

Gypsy All the extras including air condition,

1981 Honda Accord LX

Luxury model. Air condition. .Luxury with economy.

1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7

Renegade. One owner. In excellent shape.

1981 Olds Toronado XCS

22.000 miles, all th^ options, like brand new,

1980 AMC Jeep CJ-5

One owner, 37,000 miles, perfect shape.

1980 Honda Civic Wagon

Automatic transmission, good gas mileage.

1980 Volvo DL20

Air condition, tape player. A nice clean hard to find car.

1978 Pontiac Grand LeMans

4 door. Air condition, power steering and brakes, power locks, nice car.

1977 Dodge Monaco Wagon

49.000 miles. One owner, like new, air condition, power steering and brakes.

HON

3300 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500

117 W. Tenth St. /Greenville 758-7200

CONL-NER

MOBILE

HOMESATTENTION VETERANS

VA FINANCING

Now Available OnThe New Home Of Your Choice ~~

No down payment

No advance payments

%

24 Hour delivery available (with approved credit)

Over 25 new homes to seiect from

interest rates are at an alt time low Visit CONNER HOMES Today!

WHY BUY FROM CONNER?

' 25 years in the Mobile Home Business, 20 Years in Mobile Home Manufacturing. Conner Financed, Conner Service, Conner Insurance. Free Delivery and Set Up.Greenville*, N.C.

(Open Weeknights Until 10 P.M.)     ycc nOQO

I (Week-Ends Until 8 P.M.)    /OO'UOOO

616 W. Greenville Blvd.

I FREE SKIRTING    Greenville. N.C.    FREE STEPS





 .tfsday Auqusi ijoo

109

Houses For Sale

ASSUME 10M% htnHA LOAN piu equity Almost like new Brick veneer ranch 2 large bedrooms, i bath, large tamily room, handy kitchen and utility WInterville school district Only 439,900 Call Davis Realty 752 SOOO, 756 1997,

756 2904    ___

ASSUME '/S% LOAN assumption ^ 4428 60 PITI Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath, den with formal areas, fenced In backyard, carport. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 1997, _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

100 Houses For Sale

BY OWNER New log home near Ayden on quiet country road 1900 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lot siie negotiable By appointment, R H McLawhorn, 7fir2750or975 268

BY OWNER Nearly 2,000 square feet Garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 700 square foot greatroom with S' pool table, dishwasher, newly carpeted, cable TV, 8 years old Located 3 miles east of Greenville Priced for quick sale In the450's 758 0144or 752^663

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

AUCTION

TRUCKS. HEATING, AIR CONDITION AND ELECTRIC SUPPLIES

Saturday, August 27th 9:00 A.M. Location: 807 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, N.C..

TRUCKS 1976 Toyota Vi Ton 1979 Ford Courier 1979 Ford Courier 1979 Ford Pickup 1979 Dodge 0-50

RADIO EQUIPMENT 100 Watt Base VHF 6-100 Watt Mobiles 3-100 Watt Mobiles UHF Walkie-Talkie UHF 5 Palgor Base 100Tower All Radio Equipment Motorola - Like new

OFFICE EQUIPMENT 4 Wood Desks

1 Metal Desk

4 Office Chairs 3 Calculators

1 Copier

5 File Cabinets

INVENTORY Sheet Metal Supplies Heating And AC Supplies Plumbing Supplies Electric Supplies Sheet Metal Fittings Many Other Items

TOOLS

Grinder Drill Press

Other Assorted Tools Of Trade

Sale Conducted by

109

Houses For Sale

NESTLED AMONG tha trM you ii

find this wall built 1254 squara foot homa with 3 badrooms, 3 full baths, larga sunkan dan. In Whisparing Pinas. Brick with soma cadar siding. Vary attractiva with lots of axTras you don't usually find in a Farmar s Homa loan assumption. Other types of financing are available. Also exclusiva listing on this one. Call Tha Evans Company, 752-2814, Nights and weekends call Faye Bowen 756 5258 or Winnie Evans 752 4224

NEW LISTING Shaded lot. 3 bedroom. IVa bath brick ranch. Large tamily room, also features approximately 600 squara feet de tachad garage and workshop, excellent locafion Call now to see this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500. nights 756 5716

NEW LISTING 448,900. Spacious 3 bedroom. l'/> bath home, formal living and dining room. Convenient location. Call June -Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500; nlahts756 5716

NEW LISTING Exclusive Davis Realty Doll house country brick veneer ranch. Large lot, almost tike new, 6 miles from Greanville. Cheerful kitchen, tasfetully deco rated In earth tones, 3 bedrooms, IVj baths. Assume FmHA plus equity to qualified buyer. Low 440's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000. Lyle Davis at night 756 2904 or Rhesa Tucker 355 2j74.__

JRICK VENEER DUPLEX ositlva cash flow. 2 bedrooms, 1

bath, kitchen, utility, family room, heat pump. 448,000. Call Da ' Realty 752 5000: 756 2904, 756 1997.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

C.I.. i.tipton, Co.

109 Houses For Sale

BY OWNER . Cqun^try

2

heat

bedroom brick homa loan 439%). Call 758 0729

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 756-666 OR 756-5868

YOUR OWN SHANGRILAI lt'4 0ut, but not too far. Large private lot on Contantnaa Creak with 3 bedroom homa. Features large master bedroom on second floor with wrap around deck...country kitchen, playroom, sunroom and much more It you want peace and quiet and privacy, this Is It! 450's. #511.

NEW LISTING Don't cramp your style, move into this ideal 4 bedroom ranch that features a large greatroom, approximately 1575 square feet of living space, celling tan In master bedroom. 2 lots and an affordable price. 469,900. #595.

THE LOVING TOUCH will greet you when the doors open on this new listing! You'll notice this home Is special because of all of the loving care It has received. Special features Include large greatroom, fireplace, formal dining, workshop In garage, chainlink fence, and a newly painted exterior. It you are looking (or a quality built home take a look at this onel 464,900 #593.

THE PINES Ayden. Approximately 3000 square feet of quality built well kept home, on an extra large corner lot with lots ot trees. 4 or 5 bedrooms, formal areas, family room with fireplace, fully equipped kitchen, large recreation room, utility room, 2 full and 2 half baths, and so much more. If you're looking for peace and quief just a few minutes from Greenville, take a look at this one, you won't find this much house at this price In Greenvlllel $91.500. #586._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE NEED MORE HELP!!

Experienced Mechanic Needed

Good Salary Fringe Benefits Good Working Conditions Contact: H.L. Austin Auto Specialty Company Phone 758-1131

YOUR CHOICE

   i

All Cars Are Fully Equipped Including Air Conditioning, Etc. - These Are Not Stripped Models.

1983 FORD MUSTANG L -

7498***

$169.50Month

Based on $1498 Down Payment, 13V2% A.P.P. 48 Month Financing.

Price ExQludes N.C. Sales Tax and License.

**Based On Approved Credit.

1982 ESCORT L-

4 Door, Hatchback.

$4998

* *

$113.54

A Month

Based on $998 Down Payment, 13%% A.P.P.

48 Month Financing

Price Excludes N.C. Sales Tax and License.

Based On Approved Credit.

1982 TOYOTA CRESSIDA

4 Door

6<Ok-X

*10,298

* *

$241.29

A Month

Based on $1798 Down Payment, 13%% A.P.R.,

48 Month Financing

Price Excludes N.C. Sales Tax and License.

Based On Approved Credit

1981 PLYMOUTH RELIANT-

4 Door

*5398

$131.74

* *

A Month

Based on $1198 Down Payment, 14% A.P.R., 42 Month Financing

Price Excludes N.C. Sales Tax and License.

* Based On Approved Credit

1980 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE

4 Door, Hatchback.

*3398

$95.42

* *

A Month

Based on $698 Down Payment, 14V2% A,P.P. 36 Month Financing.

Price Excludes N.C. Sales Tax and License 'Based On Approved Credit.    _Washington Motor Company, Inc.

946-7798

946-6424

I1103 Carohna Ave. Washington, N.C.

109

Houses For Sale

BY OWNER Four iMdroomt. 2 baths. firMlacts, 2500 sq. ft., nic* yard In Farmvilla. 459,500 after 5 pm. 753 3030 or 148 3564._

BY OWNER 3 bedroom ranch ftyta house on Singletree Drive. Energy efficient heat pump, beautiful cedar siding, and sundack. 445,000. 355 6314 _

BY OWNER FmHA loan assump tion. 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths. Weathlngton Heights. 756 3968, 752 466 L 756 3134._

BY OWNER Assumable 8</]APR loan. Living room with fireplace, dining room, 3 bedrooms, screened porch, oareoe, low 460's. 756 4987

BY OWNER

Azalea Drive, IIViAPR assumable loan. Living room, dining room, don with fireplace, 3 badrooms. 2 bafhs, carport, central air, natural gas neat, fenced backyard, patk>.T56 tasi

BY OWNER: EDWARDS ACRES 3 bedroom home featuring greatroom, kitchen with dining area, I'/i baths, utility room, patio, garage. Located on wooded lot. Good loan assumption. 454,500. Call 758 7901 attar 6 p.m. No realtors

CHERRY OAKS 410,000 cash, assume 1st and 2nd mortgages, 3 bedroom. 2Vi bath Owner. 7S6-8073.

CLUB PINES at Its finest. All formal areas with hardwood floors, family room with fireplace, 4 bedrooms, 2'/^ baths, double garage, deck, and beautifuly landscaped lawn. Built by Tommie Litfle. To see this lovely home call Alita Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500 or 756 827

EASTERN STREET, 3 bedrooms, i bath, fireplace, mint condition. VA assumable loan. $44,000. Speight Realty. 756 3220, nights 758 77A.

EXCELLENT BUY, owner must sell! Reduced Low S60's. Almost 1,600 square, feet. Assume 9Vi% FHA loan plus equity. Payments approximately S446.77 PITI 3 large bedrooms, kitchen with fireplace.

large .fenced In backyard, excellent neighborhood. Call DavIs R 752 3000

hood. Call 'Davis Realty Lyle Davis at night

EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Walking distance of unlveristy. 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace. Central heat and air, deck, patio, double car garage, attic converted into large room. Needs some repair work. {42,500. Call Davis Realty, Grier Rental, 752 3000,    756    1997,

756 2904._

FOR A CHARMING HOME in a great neighborhood take a look at this Cherry Oaks ottering from the glazed brick entryway to the many custom bullt-ins and beautiful old brick fireplace wall, this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home is "weclal". Mid $70's. To see call Allta Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500 or 756 8278^

FOR SALE

3 bedroom house, 2 full baths, utility kitchen witn

room, dining room, built in appliances, large living room, den with fireplace, large screened porch, 2 carport, tool room. Outside storage building. Private drive ott side street. Large shaded lot with Azalea Garden. Located at 2810 South Evans Street in Lakewood Pines. "Other Brokers Welcome". Call evenings for polntment. 756 3491, R R Owner._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

109    Houses For Sale

NEW LISTING University area. Excellant condition. 3 bedrooms, living and dining areas, glauad porS, 459,900 Call Jeannefte Cox Aoencv. Inc 756 1322._

Get Comfortable

In Thif Baautltul Hw Baytree Hous#.

1724 sq. ft-, wooded lot. 2 levels. 3 bedrooms, fireplace, front porch. E 300 insulation. Equal Housing

CALL 758-6410

DivtrsifXd Financial SarvkM.lnc. or vour REALTOR

GET OUT OF THE "city" and enjoy the "small town" living In Ayden. The center of activity in this well kept 3 bedroom, 2 bath home is the large country kitchen. Priced in the 440's with an S% assumable loan, balanca ot approximately 428,000. For more information call Allta Carroll, Aldridge 8. Southerland. 756 3500or 756 8278.

HOME REDUCED 83500. Owner must sell! Well established neighborhood. WInterville school district. Brick veneer ranch 3 bedrooms, I'/V baths, central heat and air, wooded lot. 453,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997

JUST REDUCED A lot ot house tor just 462,900. 3 bedrooms, formal rooms, den, large kitchen with breakfast area. 2 baths, fenced backyard. Call Jeannette Cox Aoencv, Inc. 756-1322

LOAN ASSUMPTION and owner

financing. Yes, a possible FHA loan assumption and possible some owner tinancing. In Edwards Acres

Three bedrooms, IVj baths, living room, dining area, family room with woodstove. Only $54,900. Duffus Realty, Inc., 756 5}95.__

MAVIS BUTTS REALTY 758-0655

WE CAN BUILD-TO-SUIT your family's needs! Beautiful wooded lots are available now and prices start as low as 445,900. Get the square footage you need at the price you want to spend! Call now and let our brokers customize a building and mortgage package to fit your budget.

PINERIOGE NEVER SO AF FORDABLE as It is now! Beautiful 3 bedroom, IVi bath (already plumbed'tor full bath) brick home also features living room, large eat in kitchen, laundry room, carport with storage and extra deep lot. Owner has been transferred and needs to sell I.,445,5(X).

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED brick home features 3 bedrooms, IVj ceramic baths, eat-ln kitchen, living and dining rooms, carport with storage and lovely corner lot. Friendly, family oriented neighborhood. 447,(XX).'

NEW BRICK HOME has family sized kitchen with plenty ot room tor mom! Other features Include great room with fireplace, foyer, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, sliding glass doors to patio, carport with storage and extra deep lot with plenty of room left In the back for the kids to play in t Only 461,900.

SPACIOUS IS THE WORD for this charming brick Cape Cod. Offers great room with fireplace and dining area with french doors to deck, eat-in kitchen, laundry room, 3 4 bedrooms and 2 full baths. Owner needs to sell - Make us an offer OnLy $69,500.

Jane Butts, Broker.........756-2851

Shirley Morrison. Broker ... 758-5463 ElaineTrolano, REALTOR.

Mavis Bum, REALTOR. GRI.CRS-

756-6436

752-7073

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NEED MONEY FAST??

Ca//or Come by:

NATIONAL FINANCE COMPANY 300-A PLAZA DRIVE 756-8100

(ALL LOANS SUBJECT TO OUR LIBERAL CREDIT POLICY)

109 Houses For Sale

109 Houses For Sale

REDUCEDI REDUCEDI This tour bedroom end two bath home has been reduced In price. Take advantage-of this opportunity LIv Ing room with fireplace, dining area, wood* deck. Reduced to 453.500. DuttJs Realty Inc.. 756-5395,

3 bedroom log HOME In irivste wooded letting. 17 minutes louth ot Greenville. Serious In Quirers Cell 524 4782 after 5 p.m.

RIVERHILLS Lovelv 3 bedroom. 2<'i bath, split lavel, features living room, family room with tireplaca, large kitchen with beautiful

greenhouse window, also heat pump Call June Wyrick. Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500, nights

842,900. 2 bedroom, I'.-i bath con, dominium within biking distance ot the UniversllY. The full basement can be finished to give almost I50a square feet ot living area. Excellent condition with central air and fenced patio. Fv

Allta Carroll, Aldridge 8, Southerland. 756 3500 or 756 8278.

SINGLETREE Almost new brick ranch, 3 badrooms. 2 full baths, tamily room with fireplace, fencM back yard with dktachad double oarage. Assumable 9'/i% financing. 459,500. Call Jeff Aldridge, Aldridge 8i Southerland. 756 3500. nights 355 6700

8airCar'for'<te'tails"Drdien5e^^ 758 1983, nights and weekends 758

22^

SITUATED on a beautiful wood^ tot in country Good neighborhood. Almost like new. 1 story nome with 1,500 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace, dining area, haat pump. 465,900. Call Davis Raalty 752 3000, 756 2904,

756 1997

SITUATED ON CORNER LOT 3 bedrooms. IVj baths, large kitchen, tamily room with fireplace, heat pump, huge attic, patio, garage wired tor 220 Needs some love and tender care. Call Oavis Raalty 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997

STARTER HOME Assume loan, no credit check. Payments less than 4400 a month. Possibility of some owner financing. Will possibly rent with option to buy. 3 bedrooms, central heat, deck, good size lot. Low 430's. Call Davis Realty 752-3000, 756 2904. 756 1997.___

YOU'LL FIND ALL the formal areas in this French Proventlal, as well as a large eat in kitchen, tamily room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. Add to all this the location in Tucker Estates and you've got a very nice home 470's. To see - call Allta Carroll 756 8278, Aldridge 8, Southerland 756 3500._;

Halp tight Inflation by buying selling through the Classltlea Call 752 6166.

and

ads.

- CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY

756-6666

OR

756-5868

REDUCED Lake EllsworthI Charming brick rancher, threed bedrooms, 2 full baths, den with fireplace, and plenty of storage space In floorec attic. Beautltufly groomed property. 459,900. #504.

BELVEDERE This two story home is nestled among the trees, and could be the answer to your home buying needs. It features a foyer, formal areas, 3 bedrooms, plus a cozy den. Owners regret naving to leave this charmer, but their Toss could be your gain. Call today for your private showing. $69,900. #555.

BROOK VALLEY Custom built brick ranch close to golf course and swimming pool. You'll love the sunny kitchen with a breakfast nook, all formal areas tor classy entertaining, and a den with a fireplace for those restful evenings with thetamily. 480's. #588.

NEW LISTING Club Pines. This 3 bedroom doll house is fresh on the market, and ready to be seen. The spacious yard Is great to putter in before you go inside to relax on these pleasant summer evenings. Priced in the 460's, you need to call right now. #597.    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

in    Investment Property

APArITmENTS - OFFICE for safe

* iner will finance with little dovvn.

for SALE: 5 ctwir hair salon. Good location. Send all inquires to Hair Salon, PO Box 340, Greenville. NC 27834.    ....

113

Land For Sale

5 ACRES WOODED LAND east of

Greenville. Call 756-7884 after 6 p.m.

9 ACRES - wooded, near hospital. Leonard Lillev. 752 4139.

115

Lots For Sale

bethel highway -

cleared. 412,000. Speight Realty, 756 3220. niohts 758 7741.

BRCX)K VALLEY

Beautiful 120' wide lot with lots ot trees bordering the

Road. 756-76S4^vi; 7M-6913nlght4.

EVANSWOOD RESU-.-..... lots from $9,000 $12,500. Call W G Blount 8i Associates, 756 3000

HANRAHAN meadows 100' X 200' On State Road 1110 between Ayden and Gritton. Septic permits. Sale price $4000 4500 down payment, with payments of $92.16 a month, based on a 48 month term at 12APR Annual Percentage Rate. Call 756 2682 tor further Information.

HUNTINGRIDGE - large resL dential lots near hospital. 752 4139 Millie Lillev. Owner/Broker.

Lowest Single Family Lot Prices In Greenville!

If you are looking tor affordable, wooded lots within the city limits, you must see BAYTREE Prices start as low as 411,000.

758-6410

MOBILE HOME LOT $300 down, 485 per month. Speight Realty, 756 320. niohts 758 7741.__

MOBILE HOME LOT tor sale at Quail Ridge. Fenced yard, shed, carport. 48,000. 758 8296

PRICE REDUCED two acres pt land Ideal for trailer; septic tank, well, and electrical hookup. Just 10 miles from city limits - only $12,500. Make An Offer!! Estate Realty Company, 752 5058, Billy Wilson, 758 4476.___

THE PINES In Ayden 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. 410,500. Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details._

117 Resort Property For Sale

ENJOY THE REMAINDER ot the summer In this 4 bedroom trailer with IV] baths on a lot at Bay view -only $14,900. Estate Realty Com pany 752-5058, Jarvis or Dorlis Mills. 752 3647 or Billy Wilson, 758 4476.__

Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MAJOR APPLIANCE/HOME ELECTRONIC

SALES PERSON

Large North Carolina major appliance and home electronics distributor is looking for an aggressive experienced sales pr-son to work in our Eastern North Carolina territory. Prefer ex- perience in major appliances and/or computer industry. We offer excellent compensation and benefits program for the right individual. Please send resume in confidence to:

PERSONNEL DIRECTOR P.O. BOX 32308    CHARLOTTE,    N.C.    28232

xatemen

For Sole!

The Carolina Olds Network dealers have marked down over3000cars during their Excitement Sole.

From August 17 through the 20th you hove over 3000 specially priced cars to choose trom at your local Carolina Olds Network dealer And that's something to get excited about,    ,    

These aren't just cars., these ore Oldsmobiles. A big selection o Cutlasses, Cieras, Firenzos, 88's and 98's, and more Each one specially priced lor the Excitement Sale It's more tfian just a sale it's the opportunity lor you to get your new Oldsmobile at on incredibly low price Excitement lor sole We've got it at your local Carolina Olds Network dealer

HOLT OLDSMOBILE

101 Hooker Rd.,

Greenville, N.C;

756-3115

CaroHnaOkb

rkztwork





117 Resort Property For Sale

RI\/ER cottage on wooded water (ronf lot on the Pamlico River 1 mile from Washington. NC "lulet, established neighborhood. all 75 070?days, 752 OTIO nights.

120

RENTALS

lots for rent Also 2 and 3

bedroom nrxwile homes. Security deposits required, no pets Call 7S 4413 between 8 and 5.

need storage? We have any size to meet your storage need Cafl

121 Apartmenls For Rent

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely, furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost free refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J T or Tommy Williams _7SA    7815    

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with iVj baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer-dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, cluo house and POOL. 752 1557_

DUPLEX APARTMENT on I acre wooded lot at Frog Level. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and living room, no pets allowed. *265 per month. 756-4624.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 One, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Eastbrook Orive

752-5100

EFFICIENCIES I or 2 beds, maid service, cable, pool, weekly rates. Call 756 5555. Heritage Inn Motel.

KINGS ROW , APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal ana cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located lust off lOth Street.

Call 752-3519

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

QualHy construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs M percent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer-dryer hookups, cable TV,wall to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

* Off ice Open 9-5 Weekdays

-"S Saturday    1    5    Sunday

" Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

- CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartmenh For Ronf

FURNISF^D Ibedroom Hietncy apartmwts. UOO per montti utilities '"cludfd Available now. Call 756-5555 Herltaae Inn AAotfl

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dishwasher, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with pundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adiacent to Greenville Country Club. 7M-6869

PUT EXTRA Lash m your pocket today. Sell your "don't naeds*^lth an inexpensive Classified Ad.,

NEW TOWNHOUSE available

September 1, 2 bedrooms. V/7 baths, dine In kitchen with appliances, private sundeck and storage, energy efficient. *325 per month with security. Call CECO Con tractors. Inc. 355 2474 or Bill Erwin 753 5449.

NICE QUIET DUPLEX, hookups, appliances, nice yard, trees, 756-26^71 or 758 1543.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, disposal included. We also have Cable Tv Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815.    _

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din Ing, bedroom complete. *79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10a,m. to5p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-

tar RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, IV: bath townhouses. Available now. *295-month.

9 to 5 Monday-Friday

756-7755

WHY PAY RENT

When you can own your townhome or condominium with payments lower than rent. Five locations available. Call Iris Cannon at 758-6050 or 746-2639, Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756 1498, Wil Reid at 758-6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029.

MOORE&SAUTER no South Evans 758-6050

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Business Expanding

SHOWROOM PERSON NEEDED

Experience in design and decorating preferred. Must be mature, responsible adult. Selling experience a must.

Call 756-5097 or 756-9315

121 Apartments For Rent

NEAR HOSPITAL New duplexes currently under construction. Aveileble September 1. *300 per month. No Cell 752 3152 1 ek for John Of Brynt

1 ANO 2 BEDROOM duplexes located in Ayden. Available irhme-diately. Appliances furnished, has heat pump, in excellent condition. Couples preferred, no pets. Call Judy, 754-4336 between 9 and 5. Monday through Friday.____

3 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen applianes furnished, totally eftctrlc, tm month. Call 756 7647

2 BEDROOM townhouse, heat pump, dishwasher, refrigerator, stove, carpeted, IW betn, fl9S month. No pets. Cell 756 3563.

3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE Cedar Court *295. 758 3311

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Stancill Drive near ECU *270.754 7480

4 BEDROOM DUPLEX in town. 2 bedroom apartment in country. 746 3284 or 524 3180._

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE. PRIME RETAIL or office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feef. Only *3.60 per square foot. For more Information, call Real Estate Brokers752-4348.

FOR RENT 10,000 square foot

8    iVfWW    V

building. Ideally located Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Donnie Smith at 1 946 5887

Call

PRIME BUSINESS location tor leaie.Eatt 5th Street. 752_34ii

WAREHOUSE SPACE available Small or large areas. Centrally located. Call 7a-5097or 756 9315.

6,000 SQUARE FEET Upstairs downtown Greenville. 5th Street entrance. Call 756-5007.

903 DICKINSON, 2900 square feet. Lease available. Ken Brown. Ken's Furniture. 752 0816._

127

Houses For Rent

HARDEE ACRES 3 bedrooms, fireplace, garage. Low utility bills. *37^ 754 42^5 8fler 6^__

HARDEE ACRES, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, air conditioned, large fenced yard, closed garage. Couples only. Shown by appointment, call 752-2632 evenings.

HOUSE FOR RENT in Greenville Available around September 12 746 3862 or 752 6144

IN AYDEN 2 bedroom house, carpet, heat pump, *295. Also 1 bearoom apartment *145. 746-6394.

2 AND 3 BEDROOM houses Griffon. Phone

in nights

3 BEDROOMS, 1Vi baths, heat pump, garage, lease and deposit. S330-month. Responsible family. 758 3028atter5:30.

3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, nice neighborhood, *350. Call 758 7741 after 5 p.m._

129

Lots For Rent

1 MOBILE HOME lot for rent Lazy L Trailer Park behind Convenient World on Belvoir Highway. *50 a month. 752 4066._

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

MOBILE HOME for rent. Lease and deposit required. No pets. 752 5262 or 752 40M.    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

REPOSSESSED

BRAKE LATHE STAND AND TOOLS

AMMCO Model 4000

Sold New In January Completeijf Reconditioned

Sales Price $3950.00 Lease-PurcTiase $150 per month

Cail

COASTAL LEASING CORP. 756-5991

SPECIAL PURCHASE!

82 Toyota Corollas

Automatic with air condition. ^ to choose from. 7

82 Chevrolet Chevettes

Automatic with air condition. 3 to choose from.

82 Pontiac Grand Prixs, Oldsmobile Cutlasses, and Chevrolet Monte Carlos

to Choose From

53995

From economy to luxury.. .these cars represent an exceptional value.

TOYOTA EAST

Authorized Mercedes-Benz Dealer^ ^  ^

109 Trade Street Greenville, NC 919/756-3228

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

PRIVATE LOT. 2 badrpoms, com pg^ furnished, *175.

p.m.

758 7741

13 X 45. 2 bedrooms, fully furnished and carpefed. Washer, dryer, air. No peta, no children. 754 292?._

12x40 3 BEDROOMS with carpet and air, *150 Also i and 2 bedrooms. *130 and up. Students only. No pets, no children. 758-0745 or 754 949f

2 BEDROOMS, furnished, air. washer, good location. No pets - No children.758 4857._

2 BEDROOM mobile home tor rent on 1 acre lot. East of Greenville. Call 757 6830. 8 to5._

13S Office Space For Rent

DODWNTOWN just off mall. Con venient to courthouse. multiples. 756-0041 or 756

S

les or

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756-7815.

5.000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty of park-

!ng._<;.aM.758 2^d8YV_

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom condominium, oceanfront, families only . 756 4207or 1 726 3869.

CONDO AT ATLANTIC BEACH; 3 bedroom, 3 bath, special weekday rates ot^*70 per night. Oceanside, pool and Jacuzzi, tennis. Call 758-3206 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

ONE BEDROOM condominium, sleeps 4, Oceanfront. Atlantic Beach. August 27-September 3. 355 6023 after 6 p.m'_

138

Rooms For Rent

AIR CONDITIONED room with kitchen privileges for student. <7 block from college. 403 Jarvis Street, 752 3546._

FREE ROOM AND BOARD in exchange for housecleaning and some child care. 355 6179.

NEAR CAMPUS, *85 rent and deposit required. Available Imme diatelv. Can 758 2019.

PRIVATE ROOMS for rent Student or professional person. Private entrance. 756 8785 or 756 7674.

2 FURNISHED ROOMS, *125 a month. Full house privileges. Female only. Prefer serious stu dents. 922 East 14th Street. _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

1 ifppl.iCf's ,int) rtood'.lnvf'-. nccil ciPdninq .illpr ,i h.inl uvmipt , n-.i. Ehmin.ilp ctposolp ,int) mii'.l-y oflof, vWond -iiovp '.ppri.th'.i

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756-912?    756-1007    Niqht-

140

WANTED

RIDE WANTED Student needs ride from Highway 264, PIney Grove Church area to D H Conley High School and back. Will pay *tO per wfk^ill 756 4778 attar ^m.

Sail your utad talavlilon tha CTassiflad wayTCall 753-4144.

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE non smokar naadad to share turnished 2 bedroom townhouse. Approximately *225 month includes everything. Call 756 7582 after 3 p.m

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge. Pool, tennis courts and sauna. Call 756 9491

FEMALE ROOMMATE to share nice 3 bedroom house. ti25 includes all. Call David at 758 0966.

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted Prefer graduate or professional to share 2 bedroom turnished duplex with fireplace, '/i rent and utilities. Call 758 7884 after 4.

FEMALE ROOMMATE needed Stratford Arms Apartments. *142.50 and Vz utilities. (9t9) 347 6687. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom apartment 752 9609._

NEED FEMALE roommate to share 2 bedroom house in Stokes.

Call 752 9564 after 5p m._

ROOAAMATE NEEDED to share 2 bedroom townhouse. Vj rent, utilities: Vi deposit. 756 8153 day,

757 2441 ntoht._

ROOMMATE WANTED for 2 bedroom turnished apartment at Eastbrook. Private room *125 per month, '/ utilities Jeff at 752 5828 before 10:30 a.m. or after 11 p.m. ROOAAAAATE: Separate bedrooms, living room, and bath; share kitch en, laundry facilities and garage; unfurnished, *100 deposit. *%0 per month includes utilities. 756-0433 after 6 p.m._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

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752-1400

SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Oldsmobile Firenza

4 door. Dark blue with' blue velour interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.

1983 Datsun 280-ZX

Red with gray velour interior. T-Tops, Loaded, 7,0(X) miles.

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon

Beige with tan vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo.

1981 Ford Thunderbird

Red with white interior, one owner, loaded.

1981 Olds Omega Brougham

White with blue velour interior, automatic, air condition, stereo with cassette, 28,(XX) miles.

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Dark blue with landau roof, dark blue viriyl interior, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo with tape.    ,

1981 Datsun 210 Wagon

Light brown with light brown vinyl interior, 5 speed, AM-FM radio.

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2 door. Dark blue, beige landau roof, tan vinyl interior, automatic, air, AM-FM stereo, 21 .OCX) miles, one owner.

1980 Pontiac Phoenix

4 d<3or. Gold with tan vinyl interior, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, 42,(XX) miles, nice car.

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4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.

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Gold with tan interior. Automatic transmission, air condition, AM-FM radio, nice car.

1978 Datsun Truck

Short bed, Red with black interior, AM-FM radio, sliding glass window, sport wheels, very nice.

1978 Olds Delta 88 Royale \

4 door. White with blue velour interior, 58,(X)0 miles, one owner, automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks, looks new.

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4 d(3or, Diesel. Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded.

1978 Buick Century Wagon

Blue with blue vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, tilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks.

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1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Waoon .

Burgundy with gray cloth interior, loaded, 7,857 miles.

1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon

Silver with burgundy velour interior. Loaded, 6,307 miles.

1983 Olds Cutlass Brougham

4 door. White with light gray velour interior. Loaded. 3.121 miles.^

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Red with gray velour interior. Loaded, 6,122 miles,

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Brown with woodgrain siding, brown velour interior. Loaded. 4,433 miles.

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142 Roommate Wanted

FEAAALE HOUSE MATE t share 3 bedroom brick home. *tOO plus one half utilities. 10 minutes from Greenville 751 5747 after 6pm

WANTED FEMALE nonsmoking roommate. *70 month plus utilities 757 1175. ^

WANTED; MALE roommate Grad student or professional. *200 month includes all but long distance calls. Deposit required. Call 355-6197 after 6:X)p.m.

YOUNG FEMALE ROOMMATE needed Good responsible peson Room and board free as long as sha is willing to help lake care of household chores. Such as cooking, cleaning, and so forth Call B J Mills. 746-2446.    10 miles from

Greenville, near Black Jack_

$300 AAONTHLY - includes every thing except food and long distance phone calls 752 4176 after 5p.m.

144

Wanted To Buy

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CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

144

Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY pine and narowood timber Pamlico Timber Company. Inc 756 8615. '

146

Wanted To Rent

WANTED TO BUY small air com pressor, IIO volt with storage lank, 7077____

14fl

Wanted To Rent

SINGLE YOUNG visiting professor at ECU seeks to rent quaint apartment or private living quarters. 1 or 2 bedrooms in downtown Greenville Prefers to be in old house or apartment that has some character, possibly with 10 ceilings with or without usable fireplace, tall windows Prospective

HOUSE IN COUNTRY Greenville or Grimesland area Can remodel and do repairs Call 752 7613

HERE'S ALL YOU have to do Call the classified department with your ad tor a still good Hem and you'll make some extra cash' Call 752 6166

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

tenant willing to contribute some ry Ref

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decorating work if necessary erences sup ' fered Call 758 4593

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Due to increased Service Business, we are in need of an ambitious Automotive Mechanics. Must have tools and experience. Excellent commission schedule and benefit package. See Steve Briley, Service Manager 756-11.35.

loe Pecheles Volkswagen, Inc.

le-ntiHe Bitd    I%1135

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OFFICE ACCOUNTANT-BOOKKEEPER

Greenville based general contracting firm has an immediate opening for an experienced office accountant and bookkeeper. Position requires experience with IBM system 34 computer. Send resume to:

Bookkeeper

p/o. Box 1983 Greenville, N.C. 27834

THE

REAL

ESTATE

CORNER

FOR SALE BY OWNER

CHARMING HOME. 3 Bedrooms. 2 baths. 6/10 acre wooded and landscaped corner lot. Fireplace with wood stove Paho. hobby room, 9x10 storage area could be converted"fo office. Large great room with built ms. Williamsburg accents, crown molding, chair railing, many extras    553    jqq

Telephone 752-4162

Three offices and 2 apartments. Assumable loan and owner financing with little down money.

Call Carl at

Darden Realty

758-1983, nights and weekends 758-2230

REDUCED BY OWNER

Recently remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch near Eastern Elementary School and recreational parks m Colonial Heights Beautiful carpet and hardwood floors, large living room, sunny kitchen with plenty of cabinets, dining room. cozy.den with fireplace. Laundry room with storage area, picturesque enclosed back yard with 7 foot naturally weathered fence to give privacy to your i8'x36' inground pool, pool cover, chemicals and seasoned wood for this winter's fires included $59,500!

758-1355 After 9:30 P.M. Sunday Anytime

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Taste Of Space Provided WouM*Be Astronauts

By HOYT HARWELL Associated Press Writer HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) - For Chad Stone, 12, the toughest part of the week was shedding the 25-pound space suit.

I felt like a butterfly trying to get out of a cocoon, said the seventh-grader from Plano.

After Chad and nine other youngsters tried on the space suit, they turned to 10 video screens to work on space mission programming.

Pretty soon I want to be an astronaut or be involved in space, he said. Im especially interested in computers, rocketry and how fuels are used in rockets. Science is neat.

Dr. Wemher von Braun would have approved.

Less than a year before he died in 1976, von Braun, the father of the U.S. space program, conceived of a place where kids could learn about science and space travel. The U.S. Space Camp, located in a 2,500-square foot vinyl tent down the hill from the Alabama Space and Rocket Center, a museum containing items from the nations space progriim, is the result of von Brauns idea.

He asked, Why not have a science camp like others have sports camps? recalled Ed Buckbee, director of the center.

When he was trying to put together his team of rocket experts, it was difficult because not too many people were trained in that area, Buckbee said. He knew that with a second generation of space workers coming along, we must begin thinking about that and preparing people. The space-flying generation is here now.

Every week this summer, lOO youngsters, 12,13 and 14 years old, are spending five days at the Space Camp. By the end of September, 1,400 children from 45 states and six other nations will have experienced weightlessness, built miniature rockets and fired them, run a mock shuttle mission and visited Marshall Space Flight Center.

There are'few lectures. Each weekly group is divided into 10 teams, and a team spends no more than 30 minutes on any one exercise.

Science teachers around the country are regularly sent literature about the camp, which charges a weekly fee of $250.

The camp had 11,000 applications for its second summer, during which Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, was part of the seventh space shuttle crew and the first black astronaut is scheduled to fly aboard the eighth shuttle next week. The first 1,400 children who applied were . accepted; the ratio of girls to boysatthecampisl-to-9.

Id like to be an astronaut or work with the space pro-gram, said Susan Muldowney of Hillsdale, N.J. We talk about different jobs and the different kinds of degrees we will have to get.

Scott Shildt, 12, and his brother Dave, almost 14, are at the camp together. Their parents drove them here from their home in Cyclone, Pa.

Making rockets is the most fun, said Scott, who also had trouble getting into and out of the space suit. It was pretty han because it has tubes in the legs, and it was heavy, he said.

He said he didnt want to

-

WASHINGTON (AP) -The International Trade Commission has ruled that Chinas dumping of printcloth at prices 22.4 percent below the fair market value is hurting the U.S. textile industry.

The decision announced on an unfair-trade practice complaint filed by the American Textile Manufacturers

Institute means that importers of Chinese printcloth will have to pay 22.4 percent penalty duty.

The Commerce Department ruled last month that the cloth was being imported at below-market prices. The ITC was a^ed to determine if the dumping was hurting the U.S. textile industry.'

Is Your     Delivery Okay?

*

We take particular pride in the efficiency of our carriers who deliver the Daily Reflector to your home.

If the daily delivery of your Daily Reflector is less than satisfactory, please tell us about it. Coll our Circulation Deportment and we will do our best to work out the problem.752-3952

Between 8:30 A.M. ond 6:30 P.M. Weekdoys ond 8 'til 9 A.M. on Sundays

be an astronaut, but wanted to learn about the moon and the stars.

I came here because it sounded like a fun place where I could do a lot of things and learn a lot, Scott said. Its more fun than a pony camp 1 went to. Buckbee said he was working on plans for an

advanced camp and for weekend camps throu^outi the year. The goal is to accommodate 10,000 youngsters a year.

Last year, he said, we hadnt thought about the fact that most of the kids here werent born when Neil Armstrong walked on the moon in 1969.

The kids started asking a lot of questions about the moon landing, and we started pumping t more information on that into the program.

One aim of the camp, he said, is to give kids the oppportunity to be around science and technology at a young age and to be exposed

to some unique experiences before they have to make their choice of study in high school.

Dr. von Braun would be particularly pleased with the response the camp has had. The nationwide interest caught us by surprise.

Each team ends its training by simulating a space

flight, with five youngsters in a shuttle cockpit and the other five connected to them by headsets while they operate mission control.

Halfway through the mission, the computer drops a problem on them.

They have to try to solve it. If they do. they land safely. If not. they crash some

where in the ocean.

At graduation, each child gets a certificate and ' Space Camp" wings. Two wfio do exceptional work each week get special awards

The campers. Buckbee said, are highly motivated young people. I think they will do a good job of carrying our flag into space.

SUITED FOR SPACE - Scott Shdt of Cyclone, Pa., wears a 25*pound space suit and stands in front of a model of a lunar lander, part of the equipment of the U.S. Space Camp near Huntsville, Ala. (APLaserphoto)

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Ham Radio Operators Sought To Join ET Search

By D.J. FREDERICK Natl Geographic Newsservice

WASHINGTON - It may take a real ham to get in touch with an E.T.

Ham radio operators are being encouraged to join the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI).

SETl operates on the premise that evidence of intelligence elsewhere in the universe probably will come from radio sisals produced by advanced civilizations.

"We hope to encourage and coordinate a network of small radio telescopes operated by hams that would probe the sky for intelligent signals from space", says Stan Kent, president of the Delta Vee Corporation. Based in San Jose, Calif., the nonprofit organization promotes space exploration and research.

Do-It-Yourself

Most hams already have the technical know-how to put together a SETI system", points out Kent. "The components are all available or can easily be

built and linked together."

NASA scientists at Ames Research Center, near San Jose, helped launch the Delta Vee program by showing how to build the necessary equipment and providing computer programs that will sort out valid incoming signals from false alarms.

Kent hopes the hams will concentrate their efforts on microwave frequencies, the types tht now carry televi-sion and radar transmissions.

If an intelligent civilization 15 light years away picked up the signal from a stray TV broadcast, it just might beam back on the same frequency, he reasons.

John H. Wolfe, program scientist for SETI at Ames, and a former ham operator, is enthusiastic about the program. Its an opportunity for the public to get actively involved in space research. Ultimately, Id like to see the amateur SETI thing mushroom into an international network encompassing hams all around the

world.

NASA has already embarked on its own far-reaching SETI program. Crucial to the initial stage is a multi-channel spectrum analyzer, a device that can scan 74,000 radio frequencies simultaneously for meaningful signals.

Bound for Aricibo

This prototype will be hooked onto NASAs radio telescope at Goldstone, Calif., for testing this fall and will be tried next spring on the worlds largest radio telescope, the 1,000-foot-wide dish at Arecibo, Puerto Rico.

Testing and refining this prototype is expected to take five years so that a much larger and more sophisticated version can be develop^ - one that will scan eight to 10 million frequencies at the same time.

This extraordinary interstellar telephone attachment then will be used to listen for signals and eavesdrop on transmissions that may be going on elsewhere in the universe.

Initially well zero in on quiet, well-behaved, middle-aged stars similar to our sun, says Jill Tarter, an astronomer at the NASA Ames Center.

Life elsewhere may have evolved around such stars just as it did here. Our first target list contains about 800 such suns that are relatively close Ito us.

The NASA search wont of course, be limited to such stars. Large swaths of the sky will be included. Of average size. Earths galaxy, the Milky Way, contains hundreds of billions of stars, and billions of other galaxies of varying sizes fill the universe.    /

Harvard University physicist Paul Horowitz approves of a broad approach. We may have an extremely bri^t civilization in another galaxy or perhaps in a rather obscure place in our own. It would be a shame to miss them because we only looked at nearby sources.

In an Orchard

Supported by the

By Stephanie Maze f 1983 National Geographic Society

The worlds largest radiotelescope at the Arecibo Obser- (SETI). HA.VI radio operators are also being encouraged to vator> in Puerto Rico will soon eavesdrop on the stars in join the SETI program using their own equipment and ad-the first large-scale Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence vanced technology developed by NASA.

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Planetary Society, Horowitz recently began his own SETI endeavor with a radio receiver and an 85-foot antenna that for the next four years will scan 131,072 channels simultaneously. Set in an apple orchard not far from

Boston. Horowitzs receiver wont be able to listen in on other galaxies or very distant stars in our own.

Why would an E.T. want to get in touch with a ham, or an ordinary earthling for that matter?

Im not sure, says Horowitz with a shrug. Its hard to second guess the psychology of these guys when we dont even know whether theyre green and slimy and how many heads they have.

Communication may be a fundamental urge in the Universe. Perhaps theyre interested in the art of Picasso, the music of Bach. There must be some things on Earth that might amuse them.

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r

Navy Tackles Drug And Alcohol Abuse

The Daily Relleclor Greenville N C

By CINDY HUBERT The Arizona Daily Star

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Barbara Hartmann is less eager to join the Navy than a i^ter in her University of Arizona office suggests.

But the work that has placed her right alongside sailors and naval commanders all over the world for

the past 18 months has admittedly been adventurous.

For the past year and a half, Ms. Hartmann has taken a close look into a dark side of Navy life: the problem of alc(^l and drug abuse.

'An assistant professor of family and community med

icine, she designed and directs a University of Arizona program to aid problem drinkers and drug abusers in the Navy.

Hie Navy signed a $7.2 million contract with the university in 1981 to evaluate an existing program to prevent aloriiol abuse, and to tie in a similar program geared

toward drug abuse.

The program, which was previously run by the University of West Florida, has expanded frqm 28 sites to 39 since Arizona took over, Ms. Hartmann said. The number of people employed on the project has grown from 634 to 1,050.

Since October 1981, 73,000

people have graduated from the course Ms. Hartmann designed.Statistics are being compiled now, but Ms. Hartmann said the program was an obvious success.

Ms. Hartmann set out to develop a pro^am to help sailors cope with what she found to be an extremely stressful lifestyle in the

Navy.

There is more demand for precision in the Navy than in any of the other services. she said That, combined with how much time they spend on the ship, detached from their family ... they have an extremely stressful mission.

Many of these Navy tasks are very complex. You cant be stoned on duty. There are too many lives depending on it, she said.

The Navy appears to have a more serious problem with drug and alcohol abuse than other branches of the military, and stress is probably a contributing factor, Ms. Hartmann said.

But unlike the other branches, she said, the Navy is determined to rehabilitate its problem drinkers and drug users rather than immediately discharging them.

They felt that, rather than kick all of the mari-

Wednfbday' Augus! 24 1983, 35

juana users out, they could assign kids to go to a course, to try to get at the problem through a more enlightened approach."

The program in place before the university took over was based on the idea that actions are controlled by feelings. Ms. Hartmann said. She switched the focus.

Help keep Greenville clean' Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 752-4137 for more information.

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35 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C

Wednesday. August 24. 1983_

Votes Cast

In Congress

Roll Call Report Service

WASHINGTON -Heres how area members of Congress were recorded on major roll call votes in the days before the current summer recess.

HOUSE

RIGHTS By a vote of 286 for and 128 against, the House adopted an amendment providing that a member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission can be removed by a president only for neglect of duty or malfeasance in office.

This six commissioners presently serve open-ended terms and the law specifies no basis for removal. President Reagan's recent dismissal of three members prompted this amendment, which was attached to legislation extending the life of the commission. The bill (HR 2230) was sent to the Senate.

Supporter Peter Rodino, D-N.J., said the amendment would thwart a president who might willy-nilly remove someone because he disagreed with them on civil rights issues.

Opponent James Sensenbrenner, R-Wisc., called the meausre an infringement on executive' power than any president... would not put up with.

Members voting yes wanted to make it more difficult for a president to remove a civil rights commissioner.

NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: Walter Jones, D-1, Tim Valentine, D-2, Charles Whitley, D-3, Ike Andrews, D-4, Stephen Neal, D-5, Charles Britt, D-6, Charles Rose, D-7, W.G. Hefner, D-8, James Broyhill, R-10, James Clarke, D-11.

Voting no: James Mar-" tin, R-9.

Not voting: None.

WASTE The House adoptedi 236 for and 180 against, an amendment to increase federal regulation of hundreds of thousands of small businesses that produce hazardous waste.

The amendment re-quired businesses generating at least 25 kilograms of such waste per month to report to the government and tell the hauler that the material is hazardous. The goal is to bring about safe disposal of the toxic waste.

It replaced language in HR 2867 setting the reporting threshold at 100 kilograms per month. The still-pending bill is a rewrite of the basic hazardous waste law.

Supporter Ron Wyden, R-Ore.. said that absent any simple notification requirements the horror stories of explosions, fires, acid spills and water contamination in ordinary sanitary landfills will continue.

Opponent Richard Shelby, D-Ala., said the requirements will be im-x)ssible to enforce and is ikely to cause illegal dumping to such a degree as this country has never experienced."

Members voting yes wanted to increase the number of small business subjected to hazardous waste reporting requirements.

NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: Walter Jones, Neal, James Martin, Clarke.

Voting no: Valentine, Whitley, Ike Andrews, Britt, Rose, Hefner, Broyhill.

Not voting: None.

BENEFITS The House passed, 338 for and 84 against, and sent to the Senate a bill (HR 3409) whose effect is to provide at least a few more weeks of jobless pay in states where the economy is improving.

At issue was a special category of unemployment pay, known as Federal Supplemental' Compensation (FSC), that Toes to individuals whose )asic eligibility for state and federal unemployment compensation has expired.

Many states are to be dropped from FSC eligibility as the economy brightens. However, an

ror by the Labor D/epartment in ad

ministering the program created confusion as to when FSC money will stop flowing. This bill guarantees that affected states will get at least four more weeks of payments.

Support Olympia Snowe, R-Me., said the bill clarifies the intent of Congress regarding the current extension of longterm unemployment benefits.

Opponent Bill Frenzel, R-Minn., said it was wrong for Congress to legitimize a bureaucratic error and spend a couple of hundred million dollars jroviding these extra )enefits to which no one is entitled under the law. Members voting yes want more jobless benefits to be provided under the FSC program.

NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: Walter Jones, Valentine, Whitley, Ike Andrews, Neal, Britt, Hefner, James Martin, Broyhill, Clarke.

Voting no: None.

Not voting: Rose.

SENATE BAILOUT By, a vote of 40 for and 57 against, the Senate refused to block by parliamentary means a planned federal bailout of the Washington Public Power Supply System (WPPSS).

The main issue is whether to create a federal lending autljority to save the system, which has been called Whoops following its default on $2.25 billion in bonds for construction of two of five planned nuclear poer plants in the Pacific Northwest.

The question at hand was whether the bailout could be offered as a rider to a pending appropriations bill (HR 3363). This vote reversed a )arliamentary ruling that jlocked consideration. The final outcome is to be determined after the sum

mer recess.

Senators disagree over whether the new authority would risk taxpayers dollars.

Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wisc., who voted to block consideration of the legislation, called it his duty...to insist that we will not act further on this bill, which can involve a $7.2 billion obligation from the federal government. Sen. James McClure, R-Jdaho, sponsor of the legislation, said zero, not one penny of U.S. Treasury funds would be risked because the new lending authority would be backed by ratepayers and the Bonneville Power Administration.

Senators voting no wanted the Senate to consider the bailout measure.

John East, R, voted no. Jesse Helsm, R, voted

yes.

Set Goals For

Saturday Rally

WASHINGTON (AP) -Organizers of Saturdays 20th anniversary March on Washington say the rally will focus on urging Congress to cut defense spending and create jobs and worker retraining programs.

The groups legislative priorities were announced by Walter E. Fauntroy, the District of Columbias nonvoting delegate to Congress who is the national director of the march.

Fauntroy said the organizers of the march for jobs, peace and freedom also support a freeze on nuclear weapons, an equal rights amendment to the U.S. Constitution and improvements in the Fair Housing Act of 1968.

The march will coincide with the 20th anniversary of the famous March on Washington when the late Martin Luther King Jr. made his I have a dream speech.

HEEDEDTHREAT SANTO ONOFRIO, Italy (AP) - The Christian Democrat of this Calabrian village resigned Monday after receiving Mafia threats to resign or your house and your family will be blown up.

SUPER MARKETS, INC.

"Where Shopping Is A Pleasure

9liilf|liHKiylMl

We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities None Sold To Dealers Or Restaurants We Accept Food Stamps And WIC Vouchers IPRICES 0000 WED. THRU SAT.

* OMINVIUi-ATDCM-MTHCL-TAfltOIIO

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SNACK

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49

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PORK

CHOPS

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99*

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^^C    MERICO BUnER-ME-NOT

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HOMOGENIZED 9.5 OZ.

BISCUITS

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ORANGE JUICE





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CHAMOAl 10 GENERIC

TOWELS JUMBO ROLL

59

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18 OZ.

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PURITAN OIL

38 OZ.

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59

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99*

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PARADE FROZEN VEGETABLE SAL

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PARADE CUT YEUOW CORN... i6 oz PV

PARADE FROZEN VEGETABLE SALE    \    A    AC

PARADE BABY LIMAS....... .uoz 0

PARADE FROZEN    M    IS    1    00

LEMONADE CONCENTRATE... 60z 5/^ 1

JUNGLE TRAINING - A group of Brazilian soldiers pose in the Amazon jungle during a five^ay training session in an almost inaccessible part of the jungle. They are given the barest necessities, but no food; and are told to survive on what nature provides - monkeys, alligators, leaves and roots. (APLaserphoto)

DEEDS

Mattie M. Britton TO Garry Scott Bacon al5.00 Andrew Michael Chused al TO Helen Murray Weaver NS Andrew Michael Chused al TO Andrew Michael Chused alNS

Solon Russell Cotton Jr. al TO Henry M. Walker II al 46.50

Mont D. Gaylord To Edwin C. Bartlett al 125.00 Michael Eric Gilstrap al TO David Oakman Patton al

48.00

Greenbrier Realty Co. Inc. TO Lee F. Ball al 17.00 Marcelen Stocks Harris al TO Lionel R. Carney al 38.00 James Carroll Jones al TO Marvin A. Langley al 12.00 Stanley Peaden Builders Inc. TO Charles G. Hucknall al8.00

Preferred Properties of Grvl. Inc. TO R.C. Waters Jr. al 16.00 George Sutton al TO David Lee Crandle 26.50 Lula Mae Sutton TO Cherly S.MillsalNS Vanrack Inc. TO Joseph Burwood Harris al 54.00 ^Ruby S. Whichard TO Tiubert Elton Bland Jr. al

51.00

Loyd Howard Ange al TO AlgieD. Hicks al 25.50 H. L. Austin al TO Jack P. Morgan al 85.00 Jonathan David Baker TO Gloria Kay Baker NS Bowser Const. Co. Inc. TO Jimmie Richard Grimsley al

94.00

James Leon Bullock al To Bullock Properties Ltd. NS Cannon Court Apt. Group TO John B. Chenault al 41.00 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO Randy D. Doub 48.00 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO Rondy Bennett al 54.50 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO The Evans Co. of Grvl. Inc.NS Donald Thomas Dunlap Jr. al TO James F. White al

94.00

Eastern Carolina Coca Cola Bottling Co. Inc. TO The Medical Foundation of ECU Inc.NS Brenda B. Evans al TO Richard C. Green al 54.50 Willard A. Fraley al TO Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc.NS Fuifprd, Hardee & Parrott to Jerry P. Fulford al NS Mont. D. Gaylord TO Verna M. Faulkner 55.00 Sandra Lassiter Jones al TO Debra Cornelious Lovett

12.00

Ricky H. Parrish al TO Merrill Lynch Relocation Management Inc. NS Merrill Lynch Relocation Management Inc. TO Jay D. Hansen al 57.00 Medical Foundation of ECU Inc. TO Geor^ Tzurdis 50.00

Floyd Thomas al TO William Edward Shackleford al .50

Tucker Farms Inc. TO Bobby J. Dixon 47.00 Ruth B. Venters TO ! William Thomas Venters al NS

Orman E. Whichard al TO Grady Don Gaskins al 6.00 Ray M. Whittington al To \\. 'Rington Inc. 47.50 ' John Emmette Williams al TO David G. Vaughan 14.00

W.R. Williams al TO Paul A. Snider al 78.50 Sycamore Hill Baptist Church TO John E. Barnes NS

S.G.CobbalTO William R. Brown NS John Allen Forsythe al TO James H. Braxton al 45.50 Betty Alloy Herring Cecil Neal Herring alNS H ignite Builders TO Colin Keith McDuffyal 36.00 D.T. Jones Jr. al TO Willia, A. Mizell al NS Stanley Peaden Builders Inc. TO James W. Flake al 10.00

Jane C. Schwarz TO Donald Thomas Dunlap Jr.

71.50

F.L. Blount Jr. al TO Blount Brothers of Pitt Co. Inc.Ns William G. Blount al TO L,E . Tipton al 14.00 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO L.E. Tipton al 17.00 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc, TO Ralph C. Tucker alNS Stanley Peaden Builders Inc. To John M. Bragg al 10,00

Preferred Properties of Grvl. Inc. TO Pearl F. Seymour 56.00 John M. Sharpe al TO William L. Carter al 25.00 Greenridge Development Co. TO Tar River Realty & Const. Co. Inc. 9.00 Greenridge Development Co. TO David L. Holland al 10.00

Gene L. Lewis To Shirley T.Lazzarino 53.00 Daniel R. Morgan TO Paul R, G. Cunningham MD PA, 11,00

Mary Alite Garrett Murrell TO Gregory' W Carter a'l

27.50

Clifton E, OGeary al TO James Edward OConnor Jr.

25.00

Thomas R. Oglesby Jr. al TO Kenneth K. Dews Jr.

16.00

Margaret N. Raynor al TO John W. Nelson Jr. al NS Julian W. Rawl al TO Jan R.Sivlermanal98.50

Protest Banning Writers' Union

WASHINGTON (AP) - A statement protesting Polands decision to ban the Union of Polish Writers has been sent to Polish authorities by four U.S. organizations that represent 75,000 journalists, writers and poets.

The statement, which was sent to Wojciech Jaruzelski. head of the Polish gov-ernment and Jan Szczepanski, president of the now-banned writers union.

, called the ban an "arbitrary decree that amounts to a direct attack on the rights of all Polish people.

The statement was signed by The Newspaper Guild (AFL-CIO); Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists; the National Writers Union; and the Committee for Protection of Journalists.    u





2g The Daily Reflector. Greenville N u

Wednesaay, Mugusl 24,

Teacher; 97, Unworried

SAVE UP TO 20* PER LOAF

SAVE UP TO 68* PER BAG

SAVE $1.22 PER CTN.W

Jane Parker Bread I Dixie Crystals Sugar I BreyerS c'elm

By Critics

WHITE

ByJOHNPLATRO Associated Press Writer

MIAMI (AP) - The fresh rush of concern for American education, with accompanying calls for better teachers, doesn't worry Dr. Laura Cushman. At 97, and after 70 years of teaching, shes heard her share of criticism.

On the^ whole, she says, teachere are better now. They know more about children and what to reach for.

As for the kids, "I cant say whether children are sniarter now than they were 50 years ago, but todays children know how to use what they have better.

Laura Cushman arrived in Miami in 1913, strai^t out of teachers college in Iowa. She first taught kindergarten and home economics. Nine years later, she opened the forerunner of The Cushman School, which has become the areas oldest private grade school, and initiated teaching practices there that the times have only recently caught up with.

Locat^ on a U-shaped street not far from downtown Miami, the Spanish-style, two-story stucco schoolhouse has changed little since it was built in 1924.

The original hardwood floors glisten and much of the schools original furniture is still in use. High ceilings, plenty of screens on the big windows and ceiling fans have made air-conditioning unnecessary. An old school bell still rings each day.

Dr. Cushmans philosophy of teaching has not been changed here over the years, says the schools principal. Dr. Joan Lutton. The No. 1 priority here is character develc^ent. Being a good student is a fringe benefit of good character. Cushman School produces solid citizens.

Teaching practices started by Miss Cushman and currently in use in many schools include coitract teaching, which deals with teachier-student planning for learning goals, and study centers, in which pupils work together on reading and science projects.

' Besides the 10 classrooms, there also are music, art and computer rooms. All children, including those in kindergarten, learn Spanish. There are monthly plays and two large productions each year with every pupil participating.

I wanted children to have , everything, recalls Miss Cushman, who still lives in a house her father built about four blocks from the school. My motive was not only to educate them, but to teach them music, art and physicai education.

The Cushman School got its start when Miamis population surged from 6,000 to 30,000 people after World War I. Faced with overcrowded schools and a strained budget, Dade County officials decided in 1922 to do away with kindergartens.

Miss Cushman, already a power in local education, resigned her job and set up school on her front porch. It was called the Park Primary School. Her first class had 12 pupils.

Enough children attended the following year that she could move the school off the porch and into three open-air shacks, says Mrs. Lutton. This became The Cushman School. Parents paid $20 a month for each child. Teachers earned $125 a month. In 1924, the school was moved to its current building.

1 lb. loaf

PURE CANE

Two

5 lb. bag

ALL NATURAL

Limit

One

V2 gal. ctn.

Limit

E<ch of Ihtst dvrti*d iltms it rquirtd lo b rtadily avoiabi* talc ft or below the advcrlitcd pncc m each A&P Store eicepl at tpeciiically noted m thit ad

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U

DOUBLE

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., AUG. 27 AT AAP GREENVILLE. N.C. ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS

SAVE

FOR IVERY $10.00 YOU SPENO, WE WIU DOUBLE ^O.S COUPOMS.

EXAMPLE: $10.00 PURCHASE = 5 COUPORS $20.00 PURCHASE = 10 COUPONS; $100.00 PURCHASE = 50 AND SO ON! ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VAUIE!

Fresh With Quality

White Potatoes

JUMBO

U.S. #1

5 1b.

bag

WA III MU liUr' each

* NoneydeiB

SAVE 40

Yellow Onions

ZESTY

31b.

bag

99

0

;.*k

Mat

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CT Produce Specils^

99*

CEE Produce Specials ^

CEE Produce Specials ^

SNOW WHITE

Cauliflower

LARGE CRISP

Apresh

each

bunch

SUNNYSLOPE

w**

Broccoli jTh 99 ^ Nectarines

Dairy Specials^^ ^P Frozen Specials^ V"

WASHINGTON STATE    C!

Bartlett Pears ib

GREEN ONIONS (BUNCH) CUCUMBERS OR

Green

Household

Specials^^

Peppers

bCrocery Specials^ s.

SAVE 38

Margarine Qtrs.

SAVE 40*

Pepperoni Pizza

SAVE 10

SAVE 40

Paper Towels I Coca-Cola

KRAFT PARKAY

STUFFER

CORONET ASSORTED

DIET COKE-SPRITE-TAB

Deluxe <159

12.3 oz.

Sausage 39

12.3 oz.

11.25 oz.

2 .69

99

110 CL pkg.

99

CP^ Dairy Specials"")    Frozen    Special^

AUbl BAAE

1*

REGULAR RIPPLE

Ann Page

GOOD ONLY IN

i|C

Potato Chips

GREENVILLE. N.C.

8OZ.

pkg.

79

FLAV-O-RICH REGULAR LIGHT

Cottage Cheese 69*

ANN PAGE

Ice Milk Bars

12 ct.

pkg.

KRAR SUCES

Vlveeta Cheese X

PLAIN-RAISIN & HONEY

SEALTEST

Sour Cream

PILLSBURY BIG COUNTRY

Buttermilk Biscuits

16 oz. ctn.

260Z.

cans

Lenders Bagels ^ 69*

LACREME    OOfi

Whipped Topping (Kr

STOUFFER    449

Lasagna X

KELLOQQS SUGAR CORN POPS 15 OZ. 1.79 APPLE JACKS 11 OZ. 1.49 OR^

Sugar Frosted Flakes

DAWN FRESH

99*

69*

Orange Juice Tf99*

Pizza K 99* Morton BoiMn-Bag 2

( P iarocery Specials ) P Grocery Specials ^

DONALD DUCK PINK

Grapefruit Juice 49^ 99^ Apple Juice It Applesauce

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ASP CHILLED

FROZEN

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QUAKER

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KRAFT    ANN PAGE CUT

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PACKER LABEL

Tomatoes

64 oz.

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oz.

cans

Grape Jelly i.r

SUPERMAN CREAMY CRUNCHY

Peanut Butter

415V4 0Z. cans

leoz.

I

O 16

W Cl

OZ.

cans

88*

NEW SQUEEZABLE BOTTLE

Heinz Ketchup

26 oz. btt.

AAP DINNER

Macaroni & Cheese ^

F

F

F

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100

PR RITZ

Miss Cushman said she always intended that her school be accessible to all economic groups. That policy remains unchanged.

|j!Pie Shells

12 oz. pkg.

DOWNY FUKE

Jumbo

Waffles

12 OZ. pkg.

79*

MT.OUVE

REGULAR DIR

Salad

Cuhes

12 oz. 1

79*a'* ,.79*

We have 22 youngsters on scholarship and theres no endowment, Mrs. Lutton explains. In some cases we use the barter system. Perhaps the father can do some painting or the nwther can help out in the office.... We know theyll pay us when they can.

Morton DinnersT Orange Juice

BUDWEISER BEER BUDWEISER LIGHT BEER

CHICKEN MEAr LOAF SALIS STEAK TURKEY

FLORIDAGOLD FLORIDA FROZEN

Through the second grade, classes are limited to 15 children per teacher. After that the limit is 20 to 1. The Cushman School now has 22 teachers and 175 pupils. No letter grades are given until the fourth grade, and Miss Cushman has never had a chaiif or desk bolted to the floor

11 OZ. pkg.

16 oz.

can

129

M

12oz. can carton

I

I

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GOOD ONL Y IN GREENVILLE. N C

Masson Light

Wine

1 ' z litre bottle

459

GOOD ONLY IN GREENVILLE

^ 703 Greenville Boulevard Greenville Square Shopping Center Qreenviile, N.C.

f    tf    .    '





SAVE UP TO 30* PER CAM

SAVE 30 PER CAN

The Daily Retlector, Greenville. N C

SAVE 11* PER PKG.I

Orange Juice I Star-Kist Tuna I Krispy Crackers

MINUTE MAID FROZEN

LIMIT ONE

IN OIL IN WATER

^ 6V2 OZ.

^ can

LIMIT TWO

59

SUNSHINE

m 16 02.

pkg.

LIMIT TWO

58

COUPONS

Between now and Aug. 27, we will redeem national manufacturers cents-off coupons up to 50* for double their value. Offer good on national manufacturers cents-off coupons only. (Food retailer coupons not accepted.) Customer must purchase coupon product in specified stzO. Expired coupons will not be honored. One coupon per customer per Item. No coupons accepted for free merchandise. Offer does not apply to A&P or other store coupons whether manufacturer Is mentioned or Dt When the value of the coupon exceeds 50* or me retail of the item, this of

limited to the retail price.

SAVE $1.00 LB

Round Roast

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless

Bottom

199

Saings are Great with AGt DOUBLE SmUGS COUPON

7

MFCS

COUPON

MFC CENTS OFF

ASP AOOED CENTS OFF

TOTAL COUPON AT ASP

COUPON A

25*

25*

50*

COUPON B

18*

18*

36*

COUPON C

50*

50*

$1.00

COUPON D

75*

25*

$1.00

SAVE 40*

Pork Roast

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM

Boston

Butt

lb.

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

Rib Eye Steak

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

Shoulder Steak

lb.

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF Bone

In lb.

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

Eye Of Round Roast

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless

Rump Roast

d

lb.

0)KP!ESB

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF    OCX)

Cubed Steak    >b    L

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF    40Q

Ground Round    ^    1

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

Chuck Steak    <b    1

Round Steak

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

m BQ U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH

4^ Box-O-Chicken 1 Livers Or Gizzards

AM U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH

I Fryer Leg Quarters

gMQ U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Z Ibrkey Breast d

lb.

lb.

lb.

lb.

A&P QUALITY    I

F Ocean Perch Fillet

A&P QUALITY

P Fish Sandwich Portion

59^ Dressed Flounder ib

PA4P0UAUTV

Pork Neck Bones .b 49^

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM

Pork Steak

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM

Pork Spare Ribs

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM

Ve Pork Loin

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM

Pork Roast

lb.

Country

Style

Ib.

Ib.

Rib

End

Ib.

1

F

89

Varlaty Shop Specials ^

O)

VALLEYDALE

liced Bacon b 1

'RMEL SLICED

ookedHam x 99^^

LMADGE CHICKEN

'anks Or Bologna 'p\g 79

Meat Franks

Variety Shop

Specials

Sliced Bacon b

HORMEL SLICED

Cooked Ham x

TALMADGE CHICKEN

Franks Or Bologna 'p\g

O)

SMOKY CANYON BONELESS    M

Turkey Ham m 1

OLD FARM    AQQ

Smoked Sausage pkg. U

A&P SLICED    ^ 4IQ

Meat Bologna I

Poik Sausage

O)

Country Kitchen Deli Specials

ARMOUR

A&P QUALITY

Boneless

Bottom

12 OZ. pkg.

CREAMY    QQA

Macaroni Salad b 00

12 PIECE BUCKET6 ROLLS AND 2 LBS POTATO SALAD OR SLAW FREE.

Fried Chicken on>; I

LORRAINE    OfiQ

Swiss Cheese <b u

BUY ONE POUND OF TURKEY BREAST AT REGULAR RETAIL (LB. 4.39) AND RECEIVE HALF POUND TURKEY BREAST

FREE!

CEE Grocery Specials ^ ( Pi^^Household Special^ (

Chatham^ X 99^

General Merchandise  Specials

CORONET PRINT    AA|    AAl

Bath Tissue X! 95 Freezer Containers X 99

RUBBERMAID (TWIN PACK)

DCEE

Health & Beauty Aids \ "'f Specials Jk

BEEF CHUNKS    BRAND    RUBBERMAID (TWIN PACK)

Alpe Dog Food 2 ^    7    Sandwich    Bags ^ 09^    Ice Cube Trays

A&P BRAND    COOLER

Ttash Bags    X    99^    Lil Plapate

A&P BRAND    FOLEY ASSORTED

Garbage Bags    X:    Kitchen Tools

EX. ABSORBENT (5.99) OVERNIGHT    000    OCEDAR SMALL

A&P Diapers    X    0    Angler Broom

ASSORTED FLAVORS    400

Bright Eyes m 4    1

CANNED    5

Pointer Dog Food

|59

15'Aoz.

cane

DOW 16 OZ. CAN

1

Oven Cleaner

IS* OFF LABEL    AAd^

Downy.^ 'V X 99^ Sunlight

2ct.

pkg.

each

only

10

25* OFF LABEL SUPER HOLD

Miss Breck ^

CUTEX (REGULAR LEMON)

Polish Remover

A&P BRAND

Alcohol

, For

each

only

399

1 Peroxide

Aoq

3^ Maxi-Pads

A&P BRAND

20* OFF LABEL

gg-iA ,10W40 MOTOR OIL    KOTEX DEODORANT REGULAR

1 Gulfpride Prenfuffl X 89^ Lightdays Pads

DM

Detergent

22 OZ. bU.

9oz.

can

4oz.

btl.

16 OZ. btla.

16 OZ. btis.

12 ct. box

30 ct. pkg.

Comet Cleanser

CLEANER

Spic & Span

BUY 3 GET ONE FREE

A&P BRAND

11/Dial ^    4    ^19    ^    Charcoal

Bar Soap

3'/iOZ.

bare

iinqaw    _

tali Briquets

10 lb. bag

69

VIDAL SASSOON

Shampoo Or Conditioner

80Z.

btl.

25' OFF LABEL

.179 Wisk Detergent! Tide Drtergent

I    HEAVY    DUTY    I

Iw ^ca

Pepsodent Toothpaste

30' OFF LABEL

You Pay Only

ALL PURPOSE 25= OFF LABEL    You    Pay Only

Mr. Clean 179||1', Cleaner r I

c

^You Pay Only

1 84 OZ. box

T

Open 24 Hours A Day Monday 7:00 A.M. to Saturday 12 Midnight Open Sunday 7:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.

1  ^

T

Wednesday. AugusI 24. 1963    39

Nw British Crooks Are 'Baffling'

ByEDBLANCHE Associated Press Writer

LONDON (AP) - A cat burglar suspected of stealing antiques and art treasures worth $1.48 million from stately homes is one of a new generation of British criminals who in recent months have pulled off a string of big robberies that have baffled police.

Over the last five months, the cat burglar dubbed Raffles by tabloids after the gentleman crook of fiction, and other bandits have stolen jewels, gold, cash and art works worth an estimated $22 million.

So far, Scotland Yards famed sleuths and other detective squads have failed to track them down, despite hefty rewards When Raffles struck May 18 at Waddesdon Manor, a national trust estate west of London, he scaled a tower, slid down a rope ladder to a first-floor window, snaked over a pressure-pad alarm on the sill and snatched 25 antique gem-studded gold snuffboxes and jewelry worth $740,000.^,,

He triggers an alarm inside dhe room, but when police raced up four minutes later Raffles had vanished.

Detective Chief Insp. Phil Thomas of Thames Valley police said the robbery was a brilliantly executed crime. Police suspect Raffles may be responsible for up to 20 large burglaries.

Most of the big heists have taken place in London. Scotland Yard, headquarters of the capitals Metropolitan Police, is faced with six armed robberies a day, twice as many as in the rest of England and Wales combined.

There were 1,772 hold-ups in London last year. A de-cade ago the total was 380; in I 1%2 there were 62.

The robbers haul last year totalled 12 million pounds (now worth $17.76 million). But the toot from major hold-ups so far this year already exceeds that total. Among the major heists:

- Three armed, hooded bandits handcuffed and gagged five clerks in a London bank Aug. 8 as they arrived for work, forced them to hand over the safe keys, stole 70,000 pounds ($103,600) and locked the bank doors when they fled. Armed policemen in flak jackets arrived 20 minutes later.    '

- Five gunnien wearing monkey niasks scooped up gems and coronets worth $8.9 million June 20 from a store in Londons Mayfair district after a gang member gained entry through an electronically controlled dwr by posing as a customer.

- Four con men got away with 2,500 gold Krugerrand coins worth $1.2 million June

after tricking bullion dealers with forged credentials. One gang member cut telephone cables in Londons Islington district and tapped into the system to intercept dealers calls to the gangs phony business front.

- Fourteen gunmen scaled walls around the London headquarters of Security Express, overpowered guards and looted vaults packed with untraceable banknotes. They drove off with what one detective termed "a mountain of money valued at $10.36 million.

Scotland Yard has reorganized its crime-busting force, including breaking up the legendary Flying Squad into divisional units around London in hopes of countering the new breed of criminal.

In the old days, the big gang bosses all hung out in the East End or Soho (Londons red light district), said Cmdr. Frank Cater, onetime head of the Flying Squad and now leader of the newly formed Robbery Squad at the Yard.

Now everyones a specialist. The head man calls them in for specific jobs and after its over they all go their separate ways. It, makes detection very difficult.

The Mets new chief. Sir Kenneth Newkan, has reorganized the Yards resources on criminal intelligence-gathering, target-ting known crime tsars for day-and-night surveillance.

But Newmans strategy has yielded few results. No one has yet been arrested for any of tlw recent hold-ups.

1

69*

1**

1

99*

179

99

)

i





40 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C_Wednesday.    August    24.1983

WELCOME BACK ECU

pppcpupoNiiififr^ P!^^??icoupoNi!ifnir?|

ovERTors ExnnsKun WEHM ^ TO AU simDirs mo fuuity. COMELSEEUS!

Riper

'Kwds

GENERIC PAPER TOWaS

3/99* I

ROLL

With this coupon and $10.00 food order m* excluding advertised Hems. WHhout coupon 2/SI.00. Limit 3 rolls per , customer. Expires 0-27-03.

* >    A

SHEDDS MARGARINE

LB. PKG.

FREE!

WHh this coupon and $10.00 food order excluding advarlle-ed Hems. WHhout Coupon 34*. LiniH one per customer. Ex- piras 0-27-03.    .

OVERTONS FINEST HEAVY WESTERN

SIRLOIN STEAKS

mmmiiffvXit

FAB KIERGENT

99*

GIANT

BOX

With this coupon and $10.00 food order excluding advertised Hams. * Without coupon $1.99. Limil one.I^ per customer. Expires 0-27-03.

TmiiiiiiWiiiHtrau

PEANUT CITY SMOKED

COUNTRY HAMS

$

GLENN PARK    _    _

APPLE SAUCE

I PEIFOnSKCIlLS ^

BEVERAGE SPECIALS

K-HUFFN PUFF

BUDWEISER LIGHT OR

SCAT

food

^5P1

BUOWEISER CAoq-

^BEER........Z

S' KE7R-RATI0N ORIGINAL FLAVOR

REGULAR OR DIET " ^

SDOG

Ifood

PURINA

DR. PEPPER 59^ JTP -.orcs 1 :

DOG 49 CHOW r 3

WHITE HOUSE :

APPLE ^ JUICE............09 ^

1 ^

rTAR KIST (IN OIL)

TUNA........

KRAFT REDUCED CALORIE FRENCH, ITALIAN, CATALINA, THOUSAND ISLAND

SALAD DRESSING..

8 OZ. BOHLE

69

DEL MONTE GOLDEN    />    AA    mr^,~Tummmmmia^fSmir    !

BANANAS, . JJVj. PJS.ER jOWELS......

FRESH WHOLE

THOMPSON WHITE

SEEDLESS GRAPES

1/2 GALLON PAPER CARTON

fe*

COCA-COLA

NO LIMIT!

2 LITER BOTTLE

EACH





12* Diagonal Black & White Portable TV

100% solid State chassis; quick-start picture. Reference Price $a95. 54446

With chain brake; automatic and manual chain oiling. Ref. Price $139S9. 91611

Save $21 On 32* Aluminum Storm Door

^39^3.2

Regular $60.99. With slide-up safety glass panel. Deluxe latch

Apply today for your Lowes Credit Card! It s the handy card for handy people... like vou . (>bu may also receive instant credit on your new LowesCard when you

A ----      wiTOuwiijwi in*wun*V9V/aiuiTiiOM]

4 ways lOCnarge!    presentoneofthemajorcardsatleft.)

InauMIng

Piodudal

Louie's

Your Household Word

i*!',

>    '\V

4* Corrugated Plastic Drain Pipe

20k.

Good flexibility. For tbing projects. Price 294. 24112

1983 Lowes Companies, Inc.

August (080)3





^ Exterior fx-Up

i

Save 10%! Countryside Lap Siding

Tsxtured surface

Takes paint or stain

Dent resistant

Rm. $9.99. Durable. 12" vyide panels create the look of 4" planks. Wont crack or chip. Hardboard. #15611

4'x8'VOroove

Hardboard

Siding

$1299

Reg. $13.99. Shiplap edges for weather-tight fit. Primed and ready for paint or stain. Save now! #1^

2V^1 Lb. Box Galvanized Siding Nails 99$

Reg. $1.39. Save 28%l #69200

%"x4'x8' Reverse Board & Batten Pine Siding

$1499

12" on center design. Great looking - can be used inside as well as outside. Paint or stain.

Ref. Price $21.49. #12936

lOVsar Exterior Oil House Paint... . vom

Reg. $19.99. Glossy, oil based paint in white only. Warranted 1-coat coverage.

Fade & chalk resistant. House & trim. #49358

Solid Color

Acrylic Latex Stain' w* M Gallon

Hides color and grain of wood. Easy to clean up with water. Fast-drying. Available in many colors. Ref. Price $16.95. #46251-84

Enterprises Best Natural Wood Preservative 99

Gallon

Rag. $12.99. Tung oil modified. Prevents wood from mildew. 4S86i

4-Year

Latex Rat White Exterior House Paint

199

Gallon

Reg. $11J9. Economical, quality paint. In white only. #48534

Can Your Roof Stand Up To The Weather And Still Look Good?

If your answer is no, then its time for a new roof. Lowes is the answer to ail of your roofng problems. With quality, famous brand name roofing in asphalt & fiberglass. And felt based shingles. Stop by today!...

A. Silln Can Fibered Roof Coating Reg. $13.99. Resurface asphalt roofing. #10324

a 5-Gallon Aluminum Roof Coating......

Reg. $32.99. Protects for longer use. #10325

3'64UmI Lauan Door

3'Jailhouse Exterior Door

2'8" 6-Panel Steel Door Unit

2'8*x6'8* Screen Door

$5499    $5499    $12499    $2|99

C. Mial. PlatUc Roof Cament.. $2.99

Reg. $4.49. Seals around chimneys, etc. #10320

Reg. $79J9. Exterior colonial style door. Save $25001 #10581

Reg. $8900. Wrought iron grill accent.

Save $2401! #10583

Reg. $134.99. Right or lefthand installation. $10 Savings! #14044,5

Reg. $2890. Unfinished 4-panel screen door. Save $7XX)I #11192

SaMSISOI 8-Foot FRMigiassPHMl..

SBrasassB'

.99

Heavy felt base coated with asphalt. About 400 square feet. Ref. Price $1299. #10306

4-SquiRoll #1SRoofli

A.Save$25!

6'Insulated Patio Door

$14099

Rag. $mj|L Double pane, insulated ^sliding glass door. Features bail bearingroNere&satoty lock. #13017

aSaweiaiBronzteor MHIPMio Door Screen

^23*

Raguler $28.91. #1300^12992

I





i

i)

Helpful AcM-Ons

(i

APnctca! Remodeling IdeaThat Can Be Used Inside A Out

4' Economy, Ornamental Iron Railing

$^49

4'8rtk)n Adjustable. For use inside or out. Reference Price $639. #14215

Our Best 4' Supreme"

Iron Railing

$799

# 4' Section Features thicker & stronger rails. Reference Price $8.99. #14205

Decorative 2-Scroll 8' Flat Iron Column

S||99

Reference Price $1199. #14261

WWIJirWffSl

nttmiddaeay.

Commpnhcut.

3-Step TVeated Lumber Stair Stringer

$599

V Each

Reference Price $6.99. #04578

4-Step Stringer #04579    $8.99    Each

5-Step Stringer #04580......$10.99    Each

X 12"x 36" Tread #04582.. $3.99 Each

6-Fbot-Wide

Green Carpet TUrf Tb un.Ft.*

Weather resistant. Ref. Price $209. #15262

6-Rx)t-Wide

Cocoa Carpet Trf..... a Lin. Ft.*

Wont mildew. Ref. Price $3S9. #15258

12'-Wide Cushion-Back </|99 Green Bent Trf Carpet . sq. Yd.

Limited warranty. Ref. Price $6.99. #15283

Save$4l2-R)ot Interior Door Unit

Save $4! 2-Foot Flush Lauan BIfold

$2S

4b w Regulw $27.99    I# R<

Regulw $27.99

Pre-hung in its own frame. Casing not included. #81900,1

Regular $21.99

Complete with track and hardware. Unfinished. #10712

Save $6! 2-Foot Louvered BIfold

^25^^egular $31.99

Ideal for a bedroom closet.

With track & hardware. #10535

50' Roll Chain Link Fence

Linear Foot*

Fully galvanized. (*V length regardless of height or other factors.) Components below included. #92140

Includes 48" fabric, top rail, 4 line posts, tie wire & loop caps. Gates are sold separately.

3"X 5"X4'

Landscape

Timbers

Each

Treated to resist insects and decay. Come in and stock up. Reference Price $2.49, 04578

3"x 2V2"x 8'.....$1.99

Reference Price $2.49. #04581

3"x5"x8'  ......$2.79

Reference Price $399. #04574

A. 1(K Section Brown Aluminum Gutter

^99

Reference Price $699. #11585

B. Gutter Guard

spi.

Regular $2.19. Vinyl. #11632 C Gutter Splash Down

$299

Regular $3.99. #11629

Save $5! 32" Catalina    Storm Door

Vinyl Folding Door    For Patio Door

For laundry room, pantry, etc.    Fits a 6' wide door. Bronze

With track and hardware. #11326    or white finish. #15676,7

S4MT4Rr

sMumi

Storm Windows starting As Low As..

$||99

23%* X 38% 1-1rack Storm Window, Reg. $17.99. #13132

Tnished casing

$329

Ref. Price $169. #02936

8' Unfinished Base

$329

Ref. Price $169. #02937

A.2^X3'2" Insulated Window-

$ej99

. V h#^Rag.$88.9%/v

Weatherstripped and reaj^ to finish. Grill extra.    ^

Via Catalog Sales. #17942

a Save $4! Exterior Vinyl Shutter Set

39" high. Will not split.

Black or white. #12852,60

4-Mil Clear Or    Energy Saving    Great Stuff"

Black Polyethylene    Window Film    Insulating Foam

^R#gular$5.99    O^Sq.Ft.    ^^120z.Can

10'x 25'. #16925,6    Adheres to pane. #11244 Reference Price$8.49.#i38i7





Good Looks...

25" Di

In Your I

Both I

rholce Of Cabinet Styles

*519

CASH

see it. Mediterranean or Early American cabinet. Ref. Price I *No Down Payment. Deferred Payment Price 1832.68. Annual Percentage Rate 23.98H. See Credit Terma On Page 8.

OcSrTV??*!*.*. *259

Solid State. Ref.Price $329j95. 54479

RGi

25' Dl^xial

*499

Coter TV??*!*.'. *289

Solid state. Ref. Price 8349S5. 54518

Color

With SignaLock electronic channel tuning; automatic color control and fleshtone correction; and solid state Xtended Life chassis. Reference Price $579J5. #54654

NEW!,

. Texas Instruments

\CtAMMSl MMSm

UHF/VHF/FM TV Antenna

$2499

Refarance Price $39j9& 56234

$iag99/$99

.    fAntrSSOItabalt

A.TI-M/4A

Home Computer.. .Tl

Regular 8189 J9. Wa've got some great new hardwaral Just hook this unit up to your television, plug in the

taxes, keep records, teach your children a vari^ 1

Automatic Rotor And Control

subjects and even zap invaders. Buy before January 31 lils at Lowes. #56700

& get a $50 rebate from Tl. Details at Lowe's. 1

$5499

Lets you pinpoint stations an. .56206

a Speech $CM199/^EEAs Synthesizer..    /Alined    Below

When you buy any six Tl Solid State Software** Command

When you bw any six Tl Solid State Software** Command Cartridges, Texas Instruments will send you the Solid State Speech** Synthesizer absoluteiy freel Offer good between now & January 31,1964. Details at Lowe's.

'Answer only" phone is an ideal extension telephone. Ref. Price $14.95. #55410

* /UNDUIK

Teltphoiw Mlnl-Tatophoiw

$4499

- 3. $47.99. French styling and a creamy ivory finish. Perfect for bedroom. 55428

With automatic rediai, mute hold) key and 14-foot cord. Ref. Price $21S5. 55404

Remodel Ybur Cellinas With Armshong Quellty At Lowes Low Price...

Ceiling Of The Month:

Save On Oak Plank Ceiling

(JArinstrong

r$1jQ2. Simulated, washable 4' i^ks. Fire retardant, too.

Sold by carton (40 sq. ft.). 12292

Save On 12"x 12" White Celling Tile

33

SaveOnirx 12" Glenwood Tile

Squara Foot

Regular 384. Has washable surface for easy upkeep and good looks. Sold by carton (64 tiles). 12313

45*

Square Foot

524. Has "butcherblock" & washable vinyl surface, carton (64 tiles). 12316

All Of These Cellings Can Be Easily Installed By TheDo^<MirseHrWlth:

ir X12" NoWx Soiarian Tiles

Armstrong's Easy^Jp"*    S^59

Calling TifalnatafMonKIt.........NOW    V

99.

Regular I8S9.    & easy. Includes track, dips, nailseverything

needed to install 20 to 25 square feel of ceiling tile. 10411

Each

TbughMirabond* no-wax surface shines far longer without waxing than regular vinyl no^ivax tiles. Ref. Price $131. 1642832-35

S/VE

sum

CoolWhita

4'xr

Tilaboard

$Q99

Rag. I8J9. Smooth melaminefii

line finish on hardboard. Its

(Hchenorbath. Easynclean. 16634

A. Save $2^1 Carver THpp Clear Finishes

a Save On 13 Oz. Spray Un-Rust

Quart $7.49. Choose Satin or Super Gloss. Both give you a terrific finish over wood surfaces. 45737,42

$|99

Regular $2.79. Choose from avariety of good-looking, protective colors. For lawn furniture, etc. 46441-48

Qalion

c Save $3^1 SJWay    SHF99

Interior Latex Flat raint........;/ o

Regular $10 J9. Choose white, off-white or ceiling white. Its warranted to cover in one coat and dr finish. Easy ciean-up in 8oap&water.

warranted to cover in one coat and dries quickly to a flat, smooth

IT. 4765^

S/VE

SIXK

Abltlbl Brand r Chair Rail Moulding

$4^

Mg>$$>29. Prefinished In your choice of buff.

brindy, fawn or laurel. (Wi alao Stock adhesive $00

Save$15^0nA 5-Gallon ShopVBC

$ZC|99 Regular

Price $54.991

& dry spills with ease - and its a blower, too. Sp9cial attachments are extra. #98690

Sava $20.001 Deluxe 10-Gallon ShopVBC,

Regular $89J9. High performance model has more cleaning power; larger capacity: casters. 98692

9

A. Sam $10001 3%'x96' Porch Post

Is

1999

a six 32" Ihmlngs, One 8'Handrail...

Regular$3$J9l Handrail can be( witnthe1Htun

Regular $2939. Made of solid wood and ready to paint or atairi. Good-looking

'turnings to make a stairway section. (Support posts Add paint or stain to finish. 005

Newel Post

a^s-xSO.........

above, ^im, rtiin. Ref. Price $2





...&Conv&ii&Ke

12' Pattomed Loop Valencia Carpet

SquaraVird*

*SoW by linear fort. It's 100% nylon carpeting, with cushioned back and Scrtchoard"* protection. Reference Price $759. #15205.7

12'CutNLoop Carefree Carpet

(Inset) 12'Sundlar Solaran Flooring

$099

W SqumUM*

Sold by linear foot 12* wide.

Has tough Mirabond* surface & cushioned back for quiet comfort. Reference Price S12.M. #16139,42

Square Yird*

Sold by linear fort. Its 100% nylon filament. Has Scotehgard protection and a cushioned back. Reference Price $959. #15220-28

Real Oak 12x 12 Tile With Self-Adhesive Back

Each

SaUO*

ftmuBi

Floor

Conng

%a" Thick Prestige White Panel

4'x8'

Regular $11.49. Simulated on lauan plywood. Has off-white wood^ finish. #13928

Thick Pegged Pecan Panel

Rea. $3.29. Solid oak parquet floor tiles.

With cushioned, self-adhesive back and your choice of three handsome finishes. Just psel and press into place. #00469,70,71

Turn Dia Wats Mo SrmietNngSpedi...

3mm Lauan 4'x 8'

Colortone Panel

Made of real, tropical lauan wood that's stained to bring out the natural woodgrain highlights. It's a good-lookino, economical panel that blent well with most decors. Why not panel a room this weekend? Ref. Price $10.99. #13866

4'x8'

Regultft1259. Simulated on lauan plywood. Has pe plank appearance. #1S

n be cut & combined ike a handsome x)sts are extra.) iW)057550

^99

d with components :e $2959. #00585

Save $1^118''x24-Bulletin Boaitl

Regular $M9. A noteworthy addition. #10946

Save On Elmers 4 Oz. White Glue

FOR

$|00

Regular 999 each. Bonds wood, paper, cloth, etc. Non-toxic. And it washes out with soap & water. Great for school. #40070

Save $3.001

7-Shelf

Untt

$18

Reg. $2159.

Its V wide &

12* deep; full 5 feet high.

V. #62455

Save $3.001 Folding Metal 6iair

$6

Reg. $9.99.

Autumn Bronze orBrownstone. For home or office. #96050,2

Microwave Oven

*259L

Regular $299.99. Has variable power& meal temp probe; duahspeed timer, and extra-large, 15-cubic-fort oven. #51736 *No Down Payrnem. Deferred Payment Price $362.64. Annual Percentage Rate 23.95%. Ciedn Terms On Page 8.

Save $50.00!

Solid State Microwave

33999

Regular $389.99. Solid state touch controls; 10 power levels for versatility; temperature probe; dual-feed cook system for more even cooking; 3-memory function; & roomy 1.4 cubic foot oven. #51757

Save $30.00!

MaxLChef

Microwave

#SSANYO

H69

Regular $199.99. Economy model. With a 10-minute timer; .6cu. ft. oven; and glass tray. #51731

Save $2.00! Rustic Brown V4* Panel

S|P!..

Regular $1359. Made of real aspen wood, stained for a rustic siding look. #13897

Save $1.50!

1/4" Penthouse Walnut Panel

*12..

Regular $13.99. Simulated on lauan plywood. Rich, warm tones of walnut. #13946

ConUnuous Cleaning ElectricRange

$41999

iilar $479.99. It cleans while you cooki Digital oven timerfolock. With high-speed surface units. Oven light & black glass see-thru oven door. #52854

Save $30!

Compact Range

$259

Regulw $28959. Has 4 Calrorf sunace units; inside oven light. 21 wide. #52812

t H O L I D A Y

Save $60115.2 Cu. Ft. Freezer

^339^ ViSs

Reg. $399.99. Textured steel cabinet; safety lock. #50860 Deferred Payment Price $507.90. Annual Percentage Rate 23.98%. Credit Terms On Pag# 8.

Deluxe 17.0 Cubic Foot Refrigerator/Freezer

Save $60.0015.1 Cubic Ft. Freezer

*89

Rag. $25059. Textured steel. Has eject-a-key lock for safety. #50801

$499

SAVE $1001

Reg. $599.99. Has adjustable shelves & separate meat drawer. No-frost. #53670

Optional Ice Maker ...

For above. Ref. Price $9955. #53785

?79

Save $100 On This Laundry Pairl

Dryer- $289

Reg. $439.99 and $32959. Its our best Hrtpoint laundry pairl ^fosher has 4 cycles and 3 temps. Dryer has 5 cycles. Much more! #51240,403

1339^

15-Cycle/Op4ion Dishwasher .

Reg. $399.99. Energy-saver options; Power Clean" wash system; pots and pans" cycle; 4 decorator inserts; lots more. #51045





Bath&U0tting

general^eiectric

Dusk-to-Dawn Security Light With Bulb

$3999

This light automatically turns on at dusk and off at dawn. Great for your businessparking lot or your home. Comes with bright bulb. Ref. Price $49.99. #74004

48-lnch-Long VMork Bench Light

SR*

With plug-in cord & chain for hanging. Uses 2 bulbs (extra). Ref. Price $15.99. #74665

WLong 16/3 Outdoor Extension Cord

$999

Heavy duty cord for tools, appliances, etc. A great buy! Ref. Price $1559. #70372

Fymetics Smoke Detector

^9^ith Battery

Mounts on ceiling & sounds alarm at first threat of fire. Ref. Price $1559. #73060

CarUfte

Economy White Vi^er-Saving Commode..

Save on water use and utility bills! Siphon jet artion conserves water and flushes thoroughly Blue, gold and creme available at slightly higher prices. Seat extra. Ref. Price $69.99. #20701,2

A. 40-Gallon Electric Style Wlater Heater

White, Plastic Molded

Commode Seat

Easy to install onto commode; has top-mount hinges. Sturdy molded pl^ic. Ref. Price $559. #20591

Everything Needed To Remodel The Bath

Lovws stocks a wide selection of wnity sets and medicine cabinets. Plus bathroom lights, tubs & more. Everything for a complete bathroom.

A. 17    <1i%QQ

WnltySel......

Compete vanity set includes cultured marble top, faucet and single door vanity cabinet. Great value! Ref. Price $99.99. #20804

a 22*x 19'    <U AQQ

VhnltySot......

Twin-door vanity in white with gold-tone hardware & accents. Includes cultured marble top and faucet. Ref. Price $159.99. #20806

Medicine Cabinet...

This cabinet features 2 sliding mirrored doors, chrome finish and interior shelves. Lightbulb is extra. Reference Price $39.99. #23716

D. 14"x 18" Tall Oak FratnefMliTor Medicine Cabinet

This model features an adjustable thermostat for

a 40-Galk>n Natural Gas Water Heater

$12999

$2999

VSJ10.00 Single Kitehen Faucet

$4499

Reg. $5459l Has a deluxe aerator for soft flow. All-in-one cartridge. Comes with sprayer. #24829

. B.Save$2XX)!3(r

Reg. $9.99. Real oak bar for bathroom or kitchen. #25310

a Save $1.001 CamI

OakToiiet  i

PtiperHolder ,..

Reg. $659. Bathroom Mxessory IS made of genuine oak. #25304

Beautifully & simply designed to blend with any bathroom decor. Built-in all-steel interior. Easy installation. A great price! Reference Price $39.99. #23711

5-Piece White Wiall Surround

Easy to install! This heater features an adjustable thermostat and a pressure relief valve. A great buv' Reference Price $169.99. #26334

40-Gallon Energy Efficient VWter Heater

*139

Save money by saving energy with this heater, i-eatures an adjustable thermostat and pressure relief valve. Reference Price, $189.99. #26302

Easy to maintain acrylic wall surround fits standard 5' tubs. Easy to install. Looks great with the PVC tub from Lowes. Ref. Price $79.99. #20781

Contemporary White PVC Tub

Ir fe is? fandart tethtub is pre-drilled on right w lelt. The tough PVC construction does not scratch, ^n or corrode. Easy to install. Looks great with the above wall surround. Refeience Price $9959. #20430,1

Ruetoroof ShoMfer Stall

*109

With everything shown. Ref.

Price $139.99. #25938

Single Control Chrome Finish Lavatory Faucet

3999

Reg. $49.99. Features a clear acrylic handle, popup drain and chrome finish. Deluxe aerator gives a gentle, even flow. Durable WBsherless < design. #24934





seasonal Aids

36" WKIte Ceiling Fan With Metal Blades......

This 36^ iMhite ceiling fan features 3 durable metal blades for v^ars of service. Wall mounted control with 4 speeds. Quiet motor operation. Easy do-it-yourself installation. Reference Price $34.99. #31704

Has a bright brass finish. Fan is reversible. Circulates cool air in summer and warm air down in winter."FBatures 4 beautiful teakwood blades. 3-speed control with pull chain operation. Reference Price $109.99. #31763

Has 4 teakwood blades. 3-spe^ control with a reversible motor-Ref. Price $79.99. #31711^

Easily adapts to most of our ceiling fans. Come in today. Reference Price $12.99. #31802,12Pre-Season \^!ues For The Cold winter oa^ Ahead

, " lAloodcK/r

Firebrick Lined Wood Circulating Heater

*239

Optional blower for this model is available. 32" wide. Reference Price $259.99. #37370

G'' All-Fuel

Chimney

Kit

For A Limited Time Oniy, Purchase The McCuiioch Pro Mac 610 Chain Saw And Receive A $35 Factory Rebate.

McCULLOCH

Electric Portable Radiator Heater

$5999

ISOOwratt oil filled heater. Dual control. With cord storage. Ref. Price $7999. #30592

9,500 BTU Automatic Start Kerosene Heater

$8999

Automatic extinguishing. With removable tank. Portable. Reference Price $119.99. #30462

18"

Pro Mac" 610 Gas Powered Chain Saw

$3349^^*29999

Has a rugged 3.7 cubic inch engine featuring an antivibration system, chain brake & hand guard. Automatic and manual chain oiling. Fuel tank comes with a sight gauge to monitor fuel supply. Ref. Price $34999. #91613

McCULLOCH

Includes fittings for normal 1-story installation. Ref. Price $3999. #37287

Do-it-yourself inctaliation. Pipe is not includecl.

*199

16" Pro" 510

Chain Saw ___

Has a 2.3 cubic inch engine. Includes an anti-vibration system plus wraparound chain brake and hand guard. Automatic and manual oiling. Muffler shield for quiet operation. Ref. Price $229.99. #91612

Features a iightweight and sturdy design

A. 13*x 13*Ru0Kap~

For Flue Uneii.......

Other sizes available. Ref. Price $2299. #39242

18,000 BTU Kerosene Heater

Kerosene Can

6,800 BTU Kerosene Heater

1" *M9 *7 *69

a 6* Round

ChtanneyBrush........

Rods A ringa extra. Ref. Price $1299. #39202

Has automatic starting and extinguishing. Built for safety. Cottm in today. Ref. Price $15999. #30464

Can is Department of Transportation approved. Reference Price $899. #30502

Features automatic starting & extinguishing. Radiant ty^ heater. Hsf. Pnce $8699. Limited Quantities. #30480

McCULLOCH

10* Eager Beaver

Chain

.199

j, weekend wood cutter. Easy to . Comes with chain brake. Ref. Price $10999. #91610





11 HP, 36" Cut

Riding Mower ________

^ Stratton engine with electric ^ ^ aWemator. 5 sp^ forward plus reverse. One-pedal combination clutch and disc brake. #95196

3 HP 20" Cut Push-Movver

H09

Regulv$129Mi Briggs & Stratton engine with recoil start arKf engine brake. #95106

ISWatt Electronic Bug Killer........

Insects are attracted by a zapped by 2 surrounding c residential backyards

*69

Identicai to the model above but larger UL listed. Reference Price $9999. #73072

fO X 9 Steel Storage Building..

ktSil!?'*?- *'1P?.''? ?    9lvntMd.    Frame

'Eludes mkJ-^ brace. Base;

H    *iough    to    work    ini    #92735

NHindation Kit For Storage Building $24.99. #92726

^ inner ince Price

. I and then grids. For small 9.99. #73071

?89

Bug Killer. ,T__

Kills insects in a wider area. For pool or garden. Reference Price $11999. #73073

Grass Bag

Regular $24.99. For the

mower above. #95156

Saw $2.00 On This Itaated Mail Box Post

$20 Off Molded Thick Tool Box w

*" ?    that I most size trucks.

H2S3sr

Treated to resist rot, decay & insects. Sturdy construction tor years of service, Comes unfinished. #926^

SaveSIJXiOn Rural Mail Box

Ribbed for extra strength Madeofg^nizedst Includes flag. #92622

5 Horsepower Go-Cart

$34999

Prices In Effect Tim August29,1983 Lot* Payment Credit Terms

2-Foot Wood Step Ladder

Regui $7.99

Ideal for use in kitchen or other rooms of your house. #92503

$4.00 on 6-Foot Wood Step Ladder

^2la5ir

Has a convenient flipout tool caddy. Slip resistant rungs for safety. #92508

Louie'smr Household word

Lowes_____

prtosiThetslarenoels

IK Ptnne SiS-6171

1312N.FyWIMMSl. OOMjyiC-Phon.a6*eSM SMe F^ ru. at HunSng Lm eMUNaTON.W 0O2Ora>iamHapadalend. C^,MC-PHona 467.3600 HtghnayM

CHMja. Max, MC - Phone 967.2 1710 East FrankNn St.

------- I6MI..IBS9    ^    MIBBIgBITheres A Lowes Store Near Ybu

f NCPtionaTeseeeo 2728 South MamorWOdw MW POeiT. NC - Phono 866031 Proapact SL Iniarchanea IF66

^ ~ ******

KAWa^ - Phona B28.32S1 2512Wnharand.

1100 WFreiway Drive WOiXYMpUIIT^MC-Phona 446.2331 UA Hlgwy3Dl Bypaaa. North

*WFpWQJlC Phone 7766431 9122 & bidualrial Dr OWIaon Rd.

SfWRIA, NCPhone 3726531 101 AaaghanySt'ssasis.-""-

(acraaarrom the airport)

I





ECKEip Pre-Labor Day Sale

R5,6,7/C*1





R5,6,7/C-





ON YOUR PRESCRIPTION WITH ECKERD GENERICSLast year alope our customers saved over $8 million with Eckerd Generics.Ask your Eckerd Pharmacist if your prescription can be filled with one of the 300 Generics now available.    v    

6.69

CBITRUM MULTI-VITAMINS * 100, PUIS son Limit 2 please

STRESSTABS 600 TABLETS

60's REGULAR, WITH ZINC or WITH IRON Limit 2 please

CUMTY PUFFS I0NOSIZIIAGOP100

Limit 2 pieose

BABY FRESH WIFfS ..^

.PHPH1OP40

UmlfSpleaie' ^

l-OlOMtRM

Umlt2pl0ose

DR.SCHOU'S AII^PILiO INSOLES

Limit 2 pair

USTBUNE ANTISEPTIC

32-OZ. Price refects cents off label. With 50C coupon for next purchase. Limit 2 pi^se

efferent

I m

EFFBOBIT DENTURE CIIANS

MCXOP60WMh*MCOOkbOOk.

.79

DRIXORAL

DECONOESTANT

PCKOP10Umit2pleate

REVLON FLEX SHAMPOO orCONOmONa

15^ AUTYPMPrice reflects certts offlobeL Umlt2 ple^

R5,6,7/A-3





COMPARE ECKERD BRAND & SAVE

Every Eckerd product is manufactured to highest quality specifications and offers substantial savings to you. Try these products with confidence. If for any reason you are not satisfied, return the unused portion and we will replace it with the national brand equivalent or refund your money in full.

TOOTHPASTE

.4^3FUVOM

Compare to Crest. Limit 2 please

nossAWAir DBITAL Floss

100-VDI.2TVPII

Compare to Johnson & Johnson.

Limit 2 please

<S1.49 <SBl.19

EXTRASTRBIGTH PAIN REUEF

SOCAPSUUBorOTAMITS

Compare to Tylenol.

Limit 2 please

AISAMAPROniN SHAMPOO or CONDITIONER 2TYP016^ Compare to Flex. Limit 2 please

DRYROUrON DEODORANT

2.SOZ. Corhpare to Ban.

Limit 2 please

NATURALdAtPNA

VITAMINE

400I.U.100CAKUUI

NATURALOYSTERSHOL CALCIUM wim VITAMIN D lOOTAMITS

NATURAL VHAMINC

800Mo.Mtniorroo

6.49 3.59

NATURAL BALANCB) B-100 COMPLEX VITAMINS lomioFso

NATURALVITAMINM2

TIMNniA1,OOOMCO. omf OFM

HIOHPOTiNCY FORMUU 36 VITAMINS lOOTAMifS 36 nutrients m each tablet.

mm

DKKMMU DIAPKS MfXnUAKORNNT or4#TQOOms .....

Coimfxmifb

FRESH UP

DISINFECTANT

1M.SFIAY

Compare to iysoi.

'.S'

42;88

HICKORY-TONE

COMPUTKDESK

Rm.97.99

48 B/B" X 26%V RemovoblesiicrK} tfteV for comp0w. Computer not inoiuded.

50%OFF S3

Mft.sifoe.RirAiipRici

IQXB> CHRISIMASCARDS

MCKOF201 styteperbox.

SUN*SPUN WINTUK YARN

100ioui^O8ofit|<yl|c fiber. *0i#Oot CertMcotioO Mark

/as

5,6,7/<>4





NORELCO DIALA-BREWll 10-CUP COFFEEMAKER

No. 5185 Reg. 24.99

WITH SPECIAL REBATE OFFER*

Final OMT

Brews 3-10 cups to taste.

NORELCO COFFK FILHRS BOX OF 100 Reg. 999

Your choice of fluted or disc styles. Fits most coffeemokers.HAMILTON BEACH CAN OPENER

No. B29 Features magnetic lid lifter.RIVAL 1-OT.CROCK-ETTE

No. 3205Cc n cook unwatched up to 12 hours.

6-LB.SPUTnNGNIAUL 36" HANDLE Reg. 42.99

HRSHEY'SorMAM/MARS CANDY BARS

VALUE PACK OF 10 Reg. 3.00

HAWAIIAN PUNCH PAPER BOTTLES

PACK0F3,V4-UTIREACH Reg. 899

lANCECRACKERS

BOX 0F8PACKS Reg. 1.99

Choice of flavors.

9-INCH PAPER PUTES PACK OF100 Reg. 1.29

JOY UQUID DETERGENT

32-01 Reg. 2.39

WIIOBIRDSKD

84n.Reg.4J9

POniNGSOIL

AT.BAOReg.899ea.

2/889    779

CArS PRIDE CAT UTTER 1MB8. Reg. 1.29

R5,6,7/05





Tooh fot School Tboh fot School

-CALCULATORS-MNS'PENCILS'NOnBOOKS'ORGANIZERS'ANDMORE

S

a C3 CS C3

m.

a O a    __    |;.    ^

a ra ES ES *3    

8.88

5.44

DIOITECH SdARCBUCHf

Na 1644Rm. 12.ff Ught-fwwwed calcutator tHJW Info on r nrtirt RequifM no battoitet includes prc^tlvocanying cose.

TEXAS INSTmiMENTSICDIK>CI(nCAimATOR^M

No.n-1001 Reg.6.99Wlfhbatfefy-scivingAutoPowerOown. ^

MCK

@S^PBICUS.

MCKOM*i.Wpock

YeHoworossortad colors.R5,6,7/C^





ECKERD WILL HELP YOU UPGRADE YOUR HOME OR OFFICE PHONES. SAVE NOW!

34.88

GfiANPRlXAM/FM CIOCK RADIO wNtl BUILT-IN

PHONE    /

OKTRONIC

'Na.fM400RM. 29.99

On/off rtnoer^^h, automatic rftdlai button.'

92.88

OiCTRONIC MINI PHONE Btg. 14.99

On/crff rtngef swttch & mute button. Choose from Uoycf s, Centro ft US Tron. Model Section moy vary by store.

SlirttartoIBJrtiallon. Hfi Atari Na 2600 system.

NORH.CO

CIJEAN AIR MACHINE

No. H81900 Reg. 24.99 WITHSPfCIALRBATIOiffit*

17.77 SalePrlce -3.00 MalHn Rebate

14.77 YourRnolCoel

Special flttertraiM air poNutants.

ORANPRIXAM/FM PORTABU CASSETTE RECORDER AC/DC No. 850Reg. 59.99

Record live or from radio.

ORANPRIXSUMUNE CASSETTE RECORDER

AC/OCNo. dOORiig. 2499Higtv

level features at ojbw pricel .

16.88

GRAN PRIX PORTABLE STEREO CASSCTTE PUYER with HEADPHONES

No. 3030 Reg. 22.99

Feafher-light headphones.

WHENEVER YOU BUY A CAMERA AT ECKERD, WE WILL PROCESS YOUR FIRST ROLL or DISC FREE!

INCLUDES 5.56 MINIMUM PROCESSING VALUE!

CANONSNAPPY2035mmCAMRA Reg.89.99Automatic loading, film advance ft rewirta. RMd tacus. BuU^ta Sash. In block only.

ECKERD COUPON

ECKERD COUPON

|50%off

REGULAR PRICE ON PRINTS FROM PRINTS

Last capy af a treasured picture? We can make quality prints, even af Instant Camera phatasi Limit 1 order. Coupon must accompany order.

Coupon Good Thru Sept. 30,1983 It M M M HaCode 7051

50%OFF I

DCAIllAODDiefON I

REGULAR PRICE ON PRINTS FROM SUDB

Brine

We'lT make a high-quality print on Kodak paper.

Limit 1 order. Coupon must accompany order.

Coupon Good Thru Sept.30,1983 t M M M M    7081

R5,6,7/07





AMERICAS FAMILY DRUG STORE

ECKEI^

QEE

wnr SUNGIASSIS

REOUIAR PRICES Selectk>nrTK3yvaiylomiilustrotton.

^ADVOmaNQSijj^^ NC EcWorKTUMd^Aug. 23,

o

TUPfdeqf^ Aug. 30,1^

l9t

WEMBTMltoCMLY

mmmmcm

SHOPANVONrtADAriCKBD.

V\^ia the moif com>dWive drugstore in towni VI meet all locally advertised prices on Identlccri merchandise. Brtng In any current ocU from other local stores and seel

tCSttVBtt

PACK0PtUmir2pks. plecise

MpUOHim PACKCPt ,

Umit2paci(iplm

swKntijow

SUOARStttSmUTf

100PACKITtUmlt2please

PfTBIPsM PEANUT MITTK

fM.CRMMrerCRUIICHr

OAmSIMi

DHUXiMOIOfiOIL

1-ir.ioviMOAM.iJ Umtt 12 pleote

cuNinticirtiiAai

4mie9.1.99

' KordrKortiite

Kordite

R5,6/C-8





Ws LEVIS' WEEl^

Levis

ACTIVEWEAR

ns basic i^ns gig boys'jeans1499

Aii-cotton denims. Reg. $19.99. Reg. $23.99 Garment

washed............... .    .18.99

Not shown:

$22.99 Plaid shirt.........17.9912^-vr

Sizes 8-14, reg. $16.99-18.99. Jeans in teen sizes, reg. $18.99-

$20.99  ............14.99-16.99

Shirt, sizes, 8-12, reg. $12,998.99 Sizes 14-20, reg. $13.99 .... 9.99Little boys' jeans 899

Western style jeans in regular and slim sizes 4-7, Reg. $12.99. Woven plaid shirt in sizes 4 to 7. reg. $10.99................6.99Little girls' jeans ^99

Reg. $13.99 Western style jeans in regular and slim sizes 4-6x. Woven plaid blouse in sizes 4 to 6x, reg. $12.99............8.99Big girls' jeans 16

Reg. $20.99, Two-Horse* cotton denim Levis* jeans. Regular, slim sizes 7-14. Woven ptaid blouse,

sizes 7-14, reg. $18.99.....14.99

Jeans available in Pretty-Phjs sizes at similar savings in most larger Sears Retail stores

Most items in this section at reduced prices

Sears pricing policy... if an item is not described as reduced or a special purchase, it is at its regular price. A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value.

Sale prices shown in this section in effect through Saturday unless otherwise indicated.

Delivery not included in selling prices of all items in this circular.

1 E55 1A





it's Levi's

UviV

active

wear

^5 OFF

For sporting around on cooler days...Itoeoed separates of cotton and polyester. Sizes S-XL $15.99 Drawstring wai^ pants or crewneck sweatshirt (not shown)10.99ea.

.$20.99 Hooded puloMBr sweatshirt, withhandwarmer pockets... 15.99

2 E55 1

Levi's

corduroy

separates

CoeiReg.$75

|99

Separates tailored in cotton-polyester corduroy. Classically styled coat has suede elbow patches.

$22 Vest to team up wooat,8lackB, 17:80 $30 Slacks ideal for' <*eas,apalwee;2Sfl0

A/^n's LeviV t(^s and bottoms ^5 OFF

A. Levis rugged basic jeans. Heavyweight all-cotton denim with riveted stress points. Five pockets. Reg. $19.99........14 J9 pr.

B. Levi's western cut plaid shirt.Double fabric yokes, snap closures.

Yam-dyed plaids. Sizes S-XL Reg. $22.99...............17.99

Levis for Men stretch denim jeans. Cotton and Celanese Fortrel* polyester. Fashion back pockets. Reg. $30,24J9

C.Levis Saddleman* sport shirt in solids, stripes and plaids. Tapered cut. Cotton and polyester. Reg. $17..............11.99

Levis Action Slacks of stretch woven polyester. Solids and heathers. Waist sizes 32-40. Reg. $25..................... 19.99    pr.

Sears has a credit plan to suk most any need





Week at Sears

Levis

LEVI STRAUSS & CO.SAVE *3-*5On our entire line-up of Levi's sportswear for misses and jrs.

A. Reg. $30 Bendover' blouse for misses..... 24.99

B. Reg. $26 Bendover pants for misses   20.99

C. Reg. $28 Misses yam-dyed plaid shirt .. .ea. 22.99

D. Reg. $27 Misses 5-pocket heavyweight jeans. 21.99

E. Reg. $26.99 Junior Levis stone-washed jeans, 23.99

See our lean, pre-washed jeans, including the famous '505s", plus denim skirts for juniors in Junror Bazaar and our sefection of Levi's sportswear for misses in our Sportswear Department

AAen% Levi% shoes *5 OFF

A. $34J9AMelcaKfoid of suededspllMwr upper, Kialon*pQtyiiierunt bottom................29J9

B. $42.99 Modoe Oxford tetti lealher upper, Kralon* Doiwner unit bottom.......................37J9

a $34.99 Bootnylon and lealher upper, kigged rubber sole...........  J9

E55 3





All kds^ outerwear25% OFF

t

sizes 7-16

Youll find coats and jackets like these and many, many more in sizes to fit pre-schoolers to high-schoolers ...and all at 25% off Sears regular low prices. Get the kids ready for back-to-school and out-door activities now while the selection is great! Choose from lightweight, medium weight and heavyweight jackets and coats for kids.    

4 E55 1





Kick off the season at our NFL sale

899

NFL jersey, reg. $11.99

Officially licensed NFL jersey sports his favorite teams name on the front, plus, players numeral on both front and back. Washable nylon and cotton or all polyester knits, S-XL.

Save on officially licensed NFL shirts and pajamas for boys.

$5.99 T-shirt with team logo, sizes S,M,L,XL..............   4.49

$10.99 Pajamas, sizes 8-18...............................8.49

$9.99 Short sleeve coachs style shirt, sizes S,M,L,XL   7.49

Teams carried may vary by store.

Smart separates for big and little girls now

^ to 5 OFF

Little girts long sleeve blouse with bow, sizes 4-6x, reg. $6.99 Little girls coordinating slacks in sizes 4-6x, reg. $8.99 Big girts sweater vest, sizes 7-14, reg. $9.99 Big girts bow-trimnfied blouse, sizes 7-14, reg. $12.99

499

6

6

^99

Big girls coordinating slacks, sizes 7-14, reg. $15.99 Big gitis long sleeved classic shirt, sizes 7-14, reg. $9.99 Big girls coordinatir^ pant, sizes 7-14, reg. $16.99 Big girls pullover sweater, S.M.L. reg. $8.99

10

6

1199

5

Big girts' slacks and pants available in Pretty-Plus sizes at similar savings.

1 E55 5C





f

, . i ,

iik^

1

G)ordincrtes for big girls now *3-*5 OFF

Pririts (X)ped from patchwKxkquHts...ciu8ty pink, blue and ecnj. Lace trims. Cotton and polymler. si^ 7-14. Pretty, pleated jabot sets this laoe trimmed blouse. Ecru. Reg. $1Z99 Lace SHid ribbons trim the dasaic corduroy veeL Reg. $9.99

Fk)unced skirt comes in dusty pink or bkie corduroy. Reg. $13.99

Long sleeve blouee comes in dusty pink or bkie, lace trimmed. Reg. $12.99 Ribbons and lace trim pelchwoik-iook skirt Corduroy waistband. Rag. $13.99 Not shown: corduroy jumper, reg. $15.99,

6E ES5 1

^99

6

10

g99

10

Classic-style oxford shirt now in pastels and stripes

Reg. $14 ea.

99

ea.

Vital to your wardrobe, our easy-care, Pemia-Smooth oxford doth shirts of cotton and polyester come in a full range of solids and stripesto fit in just where you need them. All the dassic details, too, in misses sizes.

In our Sportswear Department

Sears has a credtt plan to suit most any need

Soft knit tops from the Budget Shop of *2-*3 off

Plenty of smart tops to diooie from in strfpeswid soMs for miaaes sizBS. Reg. IBJe-$l0.9eea.





We can put you in a full length raiifKoat

or a short one for only

When it rains youll shine! These stylish coats from our specie! purchase have polyester and cotton poplin shells with acetate linings quilted to polyester fiberfill. See the assortment of colors and styles. For misses sizes. Get yours while quantities last.

In our Coat Department

92

bogs you a leather trimiiied corduroy hofid bag and you idye

StyWioononoonliiiDybaoB witti mscioui leeiMr trfm-mfng. Ctioow bfown. rust

Juniors! VrsoKle jacket or stadium coat, save *20

-j^fass--

ChHhfighting choicesf Get a reversi)te sweater jacket with eoonlnaflng vett for 5 looks. OroetdoubtolhefBBMon from a mweler-krok rewBfsfeie sta-dkm ooaL See them today!

ReQ.$ro&way rjecfcet

R80.|86ravefal)ie

stadumooet

4999

4499

SAVERS

on junior basics: blouses and pants

Separates that buHd a wardrobe. Blouses in soMs or plaids. Current

SMJL

Pants in pinstripes or pleated-front solids. WooJ-look polyester. 3-15. Reg. $20





>2 0fF

Cross

Shape bras for comfort, fit and savings

3

49

ea.

Comfort underneath: our smooth nylon tricot cup bras with flat seam cups. Bands between cups for fit, separation. Stretch frame. Natural; B.C. Contour cup with polyester fiberfill; A.B.C sizes. Reg. $5.50 ea

SAVE *2

Bikinis, briefs or hip-hugqers ofsoft

combed cotton

Reg. $6.50 pkg. of 3

4

49

Naturally comfortable combed cotton in your choice of styles. Bnefs 4,5,6.7. Bikinis or hip-huggers: S.M.L White, colors

Extra size bnete at similar savings Sears has a credit pian to suit most any need





Kids' leather Rough rtousers sl^s SAVE ^3A/ien's and women's leather Roebucks shoes SAVE *10

Your

choice

12

MMmpr. R<

Durable, comfortable sueded pigskin uppers *1)reathe" for comfort. Treated to resist stains, dirt and water. Long-wearing polymer soles and heel. Sizes 8VSr3.

A Utlie boys* athletic oxford B. Little boys sport oxford

pr. Rpg. $15.99

C. Little girlsT-strap

D. Little girts oxford Not shown:

$12.99 Infants T-strap or athletic oxford, 5V4-8......... .9J9pr.

$17.99 Big boys oxford, 3%-7 . UM

21

99

A,B.C Ipr. Reg. $31.99

For women. Great styling and fashion detail. Soft, comfortable leather uppers. Durable, flexible man-made soles. Deep rich colors. 516-9,10.

27

pr. Reg. $37.99 For men. Casual comfort! Supple leather uppers, rugged man-made soles. Sizes 716-11,12. All Roebucks are made In the United States.

other stylee also on sale at simiiar savings.

Winner II Jr. for kids. SAVE 4.50

Nylon and sueded split-leather upper, treaded rubber sole. Padded collar. Toe guard. Sizes 5-12. Regular $12.99

\

Winner II athletic shoes

SAVE ^

Lightweight nylon and sueded split-leather upper and treaded rubber sole. Plus a padded collar and tongue. Cushioned HM^e. Mens 716-11,12,13; womens 5-10; big boys 3V2-7.

1199

I iReg. $1

Reg. $15.99    ,

$14.99 Youths sizes 12V2-3  ......10.99

TTw Winner U wil be on sale m the WX Tabloid until October 5,1983.

1 E55 9





SALE! Men's underwear in packages of 3

Regular $7.99 pkg.

;99

'pko

Polyester and combed cotton, Sanfor-Knit for shrinkage control. T, V-neck or A-neck shirts, or regular briefs.

Not shown:

$8.99 Perma-Prest* boxers, pkg. of 3____.'.    6.49

AAen's

fashion

underwear

. 2

Or^ MryNe nd trftch i^lciH Slack ngthi Ghost a of fix In wb/jf.

craiiitatx pirij

Stock up! Kids' socks and underwear ON SALE

For little kids: shirts, vests, parrties or briefs are now on sale. Package of 3. Sizes 2 to 6x.

Girls vests or pan^, reg. $4.49 pkg. Boys' T-shirts or briefs, reg. $4.49 pkg.

For Mg girts: knit vests of polyester and cotton, sizes 7-14.

Reg. $4.49 pkg. of 3.........3.29

Puff knit panties, 100% cotton, sizes 7 to 14. Package of 3 reg. $4.49.

For Mg boys: combed cotton briefs or T-shirts in sizes 8 through 20, reg. $5.49 package of 3.

3

29

a. pkg

0(3

3

29

0(3

3

99

s-r

Save on kids' socks

A. Big girls' cable knit knee high socks,; C. Big boys' striped sport tube socks, sizesM-L,reg.$1.49pair.. 1i)9pr. sizes M-XL, reg. $6.49 pkg.

B. Little girls anklets with lace trim, 6 pr....................4.79    pkg.

sizes S,M,L,XL, reg. $2.79 pkg. of d. Little kids' tube socks with stripes, 3pr. .............1.99    pkg.    sizes    M-XL, reg. $4.99 pkg.

6 pr....................3.691





SAVE 50

when you buy this weight bench and weight set

139

98

Reg. Sep. prices total $189.98

700-lb. cap. (user plus weights) weight bench. New institutional-type double leg lift. Incline back. Reg. $109.99,79.99 177-lb. weight set features 72-inch barbell bar, two 18-in. dumbbell bars. Reg. $79.99, 59.99

Fitness equipment requires some assembly

799

# each

Sears sweat separates

Easy care potyester and cotton sweat wear is ideal for workouts or to wear around the house. Choose either crew-neck sweat shirt or sweat pants with drawstring waist. Reg. $9.99 In our Sportirtg Goods Dept.

NOW!

Sears has great biking values for the entire family!

99

119

^30 OFF Sunbird racer

10-speed bike makes pedalling smoother and easier! Dual position side-pull brakes for fast stops from racing or upright position. Stem-mounted shifter. Reg. $149.99

Men's 27-inch racing bike. Reg. $159.99 .    129.99

Bikes partially assembled    '

*30 OFF girls' high rise bike

Pretty high rise for misses is decorated with flowers on banana saddle and chainguard. 20 x 1.75-in. whitewall tires, rear coaster brake. Blue color! Reg. $109,99

139

99

SAVE *40 on 10-speed touring bike

26-in. model for men or women! Shimano Positron derailleur, side-pull caliper handbrakes. Chrome-plated rear carrier with elasticized tie-downs. Reg. $179.99

129

99

SAVE50onFS500BMX

Track certified frame for great performance even on tough courses. Full BMX pad set, two finger alloy brake levers. Red gumwall knobby tires. Regular $179.99

CREDIT CARD 1 acdrs    I    AffirTooAT

NO ANNUAL FEE

M>00 ^

0 00000 00000 0    j,

MA*T    I    good    nationwide

1 E55 11





SAVE >4 on the The Bag knapsack

899

Assorted colors. The smart way to carry books and lunches. Reg. $12.99

SAVE ^40

SAVE *40 on Electric I typewriter

Correction at the keyboard makes changes easy. Power repeat keys and spacer bar.

Regular $199.99

159

99

SAVE *40 on Sears typewriter/calculator

Weighs under 6-lbs. Powered    m

keys. 4 math functions. Reg-    I

ular $219.99

Limit 8 to a customer all school supplies on this page. Sears has on hand sufficient quantities to meet, reasonable consumer demand. Sears reserves the right to limit quantities sold to commercial purchasers.

-

Reliable soli chassis uses tors, integrated

m OFF

12-in. diagonal measui

Bright, bo d colors! ^led nle cabinets

Automatic color adjustment system locks in col Automatic Frequency Control. Rotary UHF and VI selection. In-line picture tube. Reg. $299.99. saiee

and shelving

*25 OFF 2-dra^file

Bawd onenamef flriish in 7 ooior8--color coofcimte ofHoef 22-in. depth. Cam locfcB, auipanaionllea.

Ragulv$89.9p    64

$129.99 4^feaw0r22-fn. files.........

$4aj60ssklop  ..........

Steel shelving

In 7 ooloral 30 x 30 k 12 with 3 shaivaa. Bol 2 units togattiar for additionsd storage. Sway braces.

12 E55 1

Each of these adveniseo nems is readily available for sale as advertised.





SAVE no to *30 each

Your " Choice

A. Reg, $59.99 AM/FM electronic LED clock radio. Sleep switch.

B. Reg. $39.99 AM/FM stereo radio. Twin volume controls. Batteries extra.

C.Reg. $59.99 stereo cassette with headphones. Batteries extra.

D. Reg. $49.99 mini cassette recorder. Pause control. Batteries extra.

E. Reg. $39.99 AM/FM personal stereo with headphones. Batteries extra.

Sale ends Sepl. 3

Super Chromim picture tube for bright, natural color.

4025 Simulated TV reception

Video cassette recorder

3^/1-program/5-hour capadty. Forward and reverse BetaScan picture search. Reliable electronic tuner. Pause control.

DeHvery not Included In selling prices lor items on this page

$499.99

ure picture color TV

color, tint and d VHF channel

Sate ends Aug 27

lveiP Mai^ aof^^ #tdotloiitfenfer^ ifP|Tifni, ".ana noniejwiPr

PfOdrarm wNHyoumilMp 4Mii#tooi|[at greet oompolir;

SAVE ^50

on Sears portable black/white TV

12-in. (tog. meas, picture. Solid-state chassis. Indoor/outdoor use.

99

Reg.

$139.99

89

SAVE *5

on personal steraowith headphones

Lightweight. Cassette piiqfer. Batteries extra

Sale

1999

s*vdism3

, Klin AAinl hi-ticomponent stereo

Play and record cassettes. Electronic digital frequency readout. Make your own tapes from AM/FM receiver. Reg. $199.99. Sala ands Spi. 3

9230

SAVE W

11999

SAVE *30

on stereo

cassette

recorder

AM/FM stereo radio. LED display for FM stereo. 4 speakers.

99

89

Each of these advertised Iterns is readily available for sale as advertised

$119.99

SaMands Sapi 3

2 E55 13





SAVE MOO-^160 on Brawny beds

SSI99M S299

Bunk bed is made of solid pine and converts easily to two twin size beds. With 2 mattress boards. Reg. $299.99.

Twin size Crews Quarters includes 2 mattress boards, 3-drawer chest. Regular $459.99.

Sale ends %ig. 27

SAVE on matching pieces

$249.99 4-dr. chest or student desk ea. 179.88

$229.99 Bookcase .......   179.88

$249.99 Single dresser...................  179.88

$119.99 Mirror or chair ...............ea.    95.88

Sale ends Aug. 27

60 to 150

OFF firm Luxury

Twin mattress or box:

Reg. $1

$219.99 Full size mattress or box spring each piece... 139.88 $499.99 Queen size set, 349.88 $599.99 King size set... 449.88

Comfortable sofas by day, luxurious sleepers by night

SPECIAL PURCHASE Full size sleeper

Full size Manda economizes on space. Youll enjoy comfortable sleeping and the beauty of transitional styling. While quantities last.

YOUR CHOICE

A. Transitional style sofa opens to a 60 x 72-in. queen size bed.

B. Country style queen size sleeper is OQQoo

ideal for weekend guests.

SAVE MOO on full size sleeper

Versatile transitional    Reg.    $399.88

design looks great in    00088

any decor.    ^ ZZ

Delivery not Included in selling prices of furniture





GIGANTIC CARPET SALE!

Choose from over 200 carpets SAVE >1 to >10 0 sq. yd.

599

Opening Place Regular $8.99

Regular $12.99

Q9(

Osq.

sq. yd.

Our lowest priced sculptured carpet comes in bold multicolors that help hide soil. Made of long-wearing nylon pile.

Summer Glow or Twilight Shadows

99

.yd.

Our Glow carpets are made of durable sculptured nylon pile. The vibrant multi-colors are great for active areas. Our Shadows carpets are made of subtly colored nylon pile with a shadowy effect. Great for most any room in your home.

Secret Dream carpet

Reg. $17.99    10^^

Our Dream carpets are made of polyester plush pile for beauty and durability. These lush carpets come in vibrant solid colors.

$12.99 Touch of Style, sculptured nylon

pile, now on sale............8.99    sq.    yd.

Cushion and installation extra

SAVE 20%-50%

on our boft-selling decorator and tubular braided rugs

Dynasty decorator rug comes in your choice of 3 great styles 8x11-ft. size, Reg. $599.99, now 399.99 Gettysburg braided rug is reversibie for extra wear in rustic colonial style.

8x11-fL size, Reg. $149.99  .....89.99

30x54-in. size, Reg. $29.99.......14.99

on Chico open-weave draperies

Come see our best-selling open-weave pinch- Reg. $26.99 pleated draperies. Create a look that fits your needs...lined with semi-sheer polyester batiste for added privacy or unlined for an open, airy look. _ _ _

$39.99 Uned drapery, 48x84 in.. pair, now 27.99 |

Other ready-made draperies on sale at 25-30% off:

$29.99 Epic rich, nubby textured draperies with acrylic, flocked, foam backing to help insulate against heat/cold. 48x84 in., pair, now on sale for 20.99 $39.99 Regal, our best-selling antique satin drapery of rayon and acetate with gently slubbed texture. Insulating cotton lining. 48x84 in., pr. 27.99 $6.49 Royal Jewel sheer panel with a lustrous sheen. Many sizes and colors.

Machine wash, tumble dry. 40x84 in., each, now on sale for.  ...........4.99

Available in made-to-length sizes, up to 108 in. long Sale ends Aug. 27

Sears has a credit plan to suit most any need

1 E55 15





$

80 OFF

Power-Mate* vac gets out deep-down dirt

Reg.

$259.99

Strong 2.0 peak HP suction (.70 HP VCMA) works with beater-bar brush to get out embedded dirt. Active brush-to-wall edge-cleaning gets into corners and close to walls. Adjusts to 3 pile heights.

Sale ends Sept. 3

Dualedge-deaner deans continuously close to wails and in comers

*100. OFF

Kenmore microwave oven with probe

2gg99

Reg.

$399.99

Temperature probe helps food cook to preset temperature. Variable power, 90 to 600 watts. Automatic hold/warm feature will help keep food warm one hour after temperature is reached.

Electronic digital readout. Easy-lo-read display of your settings.

16 E55 1

Temperature probe helps food cook to preset temperature

K    rieF^^rwy^conriBcigr.    1

Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised. . Delivfy riot mduded in selliiig prices of horne apptiarwes.

L





Kmmore kirge-capachy washer

Reg. $329.99. 3 wash/rinse temperatures combinationt ... all with cold rinses. 00099

White only    JLTmM

Large-capacity electnc dryer............259J9

Large-capadty gas dryer.............   299.99

$

100 OFF

18.0 cu.ft. frostless

refrigerotor-freezer

K 499^^

Ad|ust the 2 full-width shelves in 13.90 cu.ft. fresh food section to fit your needs. Has twin cnspers for storing fruits and vegetables. 4.10 cu. ft. freezer. White only

Sale efxJs Seot C

All-frostless convenience ... no defrosting ever, no frost build-up.

Kenmore washer SAVE MOO

ss 399^

Large-capadty 2-speed unit with 6 cycles tor vaned types of fabncs Self-cleaning filter, off-baiance switch and 5 water levels

Se enos August 2'

279

99

Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertisec

Special Purcnast

Large-capacity electric dryer

Solid-state sensor dryer. .with our bes' automatic heat-shut oft system. Wrmwe Guard* feature. wMequHr

Pilot-tree gas dryer,. ...........31939

Dryers require connecto-    

not includefl in pnces snow"

Washer and dryer m white tims^

Delivery not inctudec in sailing prices ot appttancet Watner and Dryer naaMbon extr.

2 E55 17u





*50 OFF

this Kenmore* 3-cycle built-in

99

j^cie Duin disnwasher

249

Power Miser control helps save energy. Stainless steel pulverizer blade. Two spray arms provide two-levei wash action. Available in white only.

PuKwizsr biads grinds Power Mtaar control soft food pwHctes    Ms you chooee

10 be flushed away.    unhealed drying.

SAVE 30 on 20-in. both vanity

Regular $60

White with gold-color trim. Hinges, pulls in antique brass-look finish.

LMaxy lop. taioai Ml

*5 off medicine cabinet

Durable plastic body, frame. Plate glass mirror. Reg. $19.99

*20 off storage cabinet

White, gold color trim to match vanity. Four shelves. Reg. $69.99

*20 off tub door

CorrosiorKesistant frame. Easy to dean bottom track. Reg. $89.99

Tub surround value

5-piece plastic. Easy to install. 6 shelves. Caulk, adhesive extra.

Toilet seat ....................4,99

Toilet.........   49J9

SWeendsAug.27 <

2999

14

49

69

39

KMimoie 14n. SpM9 Sovw dWiwaslMr

MMirlliMroydehitpt SAVE HOO

save energy. Pots/pww cyde.2^xayairaB.

$448J9.Peitable.349J9    am

Regutar 1390,99

*120

I

SAVE *4 to *6 on toblolop opplionGn

S-cup hot pot Wh at$us*ible thermosiat, leg, IMJIl lOcup coOeemekerwEi egnel Ighl. reg. $24901.. 2-eloetoeBierwllfpee>ywllngLeg.$22JO...j...

S#M$9eiieMiMfi

OiIcnwtnlMitWMi^  .siM^

18 E55 2

Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised.

WtLUE!

onoeew

099

M

conlral Me r^ymi fiOoose soft or llOitgnmngipniy

Or CwmMKVI.





yumior

1/2FMa

30005

I

I Ih

t Mii dWM4).eoolri. $13.MTUt0x Mini-gkm gil.JO

74006

1C

ii

SAVE'6-7

on quality l-coat latex for the entire home!

Easy Living matte flat or ceiling white, reg. $15.99 Weatherbeater flat finish, reg. $16.99

gallon

.Weatherbeater exterior fiat latex

Our fine quality exterior latex with outstanding durability in 46 colors.

''CashableMildew

Easy Living* interior Iqtex

Our best interior latex in 23 colorfast, washable colors. J^esists spots.

Other quality latex paints on sale:

$17.99 Easy Living eggsheM    $19.99 Weatherbeater

enamel med. gbas, gal. HJ9    satin finish gal. 12.99

Fa one-cow results. * Sear orwKXMi pamis must be appM as dracted

Sears has a credit plan to suit most any need.

J5\U<LIITCK ^?LID COLOR

eeteril

11^

SAVE 7

Soon Best Weatherbeater* exterior paint

Rig.t24J9

172

Satin lalBX gives you ieutstandina durabll-NySMMslOyeml In^egMacotori.

THERB0^

I nnoTRin^.

: LRTEX PR'

93955

iflWriO' *

lawn

33005

93005

r*

Min

79005

it

14800R

1l# ob compressor 8CFW40 P8I.

HMeapfiqfpw.,

SAVE 1/2 on these painting needs

$eorsBell9-jnch . Soars exterior    Tirpoione*    thinner

tapered paint brushes

one eodtrpjter covers

r

n.eaje

Deeigned for Easy Living and other 1*oo^ paints.

SSMtotSSe

Durable nykm brushes wlfo soft tip. Assortsdatziee. .

Dj:

Evaporates oontptoioly and qtil^ Ctam tauahBs On. i E55 19

40% OFF

Sears ooyiic latex 11-oz. oeixxaulk

RBB.S4S9    2^

Caulk with the touch of a finger. No gun needed!





25315-6-

SAVE *20

on Craftsman portable ele^ic power tools

99

39

Your choice

%-in. variable-speed drill. Reverses to remove screws. Va-HP. 0-1200 rpm. Reg. $59.99

Variable-speed sabre saw. V4-HP. Base tilts for bevel cuts. Edge guide included, Reg. $59.99

Dual-action pad sander. %-HP motor. For fine finishing or medium-i^uty sanding. Reg. $59.99

Light-duty bench grinder. Direct-drive. Two 5xV2-in. grinding'wheels.

r Reg. $59.99

Electric nailer. V-shape base lets you nail in comers, grooves, hard-to reach areas. Reg. $59.99

7-In. circular saw. 1 A-HP. No-load speed of 4800 rpm. Includes combination blade, wrench. Reg. $59.99

All Items on page on sale thru Aug. 27

$1.69, Pk. of 6, 4Vax 11-in. sanding sheets. F,M or C, 99S pkg.

2873

Reg. $6.99, Pack of 8 sabre saw blades, 4.99

$11.99, 6 woodbor-ing bits.   ____8^99

3^ IP

$23.47*, Pack of 3, saw blades, 16.99

*Rag. sep. prices total

6809

$24.99, 15-pc. highspeed drill bit set, 19.99

^454-5

$2.49, Box of 500 1-in. nails 1.69





SAVE *60

Portable kerosene wick heater

11999

12,500-BTU convection unit heats up to 16 hours on 1.6 gallons of kerosene. Reg. $179.99

Ctwck local (

parmitteci use

SAVE *8

on trash container with 6-yr. warranty

Permanex 6 container with domed lid.

32 gallon.

16

I WReg.l

Reg. $24.99 $2.49 Fifteen 33-gal. heavy duty bags, 1.99 $7.99, 20-gal. can with 2-year warranty... 5,99

Sale ends Aug. 27

FiM warranty (or the years

1M Mrialnwt nsTlilsi n

ifiowiwQ gwnsi cfKning or breaking

6104

SAVE 20-25%

outckK>r essentials

$4.99 Yard Guard outdoor fogger, 16 oz. 3.79 $2.69 OFF! insect re-

pellant, 60Z......1.99

$4.49 Flea-B-Gon* flea

killer, 24 oz 3.49

$4.99 Kleenup* weed

killer, 24 oz 3.69

$12.99 Ortho home pest killer, gal 9.99

SAVE *40

M-in. 2.9 OD 90s chobi eaw with COM

SoKd'State ignition. Automat-    n

Ic'chain oMng. Lo-Kick Fric-    I

tionFiglilar bar. Reg. $229.99    I U    Z

SAVE *120

3 J CID got chain sow with cose

S(*tetateignion.Auloitnanual

chain oiling. U>-Kick Frictkxi C Z

Fighter bar. Reg. $449.99 WXi Z

SAVE ^50-^300

on Craftsman lawn care equipment

8-HP rider

Reg.

$1199.99

Transmission with 5 forward speeds plus reverse; in-line gear box. 30-in. floating mower deck, 7 cutting heights. Electric-start engine.

Reg. $249.99 Self-bagging grass catcher.........

10-HP tractor

999

99

Reg.

$1099.99

Transmission with 3 forward speeds plus reverse; auto-motive-type differential. 36-in. twin-blade deck, 5 cutting heights. Electric-start.

3.5-RP mower

Eager-1 engine 10099

Reg. $269.99    |

Solid-state ignition, vacuum-action deck. Quick-height adjust. Automotive-type air filter. 20-inch cut.

4,0-RP mower

Deluxe Eager-1 0/1099

Reg. $329.99 itHV Solid-state ignition. E-Z oil fill n drain. Quick-height adjust. Soft tone muffler. 20-in. Permanex catcher.

10x9<ft.* gobl>styl lown building Galvanized Steel. SYzxaVa' _ _ _ interior dimensions. Un-1 /Q99 assembled. Reg. $249.99 I / 7

b* dhwiwion* toundwJ 10 #w fwwwt kw

SAVE 50%

Electrical tool kit

37>pc. kit for homo, boat and auto. $19.99 in 1983 Spring General Catalog

WMaquanUtniar

^99

SAVE *5

Ruorescent worklight

Energy efficient! 4-ft. fixture with two 40-watt fluo-    - - ^

rescent bulbs. Reg. $19.99    |    ^l    99

$2.29 Replacement bulb. 114

WortdighI on sale until Aug. 27

3 E5S 21





SAVE 70

on this garage door opew with over 500 security igodfle

Strong sM drivt tyftsm. motor. SoNd-^toto mlcrooonlroltor for rtNabity. 4i^4ninuto Hght doity. Door autormticafly ravamaa if obatructad. Rag. $209J9

SAVE OVER 50%

Craftsman 200-pc. standard and metric tool set

This mechanics 200-pc. tool set will help enable you to make small home and auto repairs. Includes: V*., Ya and V2 in. drive sockets; wrenches, accessories and more. Reg. sep. prices total $505.82

Toot sM sMtiga art baaad on rag. npnli phoas n tw 19KM4 Powar and Hand Tool Catalog.

SAVE *40-*60

Craftsman 10-dr. chest and 5-dr. cabinet

Chest. Overall size: 26x12x19-in. high. Provides 10.6 sq. ft. of storage space. Cabinet. Overall size: 26y2x18x39%-in. high. Provides 15.7 sq. ft of storage space. Sturdily constructed.

Chest    Cabinet

Reg. $239.99

Reg. $259.99

A( about Sim Aishoitad IraMMen or ganga door opanwa ne ESTMATSSi

Reg. Sep. pnces total $505.82

*188    199    199

aia anda Aug. 27

SAVE *100

on garage door opener with 19,000 codes

1/3-HP; strong steel drive system. Vacation security switch; key switch for outside operation.

S&39    169?^

Ovar 19.000

 security codes

22 OS 1

4'/Vminute ligm delay

90-pc. tool set

drive

RioieL|2M.or

2499

Craftsman tool box

HoldBtoolsupto 19-in. long. R|34.99 sf^antf Ag.fr





SAVE 50%

on SteadyRider RT shocks when

'Ik

/h(

purchased

in pairs

Sears Best radial-tuned shocks with comfort valve smooths ride on radial and non-radial tires. Temperature-compensated for all temperature conditions. For most cars and light trucks. Reg. $45.98, now 21.98 pair. Thats 10.99 each when purchased in pairs.

Sate ends August 27 ,

*8 OFF pickup/van shock absorbers

Regular $22.99 ea.

14^

For use where driving requires an extra-tough shock. In sets of 2.

Sale ends August 27

Limited warranty on SteadyRider RT and pickup/van (Super-duty) shock absorbers for as long as you own the car, including labor, if bought installed.

no OFF    ^

Air adjustable shocks

Ideal for pulling or carrying 5999

heavy loads. Reg. $69.99

Sale ends Septen>t>er 3

pair

Other Sears Heavy-duty shocks start as low as 5.99 each

Shock installation extra

4999

20 off 17-test engine onolyier

Tests altsrnstor, dwell, battery. RPM andinofe.1

r\! Ill I -111 . I) n

<22 OFF DieHaid

Sears Best car battery

[DieHard

DieHard

t /\ f i t    I    )f    ft    fi'.IVt

DieHarcf

Great starting power525 amps cold cranking power. In Groups 24, Z4F, and 74. For most cars. Installation included. Regular $75.99

53

99

with

trade-in

16 OFF DieHard AAarine/RV batteries

Regular $75.99 to $85.99. Deep-cycle for trolling and outboard motors with no charging systems

59 to 69

*22 OFF DieHard LT light truck batterycogg

For extra-tough driving conditions. Regular $75.99    JO

Battery sale ends SeplemDer 3

AegulwpnceQ Q9e 1 .gal jugs X TOT T

2 for 8

H) off Sears timing light

Inductivesimple to useneeds no adap-

teis. Rm. $34J9.

SetaMaAuguM?

20 off compact V/z ton floor jock

Hydraulic. Fits in many small car trunks. Reg. $59.99.

SeaandaAuguilZr

$79.99 X-Caigo car-top carrier

15-cu. ft. luggage capacity. For most cars. $29.99 hitch... 22.99

Saie0nda8aplamber3

Regular $89.99 our best dmrger

Ctwges all batteries. Maintainer charge. $29.99 charger. 22.99

1-9l W*

Salaprica 1-gO.iug*

rSL 2for6

Save $1.10 on purchase of two 1-gal. jugs of Prestone II arweeze and get $2 more when you redeem coupon from manufacturer.

Salt ends Auguai 27

10W-30<

5-qt. container*

All-weather oil. Reg. $5.40

SWatndtStgLS

6

Seot cushion

Cod...ventilated. Re-' verslble. Reg. $8.99.

E55 23





SAVE 30%

on radial tires

Two steel belts (or strength and long wear. Low rolling-resistance helps save gasoline. Radial design adds quick, responsive hand-

SuperGuard

radial

whrtewall

May be

substituted

lor

Regular

pnce

each

Sale

pnce

each

plus F.E T each and old tire

SuperGuard 30

Maybe

substituted

for

Regular

pnceea

whitewall

Sale price el whitewall

plusF.E.T.* each and old tire

WeatherHandler

radial

whitewall

May be subsWufed for

Regular

pnce

each

Sale

poce

each

plus F.E T ' each and old tire

P155 80R12

155R12

59 99

41 99

137 Wr- :

A78-13

P165-80B13

59 99

41.99

167

w 'Hi '

P155/80R12

155R12

41 99

24 75

' 141

P15580R13

155R13

69 99

48.99

1 50

D78-14

P185 75B14

73.99

51 79

200

P155 80R13

155R13

49.199

33.34

1.49

f' P16S80R13

AR78-13

79 99

55.99

164 ,

E78-14

P195.75B14

75 99

53.19

2.08

P165 80R13

AR78-13

56 99

38 01

1.59

P175 80R13

BR78-13

84 99

59 49

1 83

F78-14

P20575B14

76.99

53.89

2.23

P175/80R13

BR78-13

64 99

43 34

1.72

P18580R13

CR78-13

67 99

45 34

1 86

OADl*^

fiO 00

AP 00

1 90

G78-14

P215 75B14

79.99

55.99

2.40

r 1OD oUn IJ

wn / O" U

P185 75R14

CR78-14

71.99

48.01

1.98

P185 75R14

CR78-14

99.99

69 99

2.00 H78-14

P225 75B14

84.99

59.49

2.57

P19S7SR14

DER78-14

76 99

51 35

208

P19575R14

D ER78-14

104.99

73 49

2 13

G78-15

7C.D11

a A QA

CO AQ

O AA

r 1 f 3ri IH

r[JO /I5D10

Dy.4y

C.44

P205 75R14

FR78-14

81 99

54 68

2 28

P205'75R14

FR78-14

109.99

76.99

234

H78-15

P21575B15

86.99

60.89

2.66

P215.75R14

GR78-14

86.99

58 02

2.42

' P21S75R14

GR78t14

11499

00 49

2.49

L78-15

P235.70B15

89.99

62.99

2.93

P225 75R14

HR78-14

91 99

61 35

249

P205 75R15

FR78-15

11499

80.49

2 44 - fW

P20575R15

FR78-15

91 99

61.35

2.39

- ...

P215 75R15

GR78-15

11999

83 99

259 -

Limited warranty against tire wearout. For the

' .f .'

P215 75R15

GR78-15

96.99

64.69

255

P22575R15

HJR78-15

124.99

87 49

2 74 ..

specified miles. Sears will replace the tire or give a refund charging only for the miles used.

P225.75R15

HJR78-15

101.99

68 02

2.69

P23575R15

LR78-15

129 99

90 99

2 96

P23S75R15

LR78-15

106 99

71 36

283

- - '

V

=; V

SAVE25%

on Roci#lcindlM^ AII^Terram radial tiros

AB4tftin, O iitoh. iwMtwr trtdion for pick-upt, vans and RVa. Qiwl on and off toad. Sk onda Aug. 27.

{^SearsTire & Auto Centers)*

WaViralBluptoS OMftaotiOW^Q and a faguiar imair tor axoalat snglha pmakifL LUxic' fonaaka.

WE INSTALL CONFIDENCE)

DAY AND NIGHT    J

Wa pariionn automotiiw mtvIgm dudiH) praoflino atoft iMMBi InataHed Muzator* muffl6F. M(tot Ameito^^ cars. tnciudasfraaaxtiaiMr system irisptctioit. WsIdsdandduileidiauitaysiBimeitud^ ciampa and hangais extra M neededaJS Wheel algnineii.  ..............ItiJt

^ nMMnawMeiilgriimtcm

Sears

The loHowing merchandise 8 available in larger stores only; page 2. Levi Activewear pants, hooded sh*l. crew stwl; page 3. Levi soltstde luggage. Lews shoes; page 8, some hostery. page 10. Mens rmd-lengWi briels: page 12, computers. oHice lumrture. school supphes. typewrters. calculators; page 13, dock radw. portable radio, mov cassette, cassette headphones, rad headphones, ultralight stereo; page 14. furniture, sleepers, bedding; page 15. carpet, lamps; page 18. some water heaters, ironing board cover, page 20. electnc nailer, come-along. 4-pc. lock pliers; page 21. Chemicals, page 23, super duly S air ad)ustable shocks, tuning kghl, battery charger, cool cushion, trailer hitch. The toitowing merchandise 8 rnt available lor this sale; page 8. NSF support hose.

S^disQctierY guofovreeed or your money bock

SMstaction giMnmlMd or your money back

E55

UAM aOitUCR ANO CO

SHOP YOUR NEAREST SEARS RETAIL STORE Burlington. Charlotte. Concord, Durham. Fayetteville. Gastonia, Goldsboro, Greensboro, Greenville. High Point. Jacksonville. Raleigh, Rocky Mount, Wilmington. Winston-Salem    VA;    Danville, Lynchburg. Roanoke KY: Ashland

SC: Columbia, Floience. Myrtle Beach. Rock Hill    WV:    Barboursvitte. BecWey. Bhjefiekj, Charleston

NC:

4    E55    2    Printed    inUS    A    6    83    RF    732A    92782


Title
Daily Reflector, August 24, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30552
Date
August 24, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95460
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