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        <pb facs="00088154_0001" />
        <p>WEATHER</p>
        <p>. Fartiy ckmdy with wUdy iMitifii HiMiiliiihuiin Ight 9a Wedwday.</p>
        <p>A GOOD MARKETPUCI</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>for unusual Itoms: "Miscallaiw ous for Salo" in Clastifiod. Dial F4 2-6106 today to placo, your ad.</p>
        <p>S5th Year NO. 59</p>
        <p> WBkBortgr-^</p>
        <p>AflSOOIAtXD PRtai</p>
        <p>NO. 158 GREENVILLE, N. C</p>
        <p>TTJESDAY AFTERNOON^,</p>
        <p>12 Pages</p>
        <p>Pr&amp;lt; 5' Centr ^ *</p>
        <p>Nudear Station Plans Announced</p>
        <p>Rev. William Quick Is Chairman Of Body</p>
        <p>ATOMIO POWERED 8TEAM-ELEOTRIO PLAIO:  This Is th artists drawing of a large atomic powered steam^lectric generating station, wbtoh Duke Power CO. says it will construct In Oconee County. S.- C. nae station will bs on Lake Keowee, part of Dukes proposed Keowee-Toxaway Power Project in northwestern South Carolina and Southwestern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>(AP Wlrephotoi</p>
        <p>Atomic Power Go-Ahead Of</p>
        <p>Plant Has Duke Board</p>
        <p>Pitt Good Neighbor ^ Council</p>
        <p>Is Named By Commissioners</p>
        <p>By G. C. CHAPMAN Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>A Good Nei^bor Council was appointed and a date was set for formal approval of the budget for the next fiscal year at ttie regular meeting of Pitt County 6&amp;gt;mmissloners this morning.</p>
        <p>Commissioners named 16 of an expected 19 members to a eounty-wkle Good Neig^ibor Council, with Rev. Willi a m K. Quick of Greenville as chairman. Mrs. M. J. Moore of</p>
        <p>Ayden will serve as vice-chairman.</p>
        <p>Formal approval of the next budget, tentatively approved last week, will come at a special meetjog on July 18.</p>
        <p>Commissioners set that date as the earliest practical date for the meeting following the required 20 days of advertising</p>
        <p>the new budget.</p>
        <p>The Good Neighbor Counc i 1, organized following a meeting on June 29 of the Commissioners and mayors of Pitt County, was one of a list of 14 grievances presented to the County and the City of Greenville in Am1 by the National Association of Colored Peo pie and the Southern Leaders h i p Conference.</p>
        <p>Membership in the group includes:</p>
        <p>Rev. Quick, Dr. Malene Irons, Dr. Andrew Best and Raymond Williams, all of Greenville;</p>
        <p>George G. Sugg and Mrs. Mattie Dixon of Grifton;</p>
        <p>C. W. Everett and Lewis Jenkins of Bethel;</p>
        <p>Sam D. Bundy d F. H. Me-bane of Farm^e;</p>
        <p>W. B. Dillinghams and Rev.</p>
        <p>Hoyt Hammond of Wint e r-ville;</p>
        <p>James R. Norville of F a 1 k-land. Rev. James E. Langford of Fountain, and Elmore Hodges of Grimesland.</p>
        <p>Other members are to be appointed at a later date, it was announced.</p>
        <p>In other business'this morning, Commissioners were approached by a group of local citizens, the Committee For the Improvement of U. S. Highway 264, with a request that the county donate $1,000 toward compilation of information and publication of a brochure to be presented at an August meeting of the State Highway Commission in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>The group, headed by Dr. Robert L. Humber, Dr. J. W. Pou, Richard K. Worsley and Bancroft Moseley, informed</p>
        <p>the Commissioners that a total of $4,500 would be required in assembling and publishing the brochure.</p>
        <p>Aided by the Research Institute of East Carolina C o liege, which would contribute $2,000, and by Wilson and Beaufort Counties, to contribute $1,000 and $500 respectively, the brochure would contain complete information regarding the economic, agricultural, industrial and tourism benefits to the area should Highway 264 be four-laned.</p>
        <p>Dr. Humber told the Board be has had encouragement from authorities in Raleigh that a thorough and factual presentation would be favorably received by the Highway Commission.</p>
        <p>We are proceeding to pur</p>
        <p>sue this with interest and, I believe, an encouraging prospect, h*. Humber not^.</p>
        <p>Also present at the morning session was John Clark Greenville, representing the Airport Commission, with a request for a maximum of $3,-500 as the countys share in construction of a new building and other improvements at the local airport</p>
        <p>Bids on construction of tha proposed building were acept-ed June 28, Clark said, and construction can get under way immediately if the funds are made available. He reported that the low bid on the project totals $21,769.</p>
        <p>Commissioners made no decision on either request thie morning, but action was expected to come at todays afternoon session.</p>
        <p>CLEMSON, S. C. (AP) - Directors of Duke Power Co. today authorized construction of a</p>
        <p>second unit in operation a year later.</p>
        <p>He estimated total cost of the</p>
        <p>atomic powrd steam-; nuclear steam station^nchid^ electric generating station injing fuel, substation and trns-</p>
        <p>Oconcc County.</p>
        <p>The station will be on Lake Keowee, part of Duke Powers proposed Keowee - Toxaway Power Project in northwestern</p>
        <p>mission facilitiesat $207 billion. This is in addition to the $86.8 million required for construction of Lake Keowee and Lake Jocassee and the hydro-</p>
        <p>South Carolma and southwestern' electric generating , facilities</p>
        <p>North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Plans for the nuclear station were announced by W. B. McGuire of Charlotte, president of Duke Power Co., at a special meeting of the Board of Directors.</p>
        <p>He said steam for fiie plants two units would ba ptovidad by two nuclear reaetors, with Hit</p>
        <p>net capability of each unit expected to be 822,000 kilowatts. McGuire said the company</p>
        <p>operation in May, 1971, and the</p>
        <p>initially installed at those dams.</p>
        <p>Duke has estimated total cost of the proposed Keowee-Toxa-way Project at $700 million.</p>
        <p>The nuclear plant will be installed at a Keowee River dam. Lake Keowee^ which will cover 18,100 surface acres, will be fonned by. damming the Kao-Md Utfto riven.</p>
        <p>Duke Powers license applica-</p>
        <p>has been held'iq} by interventions by the U.S. Department of Interior and electric, cooperatives in North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia.</p>
        <p>Secretary of Interior Stewart Udall withdrew the Interior Department objections and the electric co-ops in North Carolina and Georgia are no longer protesting. However, the South Car blm cdop^^ objections are still pending. Tbe Federal Power Commission has scheduled a hearing Aug. 16.</p>
        <p>The Carolinas - Virginia Nuclear Power Associates are operating a small experimental nuclear generating plant near Pr,</p>
        <p>Carolina Power and Light Co. announced plans in January to</p>
        <p>tkm for the Keowee-Toxaway i install a nuclear generating</p>
        <p>Project I* pontog before ipiant'ne HaitsvUIer S.C."^</p>
        <p>the Federal Power Commission. il was "^filed Hiin. 4, 1)uT</p>
        <p>  "T  s':#</p>
        <p>As Critics' Piatfrm</p>
        <p>LO.NDON (AP) - Americans get out of Viet Nam was the familiar rallying cry as chanting crowds, many of them Communist-organized, staged Fourth of July protest demonstrations around the world.</p>
        <p>U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk was the target of about 5,-000 screaming Japanese leftists as he arrived in Japan for an economic conference. Police slipped him out of Osaka Airport by a back road.</p>
        <p>In Paris, about 25 Americans began a march on the U.S. Embassy to deliver a protest petition, and French Ck&amp;gt;mmunists moved in and swept the group into a fist-swinging clash with police. The crowd of 700 applauded when an American girl held aloft a burning American flag as a symbol for what's happening in Viet Namfor the Americana to get out.</p>
        <p>British police stopped an ai-</p>
        <p>British Prime Minister Harold Wilson yielded to demands from membera of his Labor party and scheduled debate in the House i wants of Commons Thursday on theiShoals. extended bombings of North!  _</p>
        <p>In Philadelphia, cradle of|EX-PollCGIH3n American independence, about</p>
        <p>-vim</p>
        <p>Carolina Power-and Lights plant, which will have a 700,000-</p>
        <p>firt ^ihmrcil iiclar steam generating plant in North and South Carolina.</p>
        <p>McGuire said Middleton Shoals on the Savannah River was considered as a possible site for the Duke plant.</p>
        <p>He added Dukes decisi( to place the plant at Keowee is firm, but that the company still a plant at Middleton</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Clearing Way For Moon Ship Launch.</p>
        <p>Giant Saturn Rocket</p>
        <p>CAPE KENNEDY,* Fla. (AP)</p>
        <p> Americas heaviest satellite</p>
        <p> a 29-ton monster rocket stage like that which one day will propel astronauts to the moon  vaulted into orbit today.~As it circled the globe, ground stations monitored 10 tons of liquid hydrogen in its tank and rqiort-td in the early orbits that the high-energy fuel was briiaving very well.</p>
        <p>Msjor purpose of th flight was to detennine if |Mto hy* been</p>
        <p>drogeft it last had been Harnessed for man-to-the-moon and other space flights after years of engineering headaches.</p>
        <p>Durteg the serond orbit, a successful simulaled fistrV of the stages engine was conducted. The .jcontrol center</p>
        <p>Found Dead</p>
        <p>400 demonstrators marched with placards protesting the i</p>
        <p>Viet Nam war. Across thejs  Ij*  |i -____</p>
        <p>street, Undersecretary of State 111 nlS bIOIiiO</p>
        <p>George W. Ball told a crowd of 2,000 standing outside Independence Hall that the United States was fighting so that South Vietnamese may enjoy the inalienable rights of Ufe, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Barry Goldwater told 39 college students outside his home in Phoenix, Ariz., that were sick and tired of seeing our men kiUed in Viet Nam. But before American troops are withdrawn, the Ck)mmunists must be</p>
        <p>tempt to burn the American flag  made to realize we mean busi-at the U.S. Embassy in L(xuion | ness, the 1964 Republican pres-where U.S. Ambassador David idential candidate declared.</p>
        <p>Bruce was holding an Independ-</p>
        <p>HamburgPoUce used rubber</p>
        <p>ence Day receptiOT. Tmo sup-  hoses  to  repel  about</p>
        <p>porters of the British pacifist Committee of 100 crashed the party but were hustled out when one of them proposed a toast to the dead and dying In Hanoi and Haiphong and the American withdrawal ^m Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>500 demonstrators who tried to storm the U.S. Consulate.</p>
        <p>MunichPolice dispersed a mob which after a protest rally threw rotten eggs and stones at the U.S. Q&amp;gt;nsulate.</p>
        <p>A former Greenville police officer, James Earl Keziah, Jr.</p>
        <p>School Study Group Meets On Thursday</p>
        <p>called the exercise proof that a Uquid hydrogen powerplant can be re-started more than once in space.</p>
        <p>The main sources of information vrere crystal clear television pictures relayed from a camera mounted in the tank. The camera peered through the clear liquid all the way to the bottom of the 18-foot deep receptacle and transmitted the photos to the ground.</p>
        <p>Reports from tbm ttalians said there was even less sloshing of the propellant than anticipated.</p>
        <p>Surface condition very calm, hardly a ripple, very stable and beautiful were am&amp;amp;ig^ commehS' bvring into the control center.</p>
        <p>dramatic reported receiving clear pictures from the camera as the huge stage passed overhead several minutes after liftoff.</p>
        <p>The controller at Bermuda reported the photos showed that the hydrogen was very stable and was behaving itself very well with only an occasional ripple on the surface.</p>
        <p>Mayor Opposes Includirig Fees</p>
        <p>Liquid hydrogen, a fri^d fluid 1) at a toha^ perature of 423 degrees below zero, has to be bottomed in the engine end of the tank to assure a re-start.</p>
        <p>The 17-story-tall Saturn 1 rocket, most powerful ever fired ^ by the United States,</p>
        <p>thundered off its launching pad Members of the Pitt County at 10:53 a.m. (EDT) on the 1.6-School Survey Committee will milUon pounds of thrust and</p>
        <p>meet Thursday night for a final report of the evaluation of Pitt County Schools and for a discussion of the $9,000,000 bond referendum scheduled for Ck:-tober 4.</p>
        <p>trailed a plume of fire more than 500 feet long as it darted into the sky.</p>
        <p>Eight minutes later, the National Aeronautics and Space</p>
        <p>The meeUng will get under-:  ^ounc^  that</p>
        <p>way at 7:30 p.m. In the court--foot second stage had ig-</p>
        <p>room of the new courthouse annex and will be conducted by</p>
        <p>nited with a 200,000-pound thrust burst and drilled itself into an</p>
        <p>Arthur S. Alford, Pitt School orbit about 118 miles above the Superintendent and chairman of!*artii-</p>
        <p>the survey committee, which</p>
        <p>26, was found shot to death last was established in April, 1964. night at his Sunset Ave. home.! In addition to studying the</p>
        <p>Pitt County Coronor E. W. Harvey said the victim was found about 8:30 p.m. by his wife as she returned from a weekend trip with the couples two children,</p>
        <p>The death was ruled as suicide by investigators.</p>
        <p>final report of the committee, the group will discuss the long-range plans for school construction in Pitt County. The committee, more than a year ago, recommended consolidation of the Pitt County high schools, which will be carried out if the</p>
        <p>The launching was held up nearly two hours because of the failure of one of two television cameras located in the fuel tank to monitor behavior of liquid hydrogen fuel. Flight controllers finally decided to launch with only one of the cameras operating.</p>
        <p>A tracking station at Bermuda</p>
        <p>Coronor Harvey said Keziah apparently shot himself in the head with a .38 caliber pistol before daybreak Saturt^ay morning. His wife had left for a weekend visit to her brothers Newport News, Va. home Friday night.</p>
        <p>Keziah had apparently been depressed over some debts, officers reproted.'</p>
        <p>He had been employed as a car salesman. *</p>
        <p>Skies AUght In Southeastern Greenville Fireworks Show</p>
        <p>bond referendum is approved.</p>
        <p>Members of the Pitt Board of Education, the CJounty Commissioners, Pitts representatives to the Genera] Assembly, school Advisory committee members, school principals and PTA presidents have been invited to the meeting.</p>
        <p>Hint Of Clash In Warsaw Pact Summit Meeting</p>
        <p>Fire Marshal Is Asked To Probe Elon Dorm Fire</p>
        <p>The skies of Southeastern Greoiville were afire last night with the fireworks exhibition of East Carolina Colleges annual 4th of July celebration.</p>
        <p>The program^ held in Ficklcn Stadium, was sponsored by the East Cajpolina (Ollege Union.</p>
        <p>The fireworks show was the concluding portion of the program, which earlier featured concerts by the colleges summer band and chorus and the presentation of the colors by an AFROTC Honor Guard.</p>
        <p>After a welcome by (Ollege Union President Miss Betty Lou</p>
        <p>Baker, an audience estimated at about 6,500 persons heard remarks from ECX Student Government President James Kim-sey. East Carolina Vice President Dr. Robert Holt, Mayor S. Eugene West and Vernon White, ^airman of the Pitt County Board of (Ommission-ers.</p>
        <p>The fireworks show was executed by Ed Rawl Jr. of Greenville. </p>
        <p>He said he fired some 800 shells from steel mortars buried in the ground. The shells, rocketed about 350 feet in the air ranged in price from $1.50</p>
        <p>to $21, Rawl explained.</p>
        <p>A licensed pyroiechnidan, Rawl said the audience for the fireworks show was estimated at between 15,000 and 18,000 persons. He said large crowds gathered in residential areas nearby and at the Pitt Plaza Shopping Center on U.S.264 bypass. ,  ,</p>
        <p>Thanks to the college and their interest in the Fourth of July the show has been extended to the more expensive-type shell each year, Rawl said. It gives a'chance for our children to remember why we celebrate July 4^</p>
        <p>ELON COLLEGE, N-C. (AP) The state fire marshall has been asked to investigate a fire that virtually destroyed Old East Dormitory on the Elon (k)l-lege campus Monday night.</p>
        <p>.EIob College Fire Department oficiis decided to probe the possibility of arson after a desk was found burning in the West Building, across a sidewalk from Old East.</p>
        <p>Firemen pulled the burning desk from tM West Building before damage could be done.</p>
        <p>Old East, used last session as a dormitory but scheduled to be renovated into a faculty office building, burst into flames about 8 p. m. Monday. Firemen brought the fire under control in abut two houn. No one was injured.</p>
        <p>BUCHAREST, Romania (AP  A summit meeting of Soviet bloc leaders continued today amid indications of a new clash between the Soviet Union and little Romania over control of the Warsaw Pacts military forces.</p>
        <p>Romanias official press gave no progress report on the meeting of the (k)mmunist counterpart to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The Soviet press made no mention of dissension and treated the meeting as a reaffirmation of solidarity.</p>
        <p>The seven-nation meeting opened Monday at the former royal palace an continued there today but there apparently was a delay. At 9 a.m. and again at 10, spokesmen said the meeting had resumed. But it was 11 a.m. before the delegations arrived.</p>
        <p>Mayor S. Eugie West said today his opposition to the budget approved by Greenvilles City Council last week stems from what he considers an unsound business approach to providing architect fees in the amount of $9,000 for a proposed addition to l^eppard. Mei^ Library.</p>
        <p>My opposition to the appropriations was not against the planning for the new library addition, Mayor West said today, but to the way in which</p>
        <p>totimates have been r^eived. It is estimated a bond issue o( $200,000 will be required to make the proposed library improvement I am opposed to spending $9,000 to provide buildi^ plans when the money required for constructioo of the new addition has not been approved by the )ublic in a bond issue, which 1 feel will be the necessary source of local funds for this project If this bond issue pass money for architect fees sbouli</p>
        <p>to matter ia being</p>
        <p>The statement continued:</p>
        <p>. The Council earlier agreed to accept the library proposal that sketches and preliminary esjtimates on consteuct^ cost be received from an architect. $1,000 was allocated to accomplish this, and the sketches and</p>
        <p>$9,000 in the present budget would be wasted in plans for a building that might not be built 1 feel the city must be operated on a sound business basis, and I do not Jeel that th ap* propriatibn ""of this' $9!!006 from' operating funds is a sound business approach.</p>
        <p>u*viwsuK.#uaea**M.*.MLy.er. :h</p>
        <p>2 Red Torpedo Boats</p>
        <p>Attacked By Planes</p>
        <p>A SATURN 1, the United States most powerful rocket, blasts skyward, propelling Americas heaviest satellite into orbit at Cape Kennedy today.</p>
        <p>(AP Wi rephoto)</p>
        <p>SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)  U.S. Navy fighter-bombers attacked two North Vietnamese torpedo boats off Haiphong early today as the air war against the Communist North continued without letup.</p>
        <p>One of the two A4 Skyhawks that caught the torpedo boats 38 miles southeast of the main North Vietnamese port was shot down, but the pilot was plucked from the Gulf of Tonkin by a rescue helicopter. A U.S. spokesman said he did not know if the torpedo boats were hit</p>
        <p>Navy and Air Force planes flew a record 91 multiplane missions against North Viet Nam Monday. The Fourth of July targets included an oil storage area 19 miles southeast of Haiphong.</p>
        <p>An estimated 250 to 300 planes made the raids, a number which a qualified officer said was above the average for the 16-month-old air war against the North. It was not a record number for a single days raid, however.</p>
        <p>The Navy planes also hit an</p>
        <p>oil storage area 25 miles west of Thanh Hoa, down the coast, as the intensified assault on North Viet Nams fuel supplies continued.</p>
        <p>U.S. military headquarters reported relatively little ground action in South Viet Nam, but it appeared that the Communists may have targeted isolated Special Forces camps for the victo-, ry that has so far been denied them in the 1966 monsoon season. Viet Q&amp;gt;ng raiders made four attacks on the lonely outposts in the past three days.</p>
        <p>The heaviest action reported Monday involved U.S. Marines near the northern city of Da Nang. With the help of air strikes and artillery barrages they reported killing 154 Viet Cong in various fights.</p>
        <p>The attack on the torpedo boats came in the same general area where Navy planes sank three similar North Vietnamesa vessels Friday as they wera headed for the 7th Fleet frigate C^ntz. Nineteen North Vietnamese sailors were captured.</p>
        <p>Annual Record</p>
        <p>AERIAL COLLISION ^ LIVERMORE, Calif. (API-Two light planes collided and crashed Monday about five miles east of here, taking six llivcs.</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCUTED PRESS</p>
        <p>Traffic accidents across the nation during the three-day Independence Day observance killed at least 567 persons, a record death toll for any Fonrtb of July holiday.</p>
        <p>With reports of traffic deaths that occurred up to midnight Monday night still trickling in, the three&amp;lt;day toll surpassed even the record foor-day toll for fiie holiday set in 1963.</p>
        <p>In addition to traffic fataU-ties there were 215 drownings, nearly doable last years 114 daring a similar 784iour wrek-end period. Boating accidents accounted for another 52 deaths. That made a total -of 834 accidental deaths reported ovw the holiday.</p>
        <p>Budget Okayed By Win terville s Board</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLEThe Winter-ville Board of Aldermen, meeting last night, voted formal approval to the towns budget for the neto'fiscal year just underway^</p>
        <p>The budget, which totals $139,-</p>
        <p>220, will not increase the pres ad valorem tax rate of $1.00 ter $100 valuation in Winterville, though the new budget reflects an increase of $12,180 over the 1965-66 fiscal year.</p>
        <p>The largest expenditures' in the new budget are for water line extensions and for the widening, 4installation of curb and gutters and the resurfacing of NC II through Winterville. This latter expenditure is earmarked as Wintervilles number one project for the year.</p>
        <p>In other business last night, the board appointed W. B. Dillingham and the Rev. Hoyt Hammond to represent the community on the Pitt (k)unty Good Neighbor Council.</p>
        <p>E. C. Hines, recently reelected to the board, was sworn in last night for another three year term.</p>
        <p>^ Mayor Walter Dale appointed Hines as commissioner for streets and drainage, Jimmy Stocks as commissioner for water and sewage and W. Jack Thompson as commissioner for fire and police department and for cemetery.</p>
        <p>Elwood Nobles was reappointed tax collector and W. E. Bn-nis was reappointed chief of police.  "  to</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0002" />
        <p>a-;:!; r-"--</p>
        <p>C.Tuasday, July 5, 1966</p>
        <p>Pi Change Of Pace Is^ Ofiereci In Stop The World</p>
        <p>(Editors Note; Mr. Vincent, a reviewer of drama and music for the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, was guest critic for the opening performance of the East Carolina College Summer Theatre production of Stop the World, I Want to Get Off.)</p>
        <p>By MAL VINCENT Norfolk Virginia-Pilot</p>
        <p>Theatergoers who have become accustomed to musicals that are louder, faster and more elaborate than ever will find it a pleasure to come across something like Stop the World, I</p>
        <p>Want to Get Off at East Caro-1 The idea is to clown through mime to convey Littlechaps lina Summer Theater through i a human life. As with most</p>
        <p>Saturday. It has a certain form and style that is far removed from the usual boy-meets-girl brand of musical.</p>
        <p>human lives, more than a little tragedy is involved before the finale. With song, dance arid mime, the young cast presents</p>
        <p>To say the least, Stop the the adventures and misadven-World is offbeat. Indeed, at *  ^  !,*</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>times it seems to labor a bit too hard to be avant-garde. All the actors wear white-face clown makeup. There are no costume changes. The pressure is upon the actors to vary mood and atmosphere. The set, designed by John Sneden, is a circus tent of which the audience forms half.</p>
        <p>tures of Littlechap, the poor Cockney lad who marries the boss daughter after getting her pregriant, advances from a branch office to head of the firm, enters Parliament, and even gets into the club of his choice (Snobs). With each worldly success. Littlechap sinks deeper into conformity and into</p>
        <p>birth and first attempts to walk are well handled. Dillards voice is pleasant enough for such ballads as* Someone Nice Like You and Meilinki Mailchick (Russian for Little Boy). His voice, however, was not capable of doing justice to Gonna Build a Mountain or What Kind of Fool Am I? (one of the best songs written for the musical theater in recent years). More volume was needed.</p>
        <p>The standout performer was Anne Gilliam who plays Little-</p>
        <p>his own selfishness.  'chaps  wife  as  well as his Rus-</p>
        <p>Bob Dillard is adept at im-|sian, German and American girl personating the clever, quick-1 friends. She displays a versatil-tongued chap. His bits of panto-|ity that is a pleasure to watch</p>
        <p>as she switches characters with</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Sargent Shriver* director of the antipoverty program, says family planning grants will be made available to the poor if they are desired.</p>
        <p>There is absolutely no hesitation on my part or, as far as I know, on anyones part in Washington to approve family planning grants, ShriVer said in an interoffice memorandum.</p>
        <p>As far as I know I have signed every such grant which has come to my desk. I shall continue to do so.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Diplomatic sources in Washin^n are mentioning the Dominican Republic as an alternate site for next months Inter-Americari summit conference.</p>
        <p>The conference is scheduled to be held in Buenis Aires, but the^change in sites  becau^'bf' the military coup that ousted President Arturo Illia of Argentina  reportedly has considerable Latin-American support.</p>
        <p>The conference was called to update the peace-keeping and economic machinery of the Organization of American States.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Robert M. Ball, commissioner of social security, says elderly pa</p>
        <p>tients under the medicare program apparently have not made a postholiday rush to the nations hospitals.</p>
        <p>Admissions are running at normal rates, Ball said. It</p>
        <p>Violation Is Charged Man</p>
        <p>Liquor Violation  ,</p>
        <p>  Director  Errol Greenberg has</p>
        <p>put a driving showmanship into his work. The result is a produc-Pitt County ABC officers and tion that glows with theatrical</p>
        <p>constables arrested Willie J. Hardy, 61-year-old Negro of</p>
        <p>imagination. The supporting cast consists of a Greek chorus</p>
        <p>reminiscent of the classic theater. It is to Greenbergs credit that he has put the chorus into highly diverting motiondanc-</p>
        <p>! m</p>
        <p>W UMi i:-:</p>
        <p>Ip A</p>
        <p>-V  'if</p>
        <p>i i  ^  &amp;gt;  X</p>
        <p>Route 4, Greenville on liquor _  law-violation charges early Sun-</p>
        <p>seems fair to assume that the 1 day.</p>
        <p>program will not increase hospi-1 Lawmen said Hardy of Route ........ ---</p>
        <p>tal utilization above the antici-j^^ Greenville, was charged when!^^8 miming as well as sing-pated level of 5 per cent  andjhe found on Ford Street i ^8* that will be absorbed in most i with 16 pints of tax-paid whis-' places with little trouDle. jkey.</p>
        <p>Ball ihade the statement Mon-, Hardy was charged with hav-iay after survey of 200 repre- ig over one gallon of tax-paid sentative hospitals showed only whiskey in his possession and normal advance reservations i with possessing tax-paid whis-for Tuesday and Wednesday. key for the purpose of sale.</p>
        <p>The case was scheduled for trial July 15 in County Record-</p>
        <p>'STP THE WORLD' . . . On tilted circle In foreground eiy (from left) Marcia Edmundson at Jane, Anne Oilllain Evie, Bob Dillard as Littlechap and Susan Corbett as Susan. (ECC News Bureau Photo)</p>
        <p>Capital Footnotes  ________</p>
        <p>The National Endowment for ers Court, the Arts is making available to i ^ the states and territories $2 million in grants to encourage work in a broad span of artistic and cultural activities.</p>
        <p>The Office of Economic Op-porturiity says^,699 youths riowf are enrolled in 104 Job CJorps centers, including 82 conservation centers, eight urban centers for men, 10 urban centers for women and four special centers.</p>
        <p>The Labor Department reports there were only 154 foreign seasonal agricultural workers in the United States at the end of June, compared with 2,-200 in June 1965 and more than 65,000 in June 1964.</p>
        <p>The cast is garbed in harle-quin-style tights designed by Lola McDermott in colors that complement Snedens set. The orchestra, directed by Gene Narmour, has been moved backstage for this production  a move which serves to create a ^ more spatial effect on McGinnis |^A,uditoriums crowded stage.</p>
        <p>Some of the British gags may become lost in translation to local ears but for those who listen closely, there are clever satirical barbs at marriage, politics, social-climbing, snobbery, religion, and the peculiar characteristics inherent in Russians, Americans, Germans and, above all, the British.</p>
        <p>Politics gets a good deal of the attention when Littlechap runs for Parliament on the Opportunist ticket and sings a song called Mumbo Jumbo,</p>
        <p>which the voters immediately go for in a big way. This, like most of the other Leslie Bri-cusse-Anthony Newley songs, is a delight.</p>
        <p>At the finale, the hero dies and another Littlechap is bom, thus completing the human circle.</p>
        <p>The more conservative theatergoers may often think that Stop the World is a bit too much. Others, however, will dig it the most for, above all, it is modern to the core.</p>
        <p>Frank H. Longino, M. D.</p>
        <p>announce the association of</p>
        <p>Bernard Vick, M. D.</p>
        <p>for the practice of General Thoraqic and Vascular Surgery Medical Pavilion  1800  West  Fifth  Street</p>
        <p>Greenville, North Carolina</p>
        <p>Warehousemen</p>
        <p>Gather In Va.</p>
        <p>VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) The 22nd annual convention of</p>
        <p>Milton E. Harrington of New York City, president of Liggett</p>
        <p>4fvt  Mirlis  tobacco  C6  wiS  dT-i</p>
        <p>sociation began here today, with leaders from all segments of the tobacco industry in five Southeastern states on hand.</p>
        <p>All the principal state grower organizationFarm bureau, grange and garmers unionas well as warehousemen, dealers and manufacturers will be represented, before the convention ends, said Fred S. Royster of Henderson, N.C., managing director of the association.</p>
        <p>Graduated From Dentistry School</p>
        <p>Richard H. Evans Jr. graduated June 6 from the University of North Carolinas School of Dentistry.</p>
        <p>Evans, who received an AB Council.*' degree from UNC in 1962, is a| Royster, who has been the 1958 graduate of Rose High chief Bright Belt administrative</p>
        <p>dress a banquet Thursday</p>
        <p>Hamngion wiil discuss the firms growing foreign operations, in addition to problems confronting the tobacco industry at home.</p>
        <p>Todays activities, concentrated mainly during the afternoon, featured sessions on export, research, health and taxation matters. Participants included John D. Palmer of Wilson, president of Tobacco Associates; Dr. Robert C. Hockett of New York, associate scientific director of the Council for Tobacco Research; William H. W. Anderson of Raleigh, secretary-treasurer of the Tobacco Growers Information Committee; and William A OFlaherty of Richmond, executive director of the Tobacco Tax</p>
        <p>(ireenville's Newest And Largest Department Store.</p>
        <p>Hiatts' i</p>
        <p>ennetif</p>
        <p>School.</p>
        <p>Commissioned as a lieutenant In the U.S. Navy, Evans is now living in Groton, Conn. with his</p>
        <p>officer for 22 years also wil give his annual report.</p>
        <p>The association represents more than 400 tobacco ware-</p>
        <p>S ',, , w","'' i'" ?.i'' house firms operating in Flori-Howeii of Wiimington and their Qjorgia, North and South liv^wek^ld daughter.  ,  Carolina ^d Virginia.</p>
        <p>While at UNC Evans won the !-----</p>
        <p>intramural sports trophy given by Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.</p>
        <p>He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>R. H. Evans, 614 Oak St.</p>
        <p>The Indian school at Fort Apache, Ariz., is named for Theodore Roosevelt.</p>
        <p>Bass Weejuns</p>
        <p>Antlque Brown. Whitkoy Comploto size rango</p>
        <p>Buy Now Whilo In Oood Supply</p>
        <p>EYEGLASSES</p>
        <p>CONTACT LENSES</p>
        <p>SUNGUSSES</p>
        <p>HEARING AIDS</p>
        <p>MAGNtnm</p>
        <p>OfBU tUSSiS</p>
        <p>bring your prescripiim</p>
        <p>to: '</p>
        <p>fjldjoufaiis</p>
        <p>aariCIANt. lee.</p>
        <p>OREENVILLB Balelfh Aei Charlette Alee fa Oreeasfeere</p>
        <p>STARTING TUESDAY MORNING JULY Sth AT 10 A.M. WILL ACCEPT APPLICATIONS FOR EMPLOYMENT AT OUR NEW PITT PLAZA STORE.</p>
        <p>Penne/s offers you a modern new store to work in, good salary, friendly helpful supervision, generous company benefits, training at full pay, and many other advantages. Come in and discuss your qualifications with us.</p>
        <p>THIS IS "EMPLOYMENT WEEK" AT Pin PLAZA!</p>
        <p>APPLY NOW!</p>
        <p>LOOK AT THE BENEFITS FOR PENNEY ASSOCIATES</p>
        <p> PAID VACATIONS</p>
        <p> DISCOUNT ON PU|CHASES</p>
        <p> SICK PAY PLAN</p>
        <p> GROUP INSURANCE</p>
        <p> PROFIT-SHARING RETIREMENT</p>
        <p> 5-DAY WORK WEEK</p>
        <p>INTERVIEWING HOURS</p>
        <p>TUESDAY - JULY 5 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M.</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY - JULY 6 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.</p>
        <p>THURSDAY - JULY 7 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.</p>
        <p>it</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>SALES ASSOCIATE</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>POSITIONS</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>HOME</p>
        <p>CREDIT &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>FURNISHINGS</p>
        <p>UYAWAY</p>
        <p>BOYS WEAR</p>
        <p>AUTO SERVICE</p>
        <p>GIRLS WEAR</p>
        <p>INFANTS</p>
        <p>SPORTSWEAR</p>
        <p>ELECTRONICS</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>READY-TO-WEAR</p>
        <p>SHOES</p>
        <p>If</p>
        <p>SPORTING</p>
        <p>FOUNDATIONS</p>
        <p>GOODS</p>
        <p>TEXTILES</p>
        <p>PAINT a</p>
        <p>HOUSEWARES</p>
        <p>fi'i</p>
        <p>HARDWARE</p>
        <p>FURNITURE</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>CATALOG TELEPHONE</p>
        <p>PERSONNEL</p>
        <p>There are many interesting Positions Available in all departments. Full and part time applicants considered</p>
        <p>AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER"</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0003" />
        <p>?ut Summer Holidays To Wotking</p>
        <p>By RUTH GWYN Summer is looked forward to as a tme of leisure by most Greenville teen-agers. For the girls, it is a time to la*e on the beach or by a pool. However, many young ladies are taking advantage of the long summer holiday in another fashionworking!</p>
        <p>Cheryl Lee, who will be at^ tending St. Marys Junior College in the fall, is combining money - making with sunbathing as she works as a waitress in a New Jersey resort area. Cheryl left for the Shoreham Hotel in Spring Uke June 21, and will not return until September 7. Her job is one with many aide benefits. She will serve three meals a day, wearing a different-colored pastel uniform at each meal, and will have the time between meals to herself.</p>
        <p>Since the Shoreham is on the ocean and only 15 minutes from Asbury Park, there should be plenty of things to do. Sally Scheipers, a rising senior at Rose High School, will also be working at the Shoreham, so Cheryl will already have one friend there. The girls will stay in a section of the hotel. Cheryl got the job through friends. She is planning to use the money she earns (salary plus tips) for her college expenses.</p>
        <p>An outdoor job appealed to Debbit Dayson, so she applied for work at the recreation center. She is now working five days a week, 9-12 and 2-5, at the Hillsdale Playground. The children range in age from 6-15, so to work with them requires both patience and endurance. .</p>
        <p>Among Debbies duties are playing volley ball, kick ball, baseball, in fact, any kind of ball, instructing the chil--&amp;lt;hn' in arts -and crafts, and taking a trip to the bowling alley once a week. Soyie field trips are also being planned. Debbie works with about 20 children in the morning and about 30 each afternoon, although some of these are the same children.</p>
        <p>Stated Debbie, I enjoy working with people, especially children, but, actually, the childrea have taught me a lot. Jean Hodges is working at the recreation office, while C a r 0 11 Andresen and Lou Horne handle the tot lot of youngsters 4-6. Milton Hadley is busy with his job at the Meadowbrook Playground.</p>
        <p>Some patients at the hospital have doubtless been in a state of cohtsin llly s^ twins Ann and Carol Waldrop assumed their duties as</p>
        <p>To get this job, one must not only fill out an application complete with references, but also take a test. A failing grade on the test means no job. In the morn-</p>
        <p>to care for people. Presently, Ann is working in the maternity ward, with Carol working in pediatrics.</p>
        <p>1...^ Ordinarily, the girls work five days a week, but this does not necessarily mean that the weekends are free. The days off might be Tuesday and Thursday, or any other two days. Before they even started work, Ann- and Carol attended classes for two days to receivf instructions about their new duties. Now, Carol says, I feel like I know what Im doing. Thats because everyone helped us. 'They will quit September 5, and leave six days later for Methodist (Dollege in Fayetteville.</p>
        <p>Margaret Burnette is combining summer school at East Carolina with a job in the credit department at Blount-Harveys. She has been working there jpart time since November. Saturdays mean a full work day for Margaret, while school takes up a large part of her days the rest of the week. She types, answers the charge phone, and does other jobs around the office.</p>
        <p>Since she began work there, she has worked in the stock room and clerked, also. By doing this, she learned a lot about all the working parts of a store. Margaret stated that her job does not interfere with her school work ex</p>
        <p>cept at test time, when it makes study time  little harder to find. The aspect of her job* that appeals most to her is meeting all kinds of people. Sfie Mu probably continue working through next year, using the money she earns for clothes and extra cash.</p>
        <p>Jean Harvey and Sue Pierce are both working at Sheppard Memorial Library. The girls have developed a switch-about system. One week one girl works in the main library, the next week she will work in the branch library. At either location, the duties are the same  putting books away straightening them, working at the desk. Both girls have</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>worked for the library ne2U"ly two years.</p>
        <p>Sue was one of the earliest applicants, since she applied for a job at 13, and was not iltgibie to wtnit untit "She 16. She began work on her 16th birthday. Both girls work five days a week. Jean particularly likes getting to know a number of adults that she would not otherwise have an opportunity to meet. Sue and Jean are both working for extra money.</p>
        <p>The jobs are varied and the motives differ, but all the girls share one characteristic enthusiasm. 'They are only a few out of the army of</p>
        <p>Greenville teen-agers who are learning by doing.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, July 5, 19663</p>
        <p>ficJsndah</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 7:00 p.m.Creasy K. Proctor, Order of DeMolay meets at Masonic Hall 8:i50 p'ih.  Naval Reserve meets in basement of Austin Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Pitt Co. Alcoholic Anonymous meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville Hwy.</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 1:45 p.m. ( Wednesday Afternoon Duplicate Bridge Club weekly game at Planters Bank</p>
        <p>PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL . . . might be the scene of some confusion especially when twins, Ann and Carol Waldrop, left to right, are working as nurses aides.</p>
        <p>News From Robeisonville</p>
        <p>J. E. Reynolds, minister of</p>
        <p>the Oak Grove Church of Christ, of Robersonville, and his wife.</p>
        <p>ter of Hazlet, N. J., are spend</p>
        <p>ing two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Taylor</p>
        <p>Peggy, wi|^ be working with the | while her husband is doing his</p>
        <p>young people at the Roanoke</p>
        <p>Christian Service Camp at Washington, this week.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Walter Whitehurst of Greenville, Mrs. Lester Sco 11</p>
        <p>^usd-.Mcs W*. 4 Monday in Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>summer training at Gamp Le-</p>
        <p>jeune.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Elvis Carawan and her daughters, Cindie and Gail James, left Friday night for,a sjgbtseftingtrip.io. Florida. -They will spend a few days with</p>
        <p>Corpus Christie, Tex., where</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Kiwanis Club meets</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Altar Society of St. Peters Church meets THLHSDAY 7:00 p.m.  Winterville Kiwanis Club meets in Community Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  O)ochee 0)ub-cil No. 60, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Redmens Hall</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  VFW meets at Post Home 8:00 p.m.  Cosed meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous Friendship Group at Hooker Memorial Christian Church 8:00 p.m.Dessert bridge honoring Miss Kathryn Winchester, bride-elect, given at the home of Mrs. Tom Hannaford by Mrs. Carl Crawford and Mrs. Hannaford</p>
        <p>FRIDAY 7:30 p.m.  Redmen meet 7:30 p.m.  Regular session of Faculty Duplicate Club meets at Planters Bank 8:00 p.m.  Pitt Co. Alcoholic Anonymous meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville Hwy. SATURDAY 6:30-7:30 p.m.  Summer Theater buffet for members of Greenville Golf and Country (Hub. Reservations are not necessary</p>
        <p>- SUNDAY-12:30 p.m.  Luncheon buffet for members of Green-Golf and Ck)untry Club. Make reservations by telephone PL 6-1237</p>
        <p>Leaves For European Tour</p>
        <p>BIRTHS</p>
        <p>they visited Mrs. Etheridges brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Delos Doughter. While there she saw another sister. Miss Eveleyn Everett, and brother, Harry, his wife and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Everett.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Hattie Harrell of Rich-her parent, Mrs and Mrs. Led-me;!^arrived &amp;lt; is,ilofeci:oavie*a;^Ior</p>
        <p>Gaston Andrews Jr. of Wil-,i;i family, son spent Saturday with his fa</p>
        <p>Friday to spend a rriohlh with ,^*^d his little girl Lee Ann, at her son-in-law and daughter,! West Palm Beach. Donna and</p>
        <p>Lt. Tommy Lough, son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Lough, of Elkton, Va., who has recently returned from Korea was the guest of'his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bunting, for two days.</p>
        <p>Seaman Tilton Harney of Norfolk arrived here Tuesday for a weekend visit with his grandmother, Mrs. Florence Creecy.</p>
        <p>I Dutch Harney, a government Miss K^en Reed from Hoi- grader working in Faison, spent ,lyiyowl, f'3 arrived la't jeeS a !c^se3d-.fcc,. -  . </p>
        <p>ifr/' Wa- Walter Sunmer of El.za-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs..^j</p>
        <p>^ Mrs.". Arti^</p>
        <p>CAROL CLARKof Greenville is pictured on deck of tho Greek line luxury flagship, TSS Queen Anna Maria, Just before sailing from New York harbor bound for a summer holiday vacation tour of Europe.</p>
        <p>GRIFFON NEWS</p>
        <p>Miss Sue Burch a student at</p>
        <p>Rogerson</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Rogerson of 106 N. Summit St., a son, Timothy Eason, on July 1, 1966, in Pitt Memorial Hospital .</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Winston Cargile! Charles who have been visiting</p>
        <p>ther and stepmother, Mr. and</p>
        <p>and children, Blain, Glenn and'^.^i^ grandparents for a month Mrs. Gaston Andrews Sr.</p>
        <p>(Will accompany their motiier to</p>
        <p>Benny Edmondson, Mr. a  d i their home in Robersonville</p>
        <p>ina The cirir take temi^^ 'Mrs. J. D. 'Tyler and daughter,! Bobby Batts, who h^ t</p>
        <p>Alida Tyler, attended -l,e Ty-;Visitmg Mrs_ Gladys Tayl lers family reunion at the home Ralph and Emily, returned to</p>
        <p>tures, give baths, and change the linens. They also take pulses and give blood pressure readings. After lunch, they admit new patients, make trips to the lab, run errands to central supply and X-ray, and do other assorted odd jobs.</p>
        <p>Carol, who plans a nursing career of some kind, decided to find out if this was the job for her by becoming a nurses aide. Ann, who has no nursing career in mind, simply likes</p>
        <p>been</p>
        <p>or,</p>
        <p>_</p>
        <p>[Jlowdoj^ou know ^ a diamond r</p>
        <p>Finding out about the precious diamond you wish to purchase is as simple as 1-2-3. And you dont even need your own loupe to do iti Choose a jeweler you can trust one recommended by an organization such as the American Gem Societyand then rely on his high standards ef ethics and trained gemological background to carefully and truthfully advise you. You will find such attention ^n our store. Do come in soon and let us show you our fine diamonds.</p>
        <p>of Pete Tyler in Rich Square.</p>
        <p>Miss Carol Hardy is attending camp at the Circle M. Ranch for Girls at Clover, Va.</p>
        <p>Miss Linda Rowe of Raleigh is spending sometime with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Edmondson.</p>
        <p>his home in Wallace Friday.</p>
        <p>Miss Mary Rodgerson of Wil-liamston arrived here Saturday to spend July 4 with her sister, Mrs. M. C. House, and son, George.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Edwine Coble of Greensboro were the guests</p>
        <p>S-Sgt. and Mrs. Dalina Ever-of Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Taylor</p>
        <p>ett, Dal, Curt and Linda of Florida and his brother, Lt. Everett, his wife and children, Myrna, and Vernon, from Imperial Beach, Calif, are visiting Mrs. Jack Everett.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Irving Smiths recent guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Turner and family from New Orleans, La., and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hold i n g of Smithfield. The three ladies were classmates at Salem College, Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p>Mrs. R. J. Riley and daugh-</p>
        <p>Wednesday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Letha Baldress is visiting relatives in Tennessee.</p>
        <p>Mrs. William Etheridge and daughter, Donna Ruth, and friend Miss Mary Louise Whitaker, returned by plane from</p>
        <p>Strips of onion, cooked in but-</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Archie Andrews of Raleigh visited her unc 1 e and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Taylor, Sunday.  ;</p>
        <p>Mrs. Fred James and child-! ren, Harold and Sarah Jean,; have returned to Atlanta, Ga.,</p>
        <p>ter, and a dash of thyme will add interest to cooked carrots.</p>
        <p>How To Hold</p>
        <p>FALSE TEETH</p>
        <p>More Firmly in Place</p>
        <p>Do your false teeth annoy and em&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>after snendine a week with her' barrass by slipping, dropping or wob-diter spenomg a week Wlin ner, bling when you eat, laugh or talk?</p>
        <p>mother, Mrs. H. Leroy Keel. Just sprinkle a iittie fasteetth on</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Gene Taylor and son, Scott, are spending this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Anderson, at their summer home in Morehead.</p>
        <p>your plates. This alkaline (non -acid) del</p>
        <p>powder holds faUe teeth more firmly and more comfortably. No</p>
        <p>and more comfortably. No gummy, gooey. piuBty taste or feeling. ix&amp;gt;es not sotu. Checks "plate odor breath.**</p>
        <p>Edwards</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Noah Lee Edwards of Rt. 1, Greenville, a son Paul Christopher, on July 1, 1966, in Pitt Memorial Hsspal.</p>
        <p>Lenoir Memorial Hospital in Kinston spent the weekend here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Burch Sr.</p>
        <p>' lifr. and-^Mrs.- Tommy- Jones and sons left Sunday for a vacation trip to the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee.</p>
        <p>Miss Barbara Hooks of Raleigh was here for a weekend visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hooks.</p>
        <p>Miss Anne Dixon a member of the Chesapeake, Va., school faculty is here for a summer vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Dixon.</p>
        <p>Among those in Raleigh on Sunday for the wedding of Miss Faye King and Ben Fleming were bis parents, Mr. and Mrs.: Dock Fleming, EMdie Hugh Dixon, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bradley, Misses Mary Helen and Paula Bradley.</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. L. Tucker had as ^3as^ for. 54  at</p>
        <p>cottage at Minnesott Beach, .Mr.</p>
        <p>and Mrs. H. P. Quinerly, Mr^ and Mrs. Alton Chapman, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Chapman, Misses Louike Mewborn and Bertha Jolmsiffi Tom Mewborn.^</p>
        <p>Mrs. Edwin Reeves and Mrs. B. C. Troutman have returned from a visit in Winston - Salem with Miss Margaret Sugg.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Joe Paget and daughters, Jan, Jill and Judy havt returned from a two weeks visit with relatives in Atlanta, C^a.</p>
        <p>HAIR</p>
        <p>WIGS</p>
        <p>39u.</p>
        <p>Mywac SS.TO</p>
        <p>1M% HUMAN</p>
        <p>11.00 LAYAWAT PLAN</p>
        <p>WIGARAMA</p>
        <p>109 ATLANTIC AVI.</p>
        <p>Dentures that fit are essential to health. See your dentist regularly. Get PASTEETE at all drug counters.</p>
        <p>LEMON CUSTARD PIE</p>
        <p>Diener's Bakery</p>
        <p>MEMIR AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY</p>
        <p>LAUTARES</p>
        <p>JEWELERS</p>
        <p>414 EVANS STREET</p>
        <p>OPENS</p>
        <p>THUR., JULY 7</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>I BILLIE</p>
        <p>MITCHELL'S  FLOWERS</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>PHONE 756-1160</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY'S</p>
        <p>SPECIALS</p>
        <p>DAN RIVER</p>
        <p>DRESS FABRICS</p>
        <p>45 IN. WIDE</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>49c</p>
        <p>YARD</p>
        <p>1000 YARDS</p>
        <p>CURTAIN and DRAPERY</p>
        <p>FABRICS</p>
        <p>45 IN. WIDE</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>YARD</p>
        <p>25c</p>
        <p>White's Stores, Inc.</p>
        <p>The Big Store On Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>BOSTIC-SUGG</p>
        <p>Wednesday Buys</p>
        <p>FULL SIZE PLASTIC MAHRESS</p>
        <p>COVERS H</p>
        <p>WITH ZIPPER CLOSURE  </p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>EA.</p>
        <p>PLASTIC PILLOW</p>
        <p>COVERS</p>
        <p>WITH ZIPPER CLOSURE</p>
        <p>49c</p>
        <p>52"x52" PLASTIC TABLE</p>
        <p>CLOTHS</p>
        <p>ROUND STYLE IN PLAIDS</p>
        <p>39c</p>
        <p>52x72" PLASTIC TABLE</p>
        <p>CLOTHS</p>
        <p>IN PLAIDS</p>
        <p>49c</p>
        <p>\i:u WO</p>
        <p>54"x72" PLASTIC TABLE</p>
        <p>CLOTHS</p>
        <p>$749</p>
        <p>Looks Like Lace.</p>
        <p>Colors: Gold A White</p>
        <p>MEN'S a WOMEN'S PLASTIC RAIN</p>
        <p>COATS</p>
        <p>19? each</p>
        <p>IIHilllllllllllll*  A  ^  .  illllllllllllll</p>
        <p>FURNITURE</p>
        <p>lie</p>
        <p>m wm tea smr, ewemii. k c miomi  tw-mw</p>
        <p>inTTTTliiiiiiiiuiuiiumiT</p>
        <p>OPEN</p>
        <p>All Day</p>
        <p>Wednesday</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0004" />
        <p>Tuesday, July 5, 1966</p>
        <p>City's Growing Pains Are Evident</p>
        <p>It is not surprising that ^Greenvilles City Council found it necessary to adopt an increased budget for the new fiscal year to meet the growing needs of this growing community.</p>
        <p>No one, of course, relishes the idea of an increase of nine per cent in the ad valorem tax rafe which the Council adopted along with approval of the budget. The increase in the tax rate from $1.10 to the new rate of $1.20 per $100 valuation means that the cost of municipal government has gone up for all local taxpayers.</p>
        <p>Hopefully, it will also mean that the city will be able to provide proportionally better services and facilities to meet the needs of its citizens.</p>
        <p>Like most progressive communities, Greenville is undergoing a continuing series of growing pains. During the past year its corporate limits were expanded to include an additional 1,553 acres. While this additional area brought into the city additional property valuation of more tban $7 million, it also requires greater expnditure of funds for the city to</p>
        <p>Money Squeeze "moact Widens</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM A. SHIRES MONEY  The pinch of a llfht money situation affect-lag bi^eri, sellers and build-S is North Carolina is al-0 being felt by state offi-eiale and in political circles.</p>
        <p>Ttee are signs it may be Mt tiwrn harder in com i n g moDflis. Already there is wideiprcad talk that it may be necessary to ask the 1967 legislature to raise the state's fixed legfd maximum of six par eeat rate of interest on Qost types of loans.</p>
        <p>There are reports of In-creaeiiw pressure for this ort or actkm.</p>
        <p>BLAMED  There are eliiv factors, of course,^ but file preeent six pe* cent maxi-loam Is being blamed, at least indirectly, in some cir-eiee as a ejse of the pres-enl preSeaihent in Nor t h Cinlina</p>
        <p>.-vsu</p>
        <p>This is because many neighboring states have higher legal interest rates on loans seven and eight per cent in South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, and seven in Tennessee and Kentucky.</p>
        <p>It is felt this is causing m* IS at least one causeof a drain on the supply of mortgage money jivailable in North</p>
        <p>FACTOR  The fixed six per cent interest rate in North Carolina becomes even more of a factor when federal agencies such as the Federal Re-aerve Board and Federal H&amp;lt;nne Loan Bank raise their toterest and discouBt rates.</p>
        <p>For cxanople, the Federal Home Loan Bank has increas-d its interest rate recently to 5^ per cent  the rate at which savings and loan as-odatioiis must pay to borrow money from that source. The associations feel they cannot make a profit on lending per cent money at on-^ six per cent</p>
        <p>Other factors being cited</p>
        <p>include competition between commercial banks and savings and loan associations for savings dollars, the withdrawals of savings for higher return, for increased consumer buying, for paying taxes and meeting increased living costs.</p>
        <p>ACTION  Insofar as the states six per cent maximum interest rate on home and other loans is concerned, apparently there is little the state can do until the legislature meets.</p>
        <p>Even then, there are predictions that it will be difficult. Increasing the interest rate allowed under North Carolina's usury laws is always a legislative hot potato.</p>
        <p>Some legislators and others influential in financial and political circles are discussing a'^^ible^^slidjng' scale type of legal interest rate.</p>
        <p>This, they say, could be tied to the interest and discount rates fixed by federal r^ulation and state officials would be permitted to adjust the states interest rate accordingly, perhaps not more than once a year.</p>
        <p>POLITICS  Those who scoff at the idea of any talk about Dr. Leo W. Jenk i n s becoming a candidate for governor may overlook the fact that another educator-admimstrator was being talked about just three years ago.</p>
        <p>That man was William C. Friday, president of the Consolidated University of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>'^ntr'rday a n (f Dr. Jenkins are figuratively but not reallyat odds.</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>ident of East Carolina College and pushing vigorously for independent univers 11 y status for the rapidly-growing campus at Greenville.</p>
        <p>It is felt that Friday, as president of the Consolidated University, must represe n t and support the one University concept. But there is nothing wi record to indicate Friday actually opposes university status for ECC.</p>
        <p>Whether it comes to point and counterpoint between the two men, politically or otherwise, depends on what develops later this year and in the 1967 General Assembly on the East Carolina issue.</p>
        <p>provide .'Services to this new additiQrral area.</p>
        <p>_ .-AIoreover,.Greem iHe has..other needs which are only indirectly afiected by its gfovvlh in geographic  area. Many t^cilities which once adequately served citizens of the city are no longer adequate. These, like the services they provide, must be expanded to meet the new and growing needs. And UJce most other businesses, the cost ot operating the city of Greenville continues to rise. Goods and sendees which the city must purchase to carry on its operations cost more than they did a year or two ago. And again this year the city is making an upward adjustment in its salary scales in order to continue to be able to comj)ete effectively for the personnel it must have in various departments.</p>
        <p>The new, higher budget and the higher tax rate for Greenville imposes upon city officials and employes an increa.sed responsibility to see to it that the local government operates in the most efficient and effective manner possible in order that the greatest possible value will be received for each of the $1.5 million spent to finance the citys operation during this fiscal year.</p>
        <p>Pitt Blessed By Few Serious Road Mishaps</p>
        <p>While the nation was experiencing one of its worst July 4th holiday week-ends so lar as traffic deaths and injuries were concerned, Pitt County and its municipalities were blessed with a lack of serious traffic accidents, injuries and deaths.</p>
        <p>Motorists of the county are to be commended for the care they exercised on the highways during the week-end. It is reasonable to assume that the vast majority of those who took the wheel of automobiles during the week-end were vividly conscious of the greater-thaii-normal hazards they could expect on the highways during the holiday. Correspondingly, they seemsd to have taken extra precaution to avoid serious mishaps.</p>
        <p>In spite of efforts put forth by the Highw'ay Patrol and other agencies to stem the tide of highway accidents during major holidays, the outcome is ultimately decided by the drivers. If there is a genuine effort on the part of the vast majority of drivers to exercise extreme caution, the accident rate can be held down. If, on the other hand, there is less than the normal amount of care taken ih driving, the'accidenlr rate-usually soars.</p>
        <p>Pitt County is fortunate indeed to have come through the holiday week-end without the serious highway toll that w'a.s exacted elsewhere in the state and the nation.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>By HAL BOYLF</p>
        <p>items Learned</p>
        <p>ust Listen lo</p>
        <p>Gen. DeGaulle</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-Things a columnist might never know if he didnt open his mail:</p>
        <p>Man, if you're looking for a marriage partner, , Jhere_ are a lot of veterans available. The nation now has some 84 million widows and more than 2 million divorcees.</p>
        <p>Forget any dreams you have of discovering a valuable j)earl in a restaurant oyster. Pearls found in that kind of bivalve arent of gem quality, and h a*V e nothing but curTbsity value.</p>
        <p>SEE AMERICA FIRST: Our</p>
        <p>people spent between $20-25</p>
        <p>Other Editors Saying</p>
        <p>By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN</p>
        <p>Copyright, 1966, King Features Syndicate, Inc.</p>
        <p>The smart people at Radio Liberty, which monitors whatever is being said over the</p>
        <p>noticed a recurring peculiarity in de Gaulles method of</p>
        <p>ize that the concept of nation-  _  ..</p>
        <p>alism, in the Soviet Union,  ReCOrd  bpeaKS</p>
        <p>has unsettling potentialities.</p>
        <p>So what is de gaulle up to  &amp;lt; Elizabeth City  stepping in and taking over</p>
        <p>when he invokes a slogan that  Daily Advance!  anything that private enter-</p>
        <p>could onlv remind Ukrain- ^  .  nrise can handle and he said</p>
        <p>menians Latvians  Lithiian-  est of First Distrct Congress- ne wouia conimue to proiesi</p>
        <p>meiua^, Latvians, utnuan-  unrealistic guidelmes that oe-</p>
        <p>AA  a'c  u  Bessarabians and Jews man waiter jor^s lor nis area  individual of tiieir</p>
        <p>gone from one Communist  when  the' r^ord he has estaB- ^ ^  ^  espetiaLV  .io</p>
        <p>ception to another during his</p>
        <p>visit to the socialist fatherland. Me nas invariably made it a point to say Long live Russia, and he always seemed to be saying it in Russian, not in French.</p>
        <p>JOHB</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED</p>
        <p>DAVfO AFLIAN WHICHARD, Chairman Of The Board</p>
        <p>PuWithad Ivary Afternoon Except Sunday Established 1882 JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers</p>
        <p>Mitarsd at Post Office, Greenville, M. C. as ssoond class mail matter</p>
        <p>Week 30c Week 35c</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrtor On Towns)</p>
        <p>By Csrrior (Motor Routes)</p>
        <p>By MAIL, Payable In Advance Greenville Post Office, Pitt County, RobersonviUe, Vanceboro, Washington and Chocowimty.</p>
        <p>Three Months ....  3.75</p>
        <p>Six Months ............................. 7 00</p>
        <p>One Year ............   Ii3.00</p>
        <p>North Carolina (other than listed above)</p>
        <p>Three Months  ........  ..  4.00</p>
        <p>Six Months  ........  7.50</p>
        <p>One Year .............................$14.00</p>
        <p>Plus 3% N. C. Sales Tax All Other Outside North Carolina</p>
        <p>Three Months ____....   4.25</p>
        <p>Six Months .............................. 8.00</p>
        <p>One Year ......................I......  $15.00</p>
        <p>MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>The Aaaooiated Press is exclusively entitled to use for pubil-eatlen 11 news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise crsdited to this paper and also the local new's published her^ All rights of publicatioas of .'special dbpatihe* here re elao reserved.</p>
        <p>Member Audit Bureau of Circulation,</p>
        <p>All advertising copy mu-st b received at least two days before publication data.</p>
        <p>CHAMBERLAIB</p>
        <p>The opinion of the Radio Liberty experts is that there is more in this than meets the ear. For to the Sovieti, Russia and the ethnic Russian people constitute only a half of the multi-national Soviet Union. Indeed, the gan Long live Russia' been frowned upon by Kremlin ever since the Red armies, by dint of conquest in the Caucasus. Kazakhstan, 'the Ukraine, Turk menistan and elsewhere, put together the present-day Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in the Nineteen Twenties&amp;gt; The Kremlin doesnt like to be reminded that the conquest moved outward from Moscow, the Russian captial. To an older generation with long memories, Long live Russia has a pre - revolutionary, if not a counter-revolutionarj', connotationand it must seem faintly disturbing to the crowds that have turned out to listen lo Grand Charles bring greetings to the Soviet peoples from France.</p>
        <p>De Gaulle, of course, is a nationalist to whom ideology is only important when it can be used as a counter in the game of diplomacy. It would be natural for him to think of the Soviet Union as Russia. Rut he is also an intelligent man with a sense of history, and his manipulation of the slogan Long live Russia could hardly be unconscious. The Radio Liberty exper t s point out that one of de Uaulle s cliief advi.sers on Soviet policy is a man of Russian emigre origin named An-^dfonikov.' Surely, w-ith the ex-' pert briefing tiial is available to him, de Gauik nutfi ral-</p>
        <p>the Soviet Union* A Soviet Communist, shouting Long live Russia, would be accused of bourgeois nationalism. They cant .shoot a frenchman for twanging nationalist strings, but the subtle insult conveyed by de-Gaulle's harping on Russianness as he is taken about the .Soviet Empire must be a bit unnerving to Brezhnev and Kosygin.</p>
        <p>De Gaulle has often defined Europe as stretching from the Atlantic to the Urals. Where doe.s this leave t h e many peoples of Siberia^ Will de Gaulle still think of them as non-European after his trip to Novosibirsk* The Red Chinese might be particularly interested in this question.</p>
        <p>a 2(0-</p>
        <p>, S Quotes</p>
        <p>Reputation is a large bubble which bursts when you try to blow it up yourself.*Atchison ( Kan.l Globe.</p>
        <p>whh the'rcord he has estaB^ lished, in the few months he has been in Washington, is studied.</p>
        <p>Jones, who was elected to represent the district a few months ago, succeeding t h e late Herbert Bonner, has shown that he is not a rubber stamp for the administration. And, knowing his record during the General Assembly, it is assured that he is not out to bolster his own political glory, but to serve all of the people of the area he represents.</p>
        <p>The congressman came to Elizabeth City Mo nday to speak at the Rotary Club luncheon and the Lions Club dinner. He made it plain that he was strong for the democratic way of government vhich. accoriJing to the original concept, gave the individual the right of choice in making decisions. Consequently, he has already opposed the forced integration of schools, -'ospi-tals and mental instituhons.</p>
        <p>He emphasized that he was opposed to the govern.m e n t</p>
        <p>the disposal of their personal property .JHe also emphasized his opposition to pouring hundreds of millions of dollars each year into the hands of ungrateful leaders of foreign nations, who in turn stab the United States in the back. Instead he proposes that any money available for foreign nations be turned into the Food For Freedom bill which North Carolinas Rep. Harold Cooley has been advocating.</p>
        <p>Jones already has been classified with Reps. Lennon and Henderson as North Carolinas three tough g uys. That is they cannot be counted upon to be yes men when it comes to jump t h e, rope any time the administration beckons. That is the highest compliment that can be paid to the three. The people back home still have the confidence that they will be represented to the best of their ability by those who have been elected to serve in Washington.</p>
        <p>billion last year on vacation</p>
        <p>and business trips within the country. About half the family trips and two-thir(s of the business trips were round-trip journeys ui ICbS Uian 2h0 miles.</p>
        <p>Dont ever jump cut of an airplane in flight without a parachute. It's illegal and violates safety standards set ny the Federal Aviation Agency.</p>
        <p>CLEAN-UP: Justice of the Peace Mel Reinhard of Hell, Mich., is a keep-America-beautiful fan. To each of the 73 couples he married last year he gave three litterbags</p>
        <p>trash all over hell.</p>
        <p>There is a controversy rag-fqi w Gcd IS dead if he is, it is^news to mo.st Americans. According to the Cathol i c Digest magaz i n e, polls show that 97 per cent of adult Americans believe in God. But in 1952, the magazine adds, the figure was 99 per cent.</p>
        <p>Alcoholics arent born. Theyre made. Researchers believe the disease takes from 15 to 20 or more years to develop and that it can shorten life expectancy from 10 to 20 years.</p>
        <p>FRIGHTENING FACT:</p>
        <p>Washington, D. C., is reported to have more psychiatrists in proportion to its population than any other city in the United States.</p>
        <p>WORTH REMEMBERING. The trouble with most of us is that wed rather be ruined by praise than saved by criticism.</p>
        <p>Quote</p>
        <p>Whats setting off this population explosion? Why, matches, of course.  Wall Street Journal.</p>
        <p>1 inier</p>
        <p>! Radios</p>
        <p>~ Aheac.</p>
        <p>By SAM DAWSON</p>
        <p>AP Business News Analyst</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  The lady with the glittering earrings nt the other end of the bar mav refuse to talk to you becau e shes listening to the Mil-Dodgers game on her tiny concealed radio.</p>
        <p>The man with the conservative tieclasp may be in constant touch with his office  just as James Bond was supposed to be.</p>
        <p>The refrigerator at home may have a half dozen clearly defined temperature zones instead of just todys freezer conapart-ment and ordinary food cooler.</p>
        <p>All of this is only around a few comers, if you take the word of the engineers who art pushing the entry of tiny electronic circuits into the ebosum er product market.</p>
        <p>Already these circuits  no</p>
        <p>bigger than a period made by a typewriter  are scheduled to be put into a tiny electric clock radio, on the market by October, into phonographs and portable TV sets by Christmaa, and into tape recorders next year.</p>
        <p>By 1970 the microcircuits may do to transistor-type communication and entertainment products what the transistor has been doing to radio tubes. And mass production and sales are expected to bring their prict down to around 50 cents, compared with the $475 which each one cost in IWl when they were In their infancy.</p>
        <p>In the ' ioiepveaiiif years  theyve been confined largely to military, computer and other industrial uses. Now theyre ready to tackle the consumer market. Sales of the microelectronic circuits this year will run around $130 million, but consumer usage could push this Jo $400 million a year by the end of the decade. By then, General Electric says, all of its consumer electronic products will ii e microcircuits. Its competitors are just as optimistic.</p>
        <p>And a distinct possibility is the electronic jewelry, such ; .s earrings and tiedasps to replace the transistor squawk bc'X that some people now hold to their ears as they plod the sidewalks.</p>
        <p>' Th ffi Cof'pr'tii "of" America savs that both its 1967 color and black and white TV wiit have circuits to replace a score of components, including transistors. Admiral and Sylvania Electric are pushing toward the same goal.</p>
        <p>Robert C. Wilson, general manager of GEs Consumer Electronics Division, which ii unveiling its solid-state microcircuit clock radio today, insists that achievements possible with this new technology are limited only by our imagination.</p>
        <p>The radio measures tl by 2 3-16 by 3 inches. The clock-ra-dio combination is 5^ ^ Vk by 4 inches. The radio circuit that sparks it is on a silieon chip about 1-32 of an indi square. Replaced will be ten transistors.</p>
        <p>Helping to make H so small and so much cheaper k ttie elimination of the wiring, connections and other components of a conventional circuit</p>
        <p>So wfaati ahead? WOsoo saya maybe a tiny computer for personal use, or a pocket size tape recorder, or a radio in a signet ring, or a TV set that can be held in the palm of the hand.</p>
        <p>Alabama reports a second straight year of declining juvenile delinquencv. Adult competition too much for the kids?Anniston (Ala.) Star.</p>
        <p>AT&amp;amp;T Eyes The Nuisance Calls</p>
        <p>-Children don't throw Jitter away. They put it in their pockets, to get it washed in the washing machine"Baltimore (Md.) Sun.</p>
        <p>WATCH OUT FOR THE OTHER GUY</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>:&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Drive Defensively!</p>
        <p>Just being in the right isnt enough. Nearly half the drivers in fatal collisions are in the right. Drive defensivelyas if your life depended on it (It does.)</p>
        <p>tu litM coo(/t(iiijn ;th lilt AdiitriiiiAf CttuncM</p>
        <p>nfl til* Ntifiil Silely Coudul</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER</p>
        <p>The American Telep hone and Telegraph Company, beset on one side by a government investigation into i t s somewhat lush earnings, is beset on another by a rising indignation at what has been termed dial-a-victim phone calls.</p>
        <p>These are calls from sexual degenerates, sadists, perverted humorists, and Viet Cong sympathizers who try to terrorize families of American soldiers in Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>These distrubed callers have created so much havoc that a Senate subcommittee is considering a bill providing a year in jail and a $10,000 fine for obscene callers</p>
        <p>AT&amp;amp;T, which usually resists federal regulation, is supporting the proposal. Hubert Kertz, AT&amp;amp;T vice president, said. We welcome legislation on it </p>
        <p>TELEPHONE SOLICITA-TIO.N ANNOYANCES</p>
        <p>The AT&amp;amp;T has also taken</p>
        <p>cognizance of the annoyance of some telephone sales solicitations. Many Bell phone companies have launched advertising campaigns to tell the public what to do about venal calls and annoying sales solicitations. (Hang up; if calls are repeated, notify the phone company and the police.)</p>
        <p>ei MEB</p>
        <p>BOBMNEB</p>
        <p>The Bell system magazine carries a fairly dramatic article on Annoyance Calls by Kertz. It starts: The relative calm of the daily routine of a hou.sewife is abruptly .shattered. Suddenly it startswith just a ring of the telephonean ybseene tele</p>
        <p>phone telephone call . .</p>
        <p>It also takes notes of calls that are misdirected, or as we telephone answerers call them, wrong n u m-bers.</p>
        <p>WHOS RESPONSIBLE?</p>
        <p>The telephone company itself is to blame for these three types of annoyances.</p>
        <p>Wrong numbers, in many peoples experience, have increased sharply since t h e phone company shifted from letters and digits (CH 4-1690) to straight digits (394-4141). Bell system claims that this is necessary to increase the number of numbers available, since there are no letters for the 1 and the 0 holes.</p>
        <p>That is nonsense, of course, the letters Q and Z are not used and if they were added, and the other letters rearranged, there could be two or three letters for every numl&amp;gt;er.</p>
        <p>There has been other finagling with the numbers. The nurnl^r of the Overseas Press Club in New York, for exam</p>
        <p>ple, is LW 4-3500. It could have been LY-ric 4-00, but then there would be fewer wrong numbers. And the phone company profits from people who dial wrong numbers and do not dial again to cla i m their lost coin.</p>
        <p>SALESMANIC ANNOYANCE</p>
        <p>For years, phone compan-ics have been advertising the effectiveness of telephone selling. Now they have sold so much of it that, by their own admission, it can be a maddening annoyance. The complete solution is not hanging up, although that is good, but in phone company polic i n g of the telephone boiler rooms.</p>
        <p>And phone companies have a share in the responsibility for dial-a-victim calls. One refuge is the unlisted number. But the New York Telephone company has imposed a penally charge of 50 cents a month on unlisted phones. However, other Hell companies have not yet followed.</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0005" />
        <p>fhe Daily Raflactor,' Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, July 5, 19665 ^</p>
        <p>Governors Go Into First Formal Talks^ Today</p>
        <p>' By JACK BELL</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - The nations governors come to grips today with the question of restoring machine^ to deal with the explosive issues of the Viet Nam war and civil rights.</p>
        <p>In the first formal session of their 58th annual conference, the governors take up proposed amendments which would revive the resolutions-making process they junked in 1963 in a bitter fight over a Repubiftim attempt to expose Democratic divisions over racial equality proposals.</p>
        <p>Now the politically disturbing Viet Nam conflict hangs like a cloud over a conference where the everyday issues of federal-state relations, highway safety and mental health have been all but blotted out in preliminary discussions.</p>
        <p>There is no doubt that if the Democrats push for it, they can get an endorsement from the conference for President Johnsons Viet Nam policies. They annual PILORIMAOE to liberty bell  Oii the 190th anniversary of Independence i got one in last years meeting u u j  famed  Liberty Bell in Philadelphia was the focal point ol with only two dissents  those</p>
        <p>nohday activities in this historic city. Miss Liberty Belle, just to the right of the Liberty Bell, explains the history uid significance of the Bell to visitors from far and near. Outside Americas foremost shrine, anti-Viet Nam war demonstrators picketed behind police barricades a-cross the street. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>News And Notes From Bethel</p>
        <p>Guests of Mrs. Tom Andrews</p>
        <p>Dr. Saturday night were Mrs. Meyers Graham and daughter, Frances, from Scranton, S. C., Mrs. W. B. Shoe of Greenville and her daughter, Mrs. Vernon Cox, from Winterville, Mrs. Polly Thomas and Mrs. William Andntws.</p>
        <p>son Joe, were dinner guests of</p>
        <p>of Republican Govs. George Romney of Michigan and Mark 0. Hatfield of Oregon.</p>
        <p>But a check by The Associated Press of a score of governors uncovered doubts and reservations, even among the Presidents supporters, about the latest bombings in North Viet</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Grifith at their beach home Sundy.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Grover Whitehurst and Mrs. S. C. Whitehurst visited Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Peel ^ at their home in Elizabeth City last week.</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. R. Highsmith left last</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bullock for Middle Berry College from Bethel, Mr. and Mrs. F. in Middle Berry, Vt.</p>
        <p>M. Roberts and family of Plant] nnd Mrs. J. C. William-City, Fla., and R. C. Hutson I son and sons, Claude and Joe,</p>
        <p>James Horace Tetterton, son | Nam. Gov. Phillip H. Hoff, Ver-of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Teter-jniont Democrat for example, ton spent the weekend home. I said that while he generally He is presently stationed at I supports the President, I have</p>
        <p>Camp Gordon, Ga.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Jule Pollard and boys, Lee and Bill, are spending a wee'i at Atlantic Beach.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Clara Roberson left Thur-day for Durham where she is a' patient in Duke Hospital.</p>
        <p>Ferrell Blount, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Blount Jr., is attend-*</p>
        <p>grave reservations on the recent bombings.</p>
        <p>Gov. Daniel J. Evans, Washington Republican, said that the President may be on the right track in stepping up the bombings, 'but it seems to me that over the past year and a half we have attempted something simiiar in nature but it never seems to end the war.</p>
        <p>Hatfield continued his pace as one of the harsher critics of Johnsons policies.</p>
        <p>Romney, a potential contender for the 1968 GOP presidential nomination, announced he would not support any "blank check endorsement of Johnsons course. He said \flet Nam ought not to be an issue in the conference, since the governors had no opportunity to influence the policies involved.</p>
        <p>Southern governors served notice there will be a fight over any proposal for a coherence endorsement of the administrations dvil rights bill pending in Congress, particularly the open-housing section.</p>
        <p>Gov. Paul B. Johnson of Mississippi predicted in an interview a pretty good scrap against it.</p>
        <p>Im opposed to the hill, he said. I dont see that a great deal would be gained by it. 'The legislation puts a great deal of emphasis on indolence and laziness.</p>
        <p>Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama said that property ownership, as affecte(i by the bills ban against racial discrimination in the sale or rental of housing, will be, an issue in the 1968 presidential campaign in which he may run on a third</p>
        <p>TV</p>
        <p>and family from Scotland Neck * spent Saturday here with his ing summer school at Wood-  I were dinner guests of Mr. and parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Wil- berry Forest.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mozingo Friday night.</p>
        <p>Henry Gray and family and Mr. and Mrs. J. Carlisle of Tar-boro were afternoon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mozirgo.</p>
        <p>Rev. and Mrs. Justus McKeel of Wadesboro an., daughters, Mary and Matha, are spending sometime here wit&amp;gt; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. McKeel. Miss Bobby Sue Martin</p>
        <p>liamson Sr..</p>
        <p>. .Walter Latham,,HaiTy.Latham;</p>
        <p>Executives Visit Campus</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Speir of i and Bill Staton are taking a trip i Executives of several North will be a question-and-answer</p>
        <p>Tampt, Fla., are house guests I to South America. Bill will re-! Carolina and Tidewater Virginia of Mr. and Mrs. D. 0. Speir | turn home after the trip to Pan-i television stations will visit East and family.  ama.  Carolina  College  this  weekend</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. John L. Watson Mr. and Mrs. Carl Davenport | tor its first Growth and Devel-</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>opment Information Conference for TV personnel.</p>
        <p>Sponsored by three nearby television stations WITN-TV, Washington; WNBE-TV, New Bern; and WNCT-TV, Greenvillethe conference is designed to give its participants a</p>
        <p>and family have returned  from  left Friday for Newport News,</p>
        <p>Nags Head where they  spent  Va., to spend a week with Mr.</p>
        <p>several days vacationing.  and  Mrs. Jasper Davenport.</p>
        <p>" Mrs. R. I. Taylor Sr aiid Mr. Miss Julia Russell Rives, Miss and Mrs. Thomas House of Rob- Abbie Rives and Miss Frances</p>
        <p>,  .......ersonville visited Mrs. Sallie Rowlette spent part  of last week</p>
        <p>spending this week at Atlantic Mayo and Miss Sadie Taylor i at Atlantic Beach.</p>
        <p>I in Wilson Wednesday.  Jesse  Gray  Thomas spent the</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. James 0. Loftin; Miss Mary Sue Watson has as weekend with his grandmother, and  daughter  of  Raleigh  spent  her weekend guest, Lynn  Ban-  Mrs. R. I. Taylor Sr., while at</p>
        <p>the  weekend  here  with  Mrs.  ner of Greensboro. .  |Fort Bragg.</p>
        <p>^  i  Cousins  of  Miss  Karen  Mo-</p>
        <p>J. C. Wyrme Jr.  j  week-^zingo who spent Tuesday night!</p>
        <p>Rev. and Mrs. L. A. Gray and I end with  Mr.  and  Mrs.  H. J.  and Wednesday with her were gj-g^jj jj.  qj wITN-TV, Nathan</p>
        <p>daughters have returned to Alex-'Andrews.  Miss Bethany Hux of Scotland: pj-g^k of  WNBE-lV  and Hank</p>
        <p>andria. V. after spending some Mr. and  Mrs.  Buddy  White-  Neck, Miss Mary Ella Mozingo Tribley of  WNCT-TV,  agree that</p>
        <p>time, here with Mrs. Grays ^a^  som^l^ime^Qf . (^regnyUe^and Mj.ss^Wand.^ ^ roqfefpnpe cap serve^a u^</p>
        <p>ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Wil- Mr. and Mrs. Walter C.; Robert o Plant City, Fla. .fyi purpose by giving the vari-</p>
        <p>Mrs. W. C. Latham and Lou qus stations representatives* an</p>
        <p>first hand look at the college and to let them hear directiy from top ECC officials about college objectives.</p>
        <p>Managers of the three spon-</p>
        <p>liamson.</p>
        <p>Whitehurst.</p>
        <p>Mrs, W. J,.Taylor, Mrs. B. W.1 Mrs. J. M, Buffaloe of ito- are spendmg some time at At-,opportunity. tosee for them-1^4 ^rane,'Withurst ani leigh bas rllui^d" to'berliome lantic'^^h.'Clarsoii ,^'d W^-tse^s what bp'pilB^    </p>
        <p>party ticket.</p>
        <p>Gov.vRichard J. Hughes of New Jersey said be didnt come to the conference to participate in a brawl over civil rights. Tlie New Jersey governor said controversies over this issue have nearly wrecked past conferences.</p>
        <p>He said each governor has to deal with the issue individually</p>
        <p>in his state and there is nothing} taking a stand on civil rights, to be gained by adopting a reso-IHe endorsed the Johnson ad-lution. He added that his states | ministrations bill as sound leg-legislature had passed an open- islation. housing bil ^ahd l^Vent had (5P Gov. John H. Reed of 10 letters against it.   Maine said that racial relations</p>
        <p>/ But Gov. Robert E. Smylie of | are of great concern to all of the Idaho, chairman of the Republi-1 governors. But he said he Governors Assciciation, doesn't think that any confer-</p>
        <p>can</p>
        <p>said he would hate to think that: ence resolution would be of im-the conference was avoiding | mense import</p>
        <p>FORECAST</p>
        <p>FifwfM Sliew Urn Um</p>
        <p>Ufkiil Wedewdey Utwim</p>
        <p>WEATHER FORECAST  Tuesday night's weather will be rainy over the mld-Bflmoori valley, and warmer along the north Pacific coast and in the northern Plateau region. R wUI be cooler in New England. (AP Wirephoto Map)</p>
        <p>Will Investigate Poverty Efforts</p>
        <p>session with the ECC officials as panelists.</p>
        <p>The five ECC officials who will participate are Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, president; Sen. Robert B. Morgan, chairman of the trustees; (Harence Stasavich, director of atiietics; F. D. Duncan, vice president and business manager; and Dr. Robert L. Holt, vice president and academic dean.</p>
        <p>Also on the schedule for. the visitors are a campus tour, a special session with President Joikins, visits with various academic deans of the college in their respective schools and a Saturday night visit to the ECC Summer Theatre to see "Stop the World, I Want to Get Off.</p>
        <p>All TV stations in thestata,</p>
        <p>DURHAM (AP)-A congr sional investigator was due in Durham today to investigate the citys anti-poverty program.</p>
        <p>G. Fred Steele, Republican candidate for (ingress in the 5th District, said Monday he requested the investigation as a result of recent disclosures that Operation Breakthrough buses 4a Durham were-bemg used for transportation of pickets. Steele said he also requested a probe of federal spending for the entire anti-poverty program in Durham.</p>
        <p>Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>In Los Angeles to attend the National Governors Conference, Moore said, "I approve of the action tiie President has taken. We have a lot of boys over there and we have to do the best we can to protect them.</p>
        <p>Moore said the more progress the U.S. makes the better it will be for the Democratic party.</p>
        <p>Syria is building new highways.</p>
        <p>ROACHES?</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>Ivey Coward</p>
        <p>CO., INC. YOUR COWAR-DEX MAN</p>
        <p>TEl. 752.5175</p>
        <p>Steele said he had requested! the House Education and Labor Committee to make the probe through the office of Rep. Criarles Godell, R-N.Y., the committees ranidng Republican member. ,</p>
        <p>Moore Approves Bombing Policy</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP)  Gov. Dan Moore of North Carolina says he approves of the stepped \ip bombing raids over North |</p>
        <p>DONALD HUGH TUCKER, AA.D.</p>
        <p>Takes Pleasure In Announcing The Association Of</p>
        <p>WILLIAM W. FORE, M.D.</p>
        <p>In The Practice Of</p>
        <p>INTERNAL MEDICINE AND ENDOCRINOLOGY</p>
        <p>AT</p>
        <p>1705 WEST 6th STREET</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>By Appointments Only  752-6101</p>
        <p> - after spending a long weekend ter Latham, grandchildren of</p>
        <p>Murder Charged To 3 Teenagers</p>
        <p>with her sister Mrs. J. W. Rook Sr.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Latham, are staying Atlantic Beach also.</p>
        <p>at</p>
        <p>BURLINGTON, N. C. (AP)-Murder charges have been filed against three Burlington teenagers in the death of William Poteat, 16, who died of gunshot wounds suffered last week.</p>
        <p>Charged Mond^ were Curtis Junior Miles, 17; Waddell Snipes, 18; and Bobby Wiley, 14. No hearing date has been set. All were jailed at Graham.</p>
        <p>Poteat was wounded last Thursday night and died Sunday.</p>
        <p>New Prexy For Checkers Ass'n</p>
        <p>BURLINGTON, N. C. (AP)-Elbert Lowder of Albemarle is the new president of the North Carolina Checkers Association.</p>
        <p>The group also re-elected George Bean of Asheboro as secretary and treasurer Monday before opening its three-day annual checkers tournament at Burlington.</p>
        <p>More Helicopter Engines Ordered</p>
        <p>ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) - The U.S. Army Aviation Materiel Command has increased by more than $16 million an aircraft  engine contract with AVCO of Stratford, Conn.</p>
        <p>The modified contract, for UHl helicopter engines, now provides for 459 engines at a cost of $22,107,483.</p>
        <p>East Carolina.</p>
        <p>The Greenville college for the past several years has had one of the most outstanding growth records in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The upcoming conference is a weekend affair, beginning with a Friday night dinner and continuing through a final wrap-up session Sunday morning.</p>
        <p>The feature event is a Saturday morning session in which the visiting TV officials, mostly program managers and directors, will hear brief addresses from five top college officials. TTie latter part of the seminar</p>
        <p>tend. Thbs"e whose "officers have made definite plans to attend include:</p>
        <p>WECT-TV, Wilmington; WF MY-TV, Greensboro; WITN-TV, Washington; WNBE-TV, New Bern; WNCrr-TV, Greenville; WRAL-TV, Raleigh; WTAR-TV, Norfolk; WTVD-TV, Durham; and WUNC-TV, Chapel Hill and Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Also scheduled to attend is the chairman of the University of North Carolina radio, TV and motion pictures department at Chapel Hill, Dr. Wesley H. Wallace.</p>
        <p>SUBWAY PRICE IS UP NEW YORK (AP)The price of a subway ride in New York was up a nickel today. The new price, 20 cents, affected most of the citys bus lines as well, and is expected to hit all of them in a few days.</p>
        <p>rites WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-A funeral service for Deems Taylor composer, critic, radio broadcaster, editor and writerwill be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>HER THIRD HOLIDAY BABY  Mrs. David Hersh of Tonawanda, N. Y., holds a daughter born to her on Independence Day. Her other two children also arrived on holidays, Edward, 13, on Columbus Day, and Alfred, 11, on Armistice Day. Mr*. Hersh said she was bom on Labor Day, 21-plus jrears ago. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
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        <pb facs="00088154_0006" />
        <p>-Th Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.-Tue$day, July 5, 1966</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>wNa</p>
        <p>TUISOAY</p>
        <p>5:00 Tnaxton Urco Newv *;10 Sport * ; Weather ;30 News 7:00 Peter Gunn 7:30 Oaktarl R:30 Hippodrome ;30 Petticoat tO;CO CBS Reports 11:00 Final Report 11 ;X Movie</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 6:30 Carolina 8:35 News 9:00 Kangaroo 10 :00 Lucy 10:30 McCo/s 11:00 Andy 11:30 Van Dyke 17:00 Noon News 12:15 Farm News 12:25 Weather</p>
        <p>12:</p>
        <p>12:45</p>
        <p>1:0et</p>
        <p>1:25</p>
        <p>I:</p>
        <p>2:00</p>
        <p>2;M</p>
        <p>3:00</p>
        <p>3:25</p>
        <p>3:</p>
        <p>4:00</p>
        <p>4:</p>
        <p>5:00</p>
        <p>6:00</p>
        <p>6:10</p>
        <p>6:25</p>
        <p>6:</p>
        <p>7:00</p>
        <p>7:</p>
        <p>:</p>
        <p>9:00</p>
        <p>9;</p>
        <p>10:00</p>
        <p>11:00</p>
        <p>11:</p>
        <p>Search Gdg. Light Love LHe Timely Tips World Turn* Password Houseparty Tell Truth News</p>
        <p>Edge Night</p>
        <p>Sec. Storm</p>
        <p>Cartoons</p>
        <p>Thaxton</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Wanted</p>
        <p>Lost In Space</p>
        <p>Hillbillies</p>
        <p>Green Acres</p>
        <p>Van Dyke</p>
        <p>John Gary</p>
        <p>Final Report</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>wrm</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Hobo ^</p>
        <p>7:W My Mother</p>
        <p> :00 Daisies 8: Or.Kildare e:00 Movies</p>
        <p>11:00 Weather 11 05 News 11:10 Sports 11:15 Tonight WEDNESDAY 6; Aspect 7:00 Today Show</p>
        <p> 00 Beaver 9:30 Girl Talk</p>
        <p>10:00 Eye Guess 10:25 News 10: Concentrate 11:00 Chain Letter 11: Showdown 12:00 Debnam 12:15 Farmer 12:25 Weather 12; S. Country</p>
        <p>12:55 News 1:00 Jeopardy 1: Make a 0al 1:55 News</p>
        <p>2 00 Our Lives 3: The Ors.</p>
        <p>3 00 A. World 3:3q Don't Say 4:00 Match Game 4:25 News</p>
        <p>4:M Funny Page 5: Cartoons 6:00 News 6:15 Sports 6:35 Weather 6: Hunt-Brink 7:00 Beaver 7: Virginian 9:00 Bob Hope 10:00 I Spy 11:00 Weather 11:05 News 11:10 Sports 11:15 Tonight</p>
        <p>WNU</p>
        <p>TUESDAY f:00 Fun House f; Hopalong 4:00 Early Report 4:10 Weather 4:15 News 4: Combat 7; McHale  ;00 F. Troop 8. Peyton PI. 9:00 Fugitive 10:00 News 10:10 Wether 10:15 Rebel 10:45 L. Young 11:15 Pleyhouse</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 7:00 Lelenne 7: ExpreM ;00 R. Room 9:00 Early Show 10; Dating 11:00 D. Reed 11: Knows Best</p>
        <p>12.00 B. Casey 1:00 Confidential 1; Time For Us 1:55 News 2:00 G. Hos.</p>
        <p>2: Nurses 3:00 Shadows 3; Action Is 4:00 AAerket 4: Seehunt 5:00 Fun House 5: Express 6:00 Early Report 6:10 Weather 6:15 News 6; Batmen 7:00 Pat Duke 7; Blue Light 8:00 Big Valley 9:00 Hot Summer 10:00 News 10:10 Weather 10:15 One Step 10:45 L. Young 11:15 Wire Scr.</p>
        <p>Offer DataOn Traffic Vlctinis</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP) -Two Harvard Medical School researchers gave some clues today about the sort of person who dies in traffic accidents.</p>
        <p>The findings by Drs. Robert C. Buxbaum and Theodore Colton were published in the current Journal of the American Medical Association as the July ^  Fourth  holiday  weekend auto?</p>
        <p>toll mounted.</p>
        <p>They said:  A middle-aged</p>
        <p>white man is less likely to have an accident in a state which in-pects his vehicle regularly.</p>
        <p>the number of~ nonwhite men</p>
        <p>killed in accidents is higher</p>
        <p>The greatest difference is in the 45-54 age group.</p>
        <p>The report said no reliable method exists for determining the number of fatalities caused by auto mechariical failures, but findings show Van association between the preventive procedure of inspection and a lessening of the death rate.</p>
        <p>One reason suggested by the authors for the racial differential in deaths was that nonwhites generally have lower incomes and drive older, more dangerous cars.</p>
        <p>The authors said the lower income of nonwhites may prevent Installation of safety devices and delay auto repairs.</p>
        <p>A third factor listed was that nonewhite men have more jobs requiring excessive driving  such as bus, taxi and truck drivers, chauffeurs and delivery men.</p>
        <p>Gardner Has A Campaign Bus</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-Republican congressional candidate James C Gardner has officially kicked off his campaign aboard a brand new, red, white and blue rolling campaign center.</p>
        <p>The Gardner Special, with the candidate aboard, showed un at Independence Day cele-b ations Monday at Siler City, ( hapel Hill and Aberdeen.</p>
        <p>Gardner is seeking to unseat veteran Democratic Incumbent Harold D. Cooley for the 4th District seat in Congress.</p>
        <p>Gardners campaign center is equipped with a portable platform, loud speaker system, floodlights, a telephone, space for typewriters and cooking facilities. It is air-conditioned and sleeps six persons.</p>
        <p>Thieves Acquire Wire And Pipe</p>
        <p>SALINA, Kan. (AP) - Pat F OConnor believes thieves will steal anyttog.</p>
        <p>He opened his business one morning, flicked on the TV set and got no picture. He investigated and found the wire connecting the set to an antenna kad been stolen.</p>
        <p>Along the way, he found someone had taken the drain pipe from his buildings rain gutter.</p>
        <p>ennew</p>
        <p>ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^</p>
        <p>REDUCED-TO-CLEAR! FAMILY SHOES</p>
        <p>200 Pair</p>
        <p>3.</p>
        <p>BOYS' and GIRLS' BACK-TO-SCHOOL SHOES.</p>
        <p> 150 Pair</p>
        <p>CANVAS SHOES FOR THE FAMILY.</p>
        <p>50 Pair</p>
        <p>SLIP-INS FOR MOM and YOUNG GIRLS.</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>CAUSE WERE</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN FOI</p>
        <p>CLEAR-AWAY TEMS FOR THE UDIES!</p>
        <p>"N</p>
        <p> 12 Onlyt</p>
        <p>Ladies Swimsuits</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p> 100 Only!</p>
        <p>Tuft-Front Blouses</p>
        <p>NOW ........&amp;gt;........... 2  FOR</p>
        <p>IGO "Gnfy?^</p>
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        <p>White Uniforms</p>
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        <p>NOT MANUFACTURERS HOT-SHOT" ITEMS! BUT QUALITY MERCHANDISE</p>
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        <p>Slacks &amp;amp; Knee Pants</p>
        <p>NOW .................... 2  FOR</p>
        <p> 150 Pair</p>
        <p>Ladies Sandals</p>
        <p>NOW ......................</p>
        <p>EXTRA SPECIAL BARCAINI</p>
        <p> SO Pair</p>
        <p>Shoes</p>
        <p>pr.</p>
        <p>MIDGET BASEBALL</p>
        <p>NOW..............</p>
        <p>Solids, Plaids, Paisleys</p>
        <p>2-5</p>
        <p>WERE CLEARINGS TOWN STORE AND NOW ON TREMEND</p>
        <p>;</p>
        <p>ALWAYS SAVE AT PENNEYS!</p>
        <p>mmvmtami</p>
        <p>Boy's Dept. Bargains!</p>
        <p>500 Only!</p>
        <p>'Penn Prest"</p>
        <p>Slacks</p>
        <p>Reg., Slim, Husky Sizes 6 to 20 Now ....</p>
        <p>$322$^</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>300 Only!</p>
        <p>Knit Sport Shirts</p>
        <p>Plaids, Stripes, Solids.</p>
        <p>NOW ........................</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>1000 Pair</p>
        <p>Boys Socks</p>
        <p>All SiA.s. All Colors JJOW</p>
        <p>3 Pr.</p>
        <p> 150 Only!</p>
        <p>Walk Shorts</p>
        <p>"Ponn-Prest"</p>
        <p>Plaids and Solids. NOW</p>
        <p>$222 $3</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>TERRIFIC MARK-DOWNS IN EVERY DEPT.</p>
        <p>SHOP EVERY DEPT. EOR OTHER 'REDUCED</p>
        <p>YES! Were moving h Pitf Plaza Sho</p>
        <p>GRAND OPENING</p>
        <p>TO CLEAR ITEMS!</p>
        <p>THIS IS EMPLOYMENT WEEK" AT OUR NEW STORE. SUBMIT YOUR APPLICATION NOW!</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0007" />
        <p>f1i Daily Raflacter, Graanviila, N. C.-Tuesday, July 5, 196^7</p>
        <p>rnmmm</p>
        <p>HOUSEWEAR</p>
        <p>CLOSE-OUTS!</p>
        <p> 400 Only!</p>
        <p>Scatter Rugs</p>
        <p>Judge Sworn</p>
        <p>Asserted Cebrs And its NOW.................</p>
        <p>e 25 Sets!</p>
        <p>Bath Mat</p>
        <p>ENSEMBLiS</p>
        <p>NOW..........</p>
        <p> RtducedI</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>.. 56^</p>
        <p>e 3 OniyI</p>
        <p>Bed Spreads</p>
        <p>Were $10 NOW ...</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p> 25 Onlyl</p>
        <p>Place Mat Sets</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p> 20 Onlyl</p>
        <p>Tberinal Blankets</p>
        <p>37 Teachers Of Disadvantaged At Institute</p>
        <p>A summer institute to help improve the teaching of disadvantaged rural jroungsters in the early grades is in progress</p>
        <p>Marvelous Mark-Downs For MenI</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE  AP) - Judge James Braxton Craven Jr. of Morganton officially took bis place as a judge of the U. S. 4th Circuit Court of ^peals today.</p>
        <p>Swearing-in ceremonies for Craven were scheduled in Charlotte with the appeals courts chief judge, Clement F. Hayns^orth Jr. of Greenville, S. C, to administer the oath.</p>
        <p>The appeals court, which sits at Richmond, Va., serves North Carolina, South Carolina, Viripnia, West Virginia and Maryland.</p>
        <p>Cravens nomination by President Johnson was confirmed by tile U. S. Senate, last week.</p>
        <p>Fcmner Congressman W. W. Jones of Rutherfordton has been recommended to sncceed Craven as a federal district judge for Western North Carolina.</p>
        <p>300 Onlyl</p>
        <p>NOW . . . rrv^^. . .  O  for</p>
        <p> Entiro StockI</p>
        <p>Felt Hats</p>
        <p>All SliM. S*vnl Celera Veluei Te $10 NOW..</p>
        <p>$]S0 $3</p>
        <p> 50 Pairi</p>
        <p>Men's Shoes yg8 08B</p>
        <p>Drastically Raduced Save New. NOW.</p>
        <p>PRICES SLASHED!</p>
        <p>at East Carolina College.</p>
        <p>Scheduled through Aug. 3, the seven-week institute has 37 teachers and supervisors of disadvantaged pupils in the first six grades in rural North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia schools.</p>
        <p>Its director, Dr. M. Helen hgram of the ECC School of Education faculty, and her staff are presenting a three-part program: a study of contemporary* rur^ social problen^f- the wychological factors in social disorganization and appropriate materials and methods to be in teaching disadvantaged youngsters.</p>
        <p>Dr. Ingrams institute co-director is Dr. Joseph W. Con-iSlcton Jr.j also the ECC (ideation faculty. Also on the nstitute faculty are three other ECC faculty members  Dr.</p>
        <p>Ralph R. Napp, Dr. Leighton E.</p>
        <p>Harrell and Dr. Frank Arwood.</p>
        <p>Two demonstration teachers and visiting lecturers will also par-ti(^te.</p>
        <p>Funds for the instttote were made available from the National Defense Education Act through the U. S. Office of Education.</p>
        <p>Teachers and supervisors at-tttdihriSKditr PITT COUNTY, Falkland -  .</p>
        <p>Mrs. Margaret Norville, teacher</p>
        <p>Farmviile</p>
        <p>ard, 504 N. Walnut SL, teacher at Sam D. Bimdy Elementary School; Greenville  Melvin Earl Boyd of Washington, teacher at Sallie Branch Elementary School; Mrs. Alice A.</p>
        <p>Clark, 2405 E. Fourth St., teacher at Falkland School.</p>
        <p>GREENE COUNTY, Snow Hill  Jean Esther Darden, Route 1, teacher at Pattillo IBh School,</p>
        <p>Tarboro.</p>
        <p>MARTIN COUNTY, Williams-ton  Mrs. Barbara W. Ebron,</p>
        <p>204 Smithwick St., teacher at W. S. Etheridge School, Windsor.</p>
        <p>More Bargains For The Ladies And Girlsl</p>
        <p>I  40 Onlyl</p>
        <p>Sport Sets</p>
        <p>Fr.ib-Prwtf' BbuM With Co-Ordinated Shorts. NOW.</p>
        <p> 100 Only!</p>
        <p>Ladies Handbags $|gg</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p> 60 Onlyl</p>
        <p>Girl's Dresses</p>
        <p>Pastels. Sixes 4 to 14 NOW .......</p>
        <p>]88 3</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p> 200 Onlyl</p>
        <p>Girl's Panties</p>
        <p>3 For</p>
        <p>*]</p>
        <p> 25 Onlyl</p>
        <p>Short Sets</p>
        <p>NOW .............</p>
        <p>*2</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>No Charges In Monday Mishap</p>
        <p>No diarges were made in an 8:30 a.m. mishap yesterday on Cotanche Street 200 feet south of the Fifth Street intersection.</p>
        <p>Drivers involved in th mishap were identified as Earl Alvin Wald, 21, of Greensboro and Lewis Walter Cherry, 77, of Route 3, Greenville.</p>
        <p>Damage to the Cherry auto was set at $150 while no damage was reported to the Wald car.</p>
        <p>Cookies, Cakes Paid For Outing</p>
        <p>OCEAN CITY, Md. (AP) -Girl Scout Toop 1046 of Glen Burnie Park s|^t a one-day outing at the beach here recently.</p>
        <p>They paid for it with the profits from two cookie sales and a bake sale.</p>
        <p>Different Kind Of Shock, Here</p>
        <p>SKOWHEGAN, Maine (AP)-Electrician Lawrence McIntyre got a different kind of shock than hes accustomed to while working in a law office. He opened a cupboard  like box to find a skeleton hanging inside.</p>
        <p>Seems it had been used as an anatomical model in court cases.</p>
        <p>There are more than 305,000 acres of non-bearing dtrns trees planted in Florida, with approximately 280,000 acres of this total planted to orange rarie-tiee.</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0008" />
        <p>8The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, July 5, 1966</p>
        <p>Home</p>
        <p>Bank</p>
        <p>Bvilders, Planters Claim Teen-er Wins</p>
        <p>Home Builders picked up another run in the third. Wyiiams walked, stole second and scored on an error.</p>
        <p>College View added a run in</p>
        <p>last night.</p>
        <p>Planters was getting only its second win of ie year, while! Two more Home Builders runs ,</p>
        <p>State Bank went down to its scored in the fourth. Crews |  .  .  .  r</p>
        <p>lecond loss. Stale Bank conti- reached on an error and HUl  </p>
        <p>Home Builders rolled to a 13-5 victory over College View and Planners Bank handed State ^ink its second straight loss, M, in Teen-er League action</p>
        <p>runs. Glen Warren walked and stole second. Russ Smith dou-i bled him in, then scored on an' error.  i</p>
        <p>In the sixth. Planters added'</p>
        <p>th^'thir'd when Ken Hite hornera;two more runs, insuring their</p>
        <p>gjj  Win.  George Fuller walked and</p>
        <p>moved to second on an error.</p>
        <p>nues to lead the loop with a 7-2 record, followed by Carolina Dairy at 5-2, Home Builders, 5-4, Pep;;i-Cola, 3-4,t Planters Bank, 2-4, and College View, 0-5.</p>
        <p>walked. Crews reached third on</p>
        <p>Louis Gidley.</p>
        <p>The sixth also saw the final</p>
        <p>a passed baii at a ground out | by Rouse scored Crews. Wil-'  ^  *</p>
        <p>score. Russ</p>
        <p>i '  Smith  and John Speight both</p>
        <p>iiar^ then smgied to drive m  a, Smith scoring on</p>
        <p>.  . . 'the second hit. Speight then!</p>
        <p>- .  remainmg  ^  scored  on an error on Steve Al-'</p>
        <p>In the opener, College View [three runs scored for Homeug^.g grpunder moved out into the early lead Builders. Harrington was hit by^ Planters added two more in m the first inning Tommy Dur- a pitch and stole second. Kittrell   ^  the final</p>
        <p>ham smgied and Harry Winson and Harris walked, loading the 3^ margin.  Jones walked  and</p>
        <p>bases, and Crews doubled, driv- ipoved to second on a passed ing in all three runs.</p>
        <p>College View got its remaining two runs in the bottom of ^  .......</p>
        <p>another passed ball, and scored back with seven runs in the fielders choice and Mike White ^ sin&amp;lt;^le bv- Dail Briley, second inning to claim the vie-1 was safe on an error. Bucky   pint om#</p>
        <p>tory. Trent Hill started things Roebuck singled, scoring Hite, m"  buw.^ ^ ^</p>
        <p>off with a double, moved to and after a walk to Eddie Vin- west,  c</p>
        <p>third on a passed ball and scor- cent, loading the bases, LeeiK'JJ"]' ed on a wild pitch. Danny Rouse Lloyd drew a walk, driving in | crews, 2b</p>
        <p>- White.  '</p>
        <p>Planters Bank broke a score-iwiinams, cf less deadlock in the 4hird with  arns.^ib</p>
        <p>reached on a walk, Ken Hite reached first on an error, and additional errors brought Durham and Wilson in to score.</p>
        <p>Home Builders then bounced</p>
        <p>ball, scoring when Joey Pridgens grounder was errored. Pridgen moved to second on</p>
        <p>walked and Steve Williams also walked. David Harrington reached on a fielders choice</p>
        <p>which put out Rouse. Jim Adams walked to load the sacks. Joe West singled in Williams and Harrington, but Adams was out trying to gcore. Bryant Kittrell was hit by a pitch and Al Harris walked, loading the bases again. West scored on a wild pitch and Durwood Crews singled to score Kittrell and Harris. Hill walked and Rouse singled in Crews with the seventh run.</p>
        <p>four runs, and never trailed in; Totals</p>
        <p>Collaga Viaw</p>
        <p>h</p>
        <p>2 1 1 Durham, 3b 2 2 0 Wilson, c 2 2  0  Hite,  1b</p>
        <p>4 2  1  G'Ins,  p, ss</p>
        <p>2 2  1  White,  ss,  p</p>
        <p>2 0  1  Cobb,  cf,  p</p>
        <p>2 2 1 R'buck,cf 2 2 0 V'cent, If 2 0 0 Lloyd, rf 20 13 5 Hatton, 2b</p>
        <p>their</p>
        <p>ab r h</p>
        <p>3 1 1 2 101 32 1' 2 0 0 3 1 01 ICO!, 1 0 1 2 0 0 2 0 O' 10 0 10 0. 21 5 3</p>
        <p>Perry Notches 12th Win As SF Splits With Cards</p>
        <p>By MURRAY CHASS</p>
        <p>A plastic shield covers Ron Santos left cheek, but National League pitchers could use a cover to shield them from Santo,</p>
        <p>The All-Star third baseman returned to the Chicago line-up Monday for the first time since ^ June 26 and rapped four hits in I six at-bats as the last-place 'Cubs split a doubleheader wii i second-place Pittsburgh.</p>
        <p>I Santo collected two singles j and a homer in the Cubs 7-5 i first-game loss, then came back I with a run-scoring single that snapped a tie and sent the Cubs I to a 6-4 victory in the second igame called because of dark-Tness after 7% innings, t The hits extended Santos con-</p>
        <p>Alford, 2b</p>
        <p>game wiin btaie tanx.  iota  is</p>
        <p>Steve Williams led off the third |  Z  5  5</p>
        <p>with a walk, and moved up on!  swend  Gam</p>
        <p>a passed ball. Dail Briley reach-,  ^  ^  s**</p>
        <p>ed on an error and Jackie eniey, cf doubled,</p>
        <p>Wil-</p>
        <p>Speight doubled, scormg liams. Kenneth Beaman tripled to score Briley Speight, and he scored on Larry i</p>
        <p>,  Fuller, If</p>
        <p>Jones smgle.  Wllllams, rf</p>
        <p>In the bottom of the third,</p>
        <p>State Bank came back with two sute senk</p>
        <p>Gldley, ss Speight, c then I Beaman, p</p>
        <p>__ j : Bond, lb , Jones, 3b</p>
        <p>2b</p>
        <p>ab r h</p>
        <p>4  2 1  Warren, cf  2 10</p>
        <p>5  0 3  Smith ss  4 2 3</p>
        <p>4  1 1  Speight, c  3 11</p>
        <p>3  1 1  Vincent, 1b 3 0 0</p>
        <p>3  0 0  Allen, p  3 C 0</p>
        <p>3  1 1  H'ton, If  3 0 0</p>
        <p>3  1 0  Paige, 2b  3 0 0</p>
        <p>1  1 0  Mills, rf  2  0 0</p>
        <p>1 1 0 C'way, rf ICO</p>
        <p>29 8 7 Totals .  27  4  5</p>
        <p>004 N2 a 7 2 002 002 0-4 S 3</p>
        <p>McQuagg Drives Firecracker Victory</p>
        <p>To</p>
        <p>By F. T. MACFEELY Auto Racing circuit in 1965, Mc-DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Quagg was hired as one of sev-(AP)  The exclusive fraternity: en top drivers on the team this of former carpenters who laid year.</p>
        <p>ON HIS WAY . . . Wayne Elks of the Lions rounids first and heads for second in the base-running event of yesterday's Moose Field Day at Elm Street ' Park. Elks won the event, skirting the sacks in 12.3 ^ seconds. (Reflector Staff Photo)</p>
        <p>Moose Treat The Little Leagues</p>
        <p>July 4 was Field Day again [Jeff Barwick (Jaycees), base-for Little Leaguers, an occas-running; and Luke Collie sion for testing their baseball [(Pepsi), infielders throw, skills and capacity for putting | The Little Leaguers and guests away hot dogs and soft drinks, consumed 700 hot dogs and an Sponsored by the Greenville:  number  of  *inks,  ac-</p>
        <p>Moose. the Field Day has be:.*&amp;lt;&amp;gt;. S,. come a near-tradition for the.th^ Eowm Baldree. boys, their families and friends.  ^ar Heel ^ague Da^ out-</p>
        <p>scored their North State League opposites by 11-8.</p>
        <p>Wednesday's</p>
        <p>Gets No-Hitter</p>
        <p>COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) -Steve Jones of Evansville pitched a seven-inning no-hitter against Columbus in the second game of a Southern League doubleheader Monday night. Evansville won 1-0 after taking the opener 3-0,</p>
        <p>Jones, a 25-year-old southpaw from California, struck out nine Yankees and walked none. He had not started a game since June 7. Only one Columbus player reached base, Dave Truelock, who was safe on first baseman Gary Johnsons error in the fourth inning.</p>
        <p>Competition was divided into two age groups, those aged 9 and 10, and 11 and 12. Trophies raced the dirt tracks of Georgia went to winners in each event; to learn his chosen craft of race they were:  i</p>
        <p>driver.  Mike  Smith  (Mooseinfield!</p>
        <p>McQuagg Jumped into ,pe;hr 1 Tommy Harrison (Elks),!</p>
        <p>down their awl and became! Chrysler Corp. officials didnt'  "mn.,inn'Phing  for  accuracy; Wayne  Little  League</p>
        <p>Champion race drivers has alsay so publicly%ut rumor had  ,Lons), base-running and</p>
        <p>member - curly haired | it they were disappointed with jP  charger  -^ati*''  </p>
        <p>new</p>
        <p>Sam</p>
        <p>Ga.</p>
        <p>McQuagg of Columbus, I his results and were not plan-</p>
        <p>ining on a 1%7 renewal. He fin- &amp;gt;^    *  1  aPS-</p>
        <p>When he won the Firecracker,isheid fifth in the Daytona 500,j He lost first place when he field throw; Danny Harrington  ,</p>
        <p>/s .  ,  I  1  _  1  I;  ai__-rapa  *41  2  #.   a_   11  T  4^Vii*rv\ir*</p>
        <p>pitted four separate timeswell spaced to take advantage of</p>
        <p>400 at the record speed of fifth in the Bristol  250 and sev-</p>
        <p>153 813 railes an hour Mondayenth in the Atlanta  500. The last</p>
        <p>McQuagg joined the club which'four races his car  failed to fin-j caution  flags  on three  occasions</p>
        <p>up to now had a single notable |ish.  | and  had  the lead wrested</p>
        <p>member in Fred Lorenzen of! But hes in the winners circle away briefly  by Lee  Roy Yar-</p>
        <p>Jack Jones (Moose), home run hinting;, Phil Dash (Security Life), in-</p>
        <p>Exchange vs. Moose Teen-er League Carolina Dairy vs. Pepsi-Cola Home Builders vs. Planters</p>
        <p>(Security Life), catchers throw; Mike Lewis (Lions) distance, throw;  !</p>
        <p>In the 11-12 age group:  ,</p>
        <p>Randy McKinney (R.C. Cola),'</p>
        <p>ion Dodge Charger.</p>
        <p>part of the Ford factory boycott.! mile Daytona International McQuagg s viclorv may have  Speedway left no room for criti-sayed pb ^too</p>
        <p>Phmouth Dodge lactory racliig The T15.500 #ize  ^  ^</p>
        <p>team.  looked good, too, to a man who  83  miles to go, Mc-</p>
        <p>Rookie of the Year on the Na-lhad been carpenter and me- Quagg was in command. He</p>
        <p>Elmhurst, 111., who is out of for the first time and the kind of jbrough of Columbua, S.C., who Distance throw; Jack Morris</p>
        <p>stented &amp;lt;&amp;gt;5,</p>
        <p>Landy Spain (Pepsi), outfielders throw; Gene Vincent (Se-</p>
        <p>Ladies Softball</p>
        <p>Pollards vs. Prepshirt Wachovia vs. Little Mint Coca-Cola vs. Food Mart Swimming Goldsboro at Raynez</p>
        <p>Eagles vs. Underdogs Big Fry</p>
        <p>Small Fry</p>
        <p>The Braves slipped by the Cubs 10-9 in Small Fry baseball action at Elm Street Park yesterday afternoon, tieing up their series at two wins for each team.</p>
        <p>The Braves, ed by the hitting of Church Brady, chalked up one run in the first, three in the third and added six more runs in their big fourth inning to win the game.</p>
        <p>The Cubs also scored In the first inning, sending two runs</p>
        <p>home. They had their big inning in the second, scoring four runs, but were outlasted by the Braves, managing only one run in the third and rounding out the scoring in the fifth with two more runs. Noel Brady led the Cubs at the plate.</p>
        <p>Braves ...........  103  60019</p>
        <p>Cubs ............... 241  020- 9</p>
        <p>secutive game streak to_23Z3Sfbo defeated Marichal for the which is the longest in the ma- second time in six davs, ^ jors this season and which tiesj The Giants came back in the the Cub record set by Hack Wil- nightcap, though, as Gaylord son in 1929.  Perry scattered seven hits for</p>
        <p>The 26-year-old slugger ac-,his 12th victory against one de-complished all that in his tifst feat. Shannon recorded only tire appearance since a pitch from second homer off Perry this New Yorks Jack Fisher frac- season, but Perry helped his tured his left cheek bone June own cause by lacing two singles, 26,  scoring one run and driving in</p>
        <p>The doctor said if I could see; another. , t n </p>
        <p>I could play, said Santo, whose i  LsAngeles Don  Sutlt</p>
        <p>cheek was protected by a spe-:  a  five-hitter and  won his</p>
        <p>cial plastic shield. My left eye  game sma June  2</p>
        <p>looks pretty bad, but I could Dd|rs snapped a he and sen see. Some of the Pirates kept asking, Boy, that eye looks bad.</p>
        <p>Can you see out of it?</p>
        <p>I guess I proved I could.</p>
        <p>Santo especially proved it in the seventh inning of the nightcap with two Cubs oirbase, the game tied 4-4 and darkness moving in on light-less Wrigley Field.</p>
        <p>I set myself to hit Don Cardwells first pitch if it were anywhere near the plate, Santo related. It was getting  dark</p>
        <p>and  I knew in  my  own  mind</p>
        <p>that the umpire were going to call  the game.  His  first  pitch</p>
        <p>was  a fast ball,  and  I let  go at</p>
        <p>it. It was a great thrill.</p>
        <p>The single increased Santos average to .319, fifth best in the league, and gave him an average of .388 during his streak, which started June 1.</p>
        <p>In other NL games, St. Louis defeated San Francisco 6-2 before losing 3-2, Los Angeles nipped Cincinnati 2-1, Atlanta edged Houston 3-2 an/i New York swept Philadelphia 9-6 and 8-1.</p>
        <p>In the American League, Kansas City defeated Baltimore 9-6, California whipped Detroit 11-6, Minnesota edg^ Cleveland 5-4, New York downed Chicago 5-2 after losing 5-0 and Washington beat Boston 64 before bowing 1-0.</p>
        <p>The Pirates won tiie opener, despite Santos two singles and a homer, on the three-run homer of Willie Stargell and the two-run blast of Gene Alley.</p>
        <p>Home runs by Phil Gagllano. Lou Brock and Mike Shannon sent San Franciscos Juan Marichal to his fourth defeat against 13 victories. Curt Flood added a two-run single for the Cardinals,</p>
        <p>defeat when Ron Fairly dolled in the sixth and scored as John Roseboro singled.</p>
        <p>Joe Torre tripled and scored on Frank Bollings ground out in the seventh inning, breaking Atlantas 2-2 tie with Houston. Torre also doubled across a run in the first inning in helping Ken Johnson with a four-hitter.</p>
        <p>Ron Swoboda smashed a homer and a triple, driving in five runs in New Yorks first-game triumph which halted Philadelphias six-game winning streak. Bob Shaw didnt finish but still gained his fifth victory in six decisions with the Mets.</p>
        <p>Al Luplow propelled the Mets in the second game with a three-run homer in the second inning. Swoboda added a run-scoring single. Jack Fisher blanked the Phillies until the eighth when Bill White singled in a run. , a</p>
        <p>Glenn Cunningham, famous distance runner of the 1930s, estimates he has helped rehabilitate 8,000 wajward youths since</p>
        <p>into his Kansas ranch and assigning them to care for ani-</p>
        <p>tional Association for Stock Car chanic for a living while he</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League</p>
        <p>W. L. Pet. G.B.</p>
        <p>San Fran. .. 50 Pittsburgh  46</p>
        <p>Los Angeles . 43 Phila.......43</p>
        <p>Houston .. St. Louis . Cincinnati Atlanta New York Chicago</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>32 34</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>41 45 43 53</p>
        <p>.617</p>
        <p>.590</p>
        <p>.558</p>
        <p>.544</p>
        <p>.538</p>
        <p>.48</p>
        <p>.468</p>
        <p>.451</p>
        <p>.434</p>
        <p>.312</p>
        <p>Mondays Results</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh 7-4, Chicago</p>
        <p>2Vi'</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>6 6^</p>
        <p>111</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>5-6,</p>
        <p>California 11, Detroit 6 Minnesota 5, Cleveland 4 Todays Games California at Detroit, N Minnesota at Cleveland, N Chcago at Washington, N Boston at New York Only games scheduled Wednesdays Games California at Detroit, N Minnesota at Cleveland, light</p>
        <p>Chicago at Washington, N Kansas City at Baltimore, 2</p>
        <p>finished 28 seconds in front of Darel Dreringer, of Charlotte, N.C., who drove a Mercury (tomet. Dieringer collected $8,-970 for second place, including $1,500 for the best finisher outside the factory sponsored cars.</p>
        <p>Jim Paschal of High Point, N.C., was third in a 1966 Plymouth and won $6,055.</p>
        <p>2nd game IM innings, darkness j twi-night St. Louis 6-2, San Francisco 2-' Boston at New York 2</p>
        <p>The rest of the top 10 were: Jim Hurtubise of North Tona-wanda, N.Y., fifth in a 1966 Plymouth for $1,550; Don White of Keokuk, Iowa, sixth in a 1966 Dodge Charger for $1,250, Marvin Panch of Daytona Beach seventh in a 1965 Plymouth for $1,400; Dewayne (Tiny) Lund of Cross, S.C., eighth in a 1966 twi-'Ford for $1,325; James Hylton of Inman, S.C., ninth in a 1965 Dodge for $1,250, and Johnj Sears of Ellerbee, N.C., tenth' In a 1965 Ford for $1,150.</p>
        <p>. *</p>
        <p>Los Angeles 2, Cincinnati 1 Atlanta 3, Houston 2</p>
        <p>Todays Games New York at Philadelphia, N Pittsburgh at Chicago Atlanta at Houston, N Cincinnati at Los Angeles, N St. Louis at San Francisco Wednesdays Games New York at Philadelphia, N Pittsburgh at Chicago Atlanta at Houston, N Cincinnati at Los Angeles, N St. Louis at San Francisco American League</p>
        <p>W. L. Pet G.B. Baltimore ..  55  26  .679  </p>
        <p>Detroit ..... 46  31  .597  7</p>
        <p>Cleveland ..  45  32  .584  8</p>
        <p>California ..  42  37  .532  12</p>
        <p>Chicago ..... 37  40  .481  18</p>
        <p>Minnsota ..  36  43  .456  18</p>
        <p>New York ..  34  41  .453  18</p>
        <p>Kansas City  35  44  .443  19</p>
        <p>Washington . 33 47 .413 21</p>
        <p>Boston ...... 29 51 .363 25^</p>
        <p>Mondays Results Chicago 5-2, New York 0-5 Washington 6-0, Boston 4-1 Kansas City 9, Baltimore 6</p>
        <p>Carolina League</p>
        <p>W.</p>
        <p>L.</p>
        <p>Pet.</p>
        <p>G.B.</p>
        <p>Winston-Salem</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>.598</p>
        <p>Wilson</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>.577</p>
        <p>1^</p>
        <p> Lynchburg .</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>.544</p>
        <p>4 ;</p>
        <p>1 Kinston ... Rocky Mount</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>.528</p>
        <p>5^1</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>.514</p>
        <p>6V^|</p>
        <p>Burlington ..</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>.507</p>
        <p>7 i</p>
        <p>Raleigh </p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>.487</p>
        <p>8^1</p>
        <p>Greensboro .</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>.468</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>Durham ...</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>.450</p>
        <p>Portsmouth</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>.430</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Peninsula ..</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>.405</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>Yesterdays Results Wilson 11, Lynchburg 6 Portsmouth 1, Lynchburg 0 Greensboro 4, Durham 1 Burlington 4, Raleigh 1 Rocky Mount 9, Kinston 8 Peninsula 5, Winston-Salem Todays Games Kinston at Rocky Mount Raleigh at Burlington Durham at Greensboro Peninsula at Winston-Salem Portsmouth at Lynchburg</p>
        <p>Neighbor Seems Big Benefactor</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE, Ohio (AP)-Chester Hamulak installed a rotor on the aerial atop a 15-foot mast ^on his home so he would get ' the very best reception from his new color television set.</p>
        <p>When he finished the job, he found reception no better than before.</p>
        <p>But his next-door neighbor, Herbert Satterfield, reported that he was getting good pictures as far away as Cincinnati.</p>
        <p>Saadis Shoe Shop</p>
        <p>enuapi Expert Serrle An Work GuraatoeA SeiTlce WhUt Ytm WtM Leeated la CeDtga View Cleaaer* Mala Plaai</p>
        <p>Make sure you like it before you buy it. You know how long Volkswagens last</p>
        <p>COMTLKTB CAB 8EBYICI</p>
        <p>HOirS</p>
        <p>1521 Entas Si.</p>
        <p>PL t-lU1</p>
        <p>E*rl OrmoBde or Joba BaM</p>
        <p>DOG HAVEN KENNEL</p>
        <p>NOW OPEN</p>
        <p>BOARDING FOR DOGS A PETS</p>
        <p>PUBLIC INVITED</p>
        <p>OPERATED BY MRS. ELSIE DUNN PHONE 752-3377</p>
        <p>like it Of not, that's a Volkswagen. With oil the beauty of the funny-looking one.</p>
        <p>An air-cooled engine that can't bod over or freeze and averages 28 miles per' gallon of gas. Which is pretty good for o car that goes 84 miles per hour.</p>
        <p>We not only put in a lot of what makes the bug so nice. We also put in a lot of what makes the bug so,nlce for so long. Sweat.</p>
        <p>The Votkswogen Fastback is mode the same way Volkswagens were made ten years ago. Since most of them are still</p>
        <p>JOE PECHELES</p>
        <p>OTOood, that couldnY be too bod.</p>
        <p>It goes through 3,120 inspections. Nothing gets into the car that isn't perfect.</p>
        <p>For a scratch on the door that only  trained VW inspector could ever see^ we'll scratch the whole door.</p>
        <p>We even take a lot of pains with whot you can see. The paint job involves 2 chemicql baths. 3 sondlngs (one by hand) and 4 coats of point.</p>
        <p>So first be sure you like the Fastback. Then be sure to pick a color you con live with a long time.</p>
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        <p>GETS DOWN TOR BUSINESSMatsiv Jerry Jones, third draft choice of the new Atlanta Falcons, ties his shoulder pads preparing for the first workout at Black Mountain, N.C., yesterday. Jones, from Bowling Green of Ohio, dieted from 318 pounds to 267 pounds before arriving for the summer camp. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Falcons Open Workouts</p>
        <p>At Black Mountain Camp</p>
        <p>Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.-Tuesday, July 5, 1966-9</p>
        <p>Snaps</p>
        <p>Gain</p>
        <p>Baltimore Winning Split With Chisox</p>
        <p>By DICK COUCH</p>
        <p> ___ worKer who has said, *I tike to six-run fay ih the fifth/ditvin^^</p>
        <p>Associated Press Sports Writer get a game ovfr with so I can; in the first run with a single and ,  I find out who won, dispatched delivering another whi be was</p>
        <p>Catfish Huntw ^at^thejteat white Sox on 87 pitches. I hit by a pitch with the bases</p>
        <p>called balls,  loaded.</p>
        <p>in the seventh inning but Fritz Peterson didnt cool off until the eighth.</p>
        <p>Kansas Citys Huntei*, working with only two days rest in S^egree weather at Baltimore Monday, pitched six strong innings as the Athletics snapped the American League-leang Orioles winning streak at seven with a 9-6 victory.</p>
        <p>New Yorks Peterson, mean-white, rivaled the 95-degree temperature at Yankee Stadium by pitching 7 1-3 perfect innings itt a 5-2 victory over Chicago that gained the Yanks a split of their holiday doubleheader.</p>
        <p>sent across the Sacrifice fly.</p>
        <p>other with a</p>
        <p>Bob Mison pinch hit a two-. run homer in the eighth inning, ^</p>
        <p>Petersons third inning single snapping a 3-3 tie, and Dwight triggered a three-run rally, Lou Siebler rescued winner Jim Clinton singling across a pair,|Kaat in the ninth as the Twins</p>
        <p>The White Sox took the first Russ Snyder homered for the ^ Jake GibiS kjwicd in  tw^  suS!  HarmOT^flteTr-w*^ta</p>
        <p>game M  behind the six-hit . Orioles, who closed the gap with i more with a single in the  fifth  str^^  toi^ ^  Mime-^ol</p>
        <p>pitching of  left-hander Gary Pe-i three runs in the ninth^  ;?fad"hi ^^gle  a^Fred tfiw  Si .</p>
        <p>ters.  I  Peterson threw wildlv after</p>
        <p>Elsewhere, the California An-fielding Jerry Adairs roller gels whipped Detroit 11-6, Min-1 with one out in the eighth and nesota edged Cleveland 5-4 and Romano followed with his Washington divided a twin bill ground single. Ken Berry thra with Boston, winning the first; doubled in one run and Lee Elia game 6-4 and losing the night-1 cap 1-0.  !</p>
        <p>In National Lea^e double-headers, Chicago tripped Pitts-</p>
        <p>By RON SPEER  j  of Green Bay Coach Vince Lorn-</p>
        <p>Associated Press Sports Writer bardi, has wasted no time</p>
        <p>adopting the Packers sweat-</p>
        <p>ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -The Atlanta Falcons, newest team in the National Football League, will look Just like the on</p>
        <p>and-blood practice tactics for his Falcons.</p>
        <p>The Falcons  who will rely   .  _.i rbokies  and  castoffs  from</p>
        <p>Green Bay Packers    until  the other clubs when they  make  his players agreed,</p>
        <p>season starts.  ; their debut  this  fall   arent  That was  the roughest open-</p>
        <p>Coach Norb Hecker, a  disciple i expected to  play  like the  Pack-  ing workout  Iv^  seen,  said</p>
        <p> ---  ^  ^  quarter-</p>
        <p>Hunter, 20 years old and Kansas Citys biggest winner with eight victwries, yielded four hits and tiree runs  two of them unearned  before going out for a pinch hitter in the seventh, when Dick Greens three-run homer gave the As their winning margin.</p>
        <p>Manager Alvin Dark said he hadnt planned on Hunter going ail the way because of the heat and the young right-handers lack of rest. Hunter beat Detroit 16-4 in his previous start last Friday.</p>
        <p>Peterson, a 24-year-old rookie, retired the first 22 batters he</p>
        <p>burgh 6-4 after bowing 7-5, St. Louis topped San Francisco 6-2 before losing 3-2 and New York swept Philadelfrfiia 9-6 and 8-1. Los Angeles nipped Cincinnati 2-</p>
        <p>1 and Atlanta edged Houston 3-</p>
        <p>2 in single games.</p>
        <p>The Athletics, who have won four of their last five, jumped to 9-3 lead over the Orioles,</p>
        <p>Results</p>
        <p>Green leading the way with five RBI. He batted twice during a</p>
        <p>Firemen Help</p>
        <p>them look like the NFL champ-,^</p>
        <p>ons.</p>
        <p>, I nos single broke up the no-hit</p>
        <p>We 11 be in as good a shape:...  finished with a two-hit-</p>
        <p>as Green Bay, Hecker promised after a pair of rugged conditioning workouts Monday and</p>
        <p>bid. He finished with a two-hit-ter and his seventh victory in 13 decisions.</p>
        <p>The young left-hander, a fast</p>
        <p>WILUAMSTOWN, N. J. (AP)~William N. Bappert, a turkey fanner, called for help from the fire department when 5,000 of his birds died in Hie record-breaking beat wave.</p>
        <p>Fire Chief Edward Derrick-son sent trucks to spray water over Bipperts surviving 10,-000 birils Monday and to create a rand wallow for them.</p>
        <p>Minor League Results By THE ASSOaATED PRESS Carolina League Wilson 11, Lynchburg 6 Portsmouth 1, Lynchburg 0 Greensboro 4, Durham 1 Burlington 4, Raleigh 1 Rocky Mount 9, Kinston 8 Peninsula 5, Winston-Salem 4 Western CaroUnais League Greenville 6-4, Spartanbur 4-3 Salisbury 20, Lexington I (2nd game ppd., rain)</p>
        <p>SUtesville 10-5, Thomasville 2-4</p>
        <p>Gastonia 11-8, Rock Hill 1-7 Southern League Evansville 3-1, Columbus 0-0 Asheville 3-3, Mobile 1-2 Knoxville 2-6, Charlotte 1-8 Montgomery 5-2, Macon 4-5</p>
        <p>Don Buford unloaded a two-  homer  for the Indians,</p>
        <p>run inside-the-park homer and  The  Red  Sox  nipped Wasi  -</p>
        <p>J. C. Martin rapped two run- ton in the nightcap as i 3 scoring singles, leading Chica- Stange scattered thr^  i</p>
        <p>gos first-gamc attack.  Gorge Scott stroked % run-scur-</p>
        <p>The Angels struck for five ing single in the first in-' .. runs in the eighth inning, Jose I The Senators scored all tr :ir Cardenal and Jim Fregosi cap-runs in the second inmng of the ping the rally with homers, and npner, Ki McM^len s homer handed the Tigers their third triggering  the  outburst,</p>
        <p>setback in a row. Cardenal hit a</p>
        <p>three-run homer, Fregosi a two- Arne Dokka of Studio City,</p>
        <p>run shot Joe Adcock and Jack Warner also homered fw California.</p>
        <p>Calif., 1965 U. S. Amateur Public Links champion, came from Norway eight years ago.</p>
        <p>The Washington Senators played 12 American League games this spring before one of their pitchers achieved a complete game.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR ECONOMY &amp;amp; QUALITY TRY</p>
        <p>WONDER</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>DRAGON</p>
        <p>NOW AT LOWEST PRICES</p>
        <p>AVAIlAMLi AT</p>
        <p>BILBRO SERVICED STORES</p>
        <p>For LL Playoffs</p>
        <p>A District IV Little League</p>
        <p>meeting here last week resulted in the appointment of a Green-</p>
        <p>trict Administrator upon</p>
        <p>former Georgia back Billy Lothridge, who has had h-ials wHh BaRimore, Dallas and Los Angeles.</p>
        <p>Ernie Wheelwright, former New York Giant fullback, dropped 13 pounds in the morning drill.</p>
        <p>Not a minute was wasted during 90-minute morning and aft-emoon - ..workouts, and, the</p>
        <p>end of the tenure of current ad-1 Players met with coachM for ministrator Floyd Chadwick of'  Monday  night.</p>
        <p>vine man'as Asst. District Ad-'Morehead City.  ISke^'sa^d'chlSfulW</p>
        <p>ministrator and the develop-1 Presently in his first year as ment of pairing, for area:the Greenville Little &amp;gt;^8"^</p>
        <p>tournaments  Supervisor.  Gordan  was also fhe Blue Ridge Mountains is</p>
        <p>Dan Gordan, Supervisor of appointed to serve as Touma-Greenvilles Little Leagues, was ment Director for Area II.</p>
        <p>Charles Craig was named Director for Area</p>
        <p>a 20-minute drive from town, which doesnt leave players too</p>
        <p>aopointed  to the post' of Asst.  Charles Craig was named</p>
        <p>District  Administrator. The ap-  Tournament Director for  Area ' P </p>
        <p>pointment places Gordan in line I.  I dont think anyone ^will</p>
        <p>for a three-year term as Dis- The Area II tournament will want to do anythi^ but sleep   "  begin in Greenville Julv 20th|^ound here</p>
        <p>r "wfi ddnCidtie</p>
        <p>championship game July  22nd. |  But I dont thinkour opening</p>
        <p>U I IMWM  Six teams, including thost  from  drills were  any  tougher than the</p>
        <p>^^'^tfiern I^hes, Tarborb. WaK^Ycars"'^^ Packers, the saw, Robersonville and Warren- former Green Bay assistant ton will be competing.  coach said.</p>
        <p>Winners of the Area I and II Some of the players just HOUSTON  AP) - Robin tmirnaments will meet to decide arent used to that kind of work-Roberts has pitched more thani^he District IV championship' out, thats all.</p>
        <p>4,600 major league innings and on July 27th at a site to be The first days drills, Hecker his dream of winning 300 games announced.  said, indicated that many of the</p>
        <p>was almost a reality when thej The tournament pairing dc- veterans and rookies trying for Houston Astros placed him oniyeioped at last weeks meeting jobs with the Falcons wont waivers Monday.  game Warrenton a first round | make it.  ...</p>
        <p>I dont want to say anything bye in the Area II tournament I Beckers biggest chore during</p>
        <p>r...  .  ,:.V,.x</p>
        <p>I ^J^ll \ WCIlil  O  ft/ ^ fttl V*1V A*  * WK-A UAABV.'AAV  |  --------- </p>
        <p>1 might wish I hadnt  the next  and cast Greenvilles Tar Heel  I tht  first few  weeks  of  workouts</p>
        <p>day, was Roberts  only  com-^ League Team against Southern! will be to determine  which  play</p>
        <p>ment.  Pines in the first game on July * ers  to keep.</p>
        <p>. u* u A !20th at 10 a.m.</p>
        <p>The 39-year-old T^Rht-hander  second  game,  scheduled</p>
        <p>x.iv. J  -  J  lag  secona game, suucuuicu</p>
        <p>who had won more games 1** fQj. j p.m., brings Warsaw and any other active P*^^/  i Tarboro together and the 4 p.m</p>
        <p>just 16 triumphs shy of his 300- ^^^^ fggtu|.g Greenville:</p>
        <p>on Julv 21st the teams which</p>
        <p>will</p>
        <p>will</p>
        <p>in goal.  North State league team against</p>
        <p>He learned the news shortly Robersonville. before Mondays game with the pigyoffg Atlanta Braves, which the tros lost 3-2.  compete in the arerf title game,</p>
        <p>The 1966 season had been un- scheduled for July 22nd at 4</p>
        <p>kind to Roberts. He won three P "_____</p>
        <p>games but lost five. He completed just one of his 12 starts and showed well in only one of 1 is last four tires.</p>
        <p>Sixty-four prospects reported</p>
        <p>Monday, with about 35 NFX veterans obtained from other clubs scheduled to come in Saturday.</p>
        <p>Six of the top college players acquired by the Falcons arc tied up with the Coaches All-America game in Atlanta.</p>
        <p>Hecker plans to trim 20 or more players from the squad this week, W cut the list down to about 60 by Aug. 1.</p>
        <p>was a different story last *. He Signed with Houston as ree agent in August, after lesting his release from the timore Orioles, and won his t four games for the Astros icluding successive shutouts is first two appearances, oberts, who will be replaced ^oung Don Arlich of the As- Oklahomo City club, undent surgery after the 1965 on to remove loose bone ments from his right ellww. oberts, who has a lifetime or league record of 284 vic-Bs and 242 losses, originally signed in 1948 by the Phil-From 1950 to 1955, he post-20 or more victories for six ight seasons and pitched in All-Star games.</p>
        <p>Prothro Smiles</p>
        <p>/is Team Works</p>
        <p>)idn't Really Break Ground'</p>
        <p>[I (AP)Judges and fs broke ground for a ar Association building ^ hort time ago  at least id they did.</p>
        <p>eremonies were held on I parking lot which is to, ly to the building. Theyj : really break the ground, l le of sand was trucked rive the shovel-wielders</p>
        <p>ng to dig in.</p>
        <p>ALANTA (AP) - The face of Tommy Prothro, coach of the West All-Stars, was all smiles.</p>
        <p>I was real satisfied with the workout, he said after watching his charges begin preparation for the Coaches All-America All-Star football game here ntxt Saturday.</p>
        <p>One thing that made him smile was 267-pound Aaron Brown, who arrived at the practice field at least 15 minutes ahead of time and was hard at work when the others arrived.</p>
        <p>Got to lose some weight, Brown said. Id like to get down to 255-260. This fall he will cast his pro lot with the Kansas City Chiefs.</p>
        <p>The West and East squads began Intensive work on their various offensive and defensive patterns. When the session was over, Duffy Daugherty, East coach, also said he was satisfied. The boys have a good attitude and are very cooperative," he added.</p>
        <p>The Michigan State mentor said he had switched Kentucky haliback Rodger Bird from defense and hes adapted well to it He has good speed.</p>
        <p>Daugherty also said Tom Barrington is playing well at three positions. Weve been using him at wingback, fullback and left halfback. Of course, thats nothing new to him. He played all four positions at Ohio State. He started at quarterback at a sophomore.</p>
        <p>Neither coach has decided oa a starting quarterback, at</p>
        <p>years with you</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>andfdllget</p>
        <p>complaint</p>
        <p>though Missouris Gary Lane look^ good rolling out for the West and Alabamas Sieve Sloan was throwing well for the East.</p>
        <p>Randy Johnson of Texas A&amp;amp;I is Lanes competition. Sloan is battling Georgias Preston Ri-dlehuber for the job.</p>
        <p>Prothro said he didnt have much opportunity to look at the defense, but I believe everybodys doing well. 'The offense looks pretty good and I was especially Impressed with (Glen Ray) Hifes and (Francis) Peiy at tackle and (James) Lindsey I in Hie backfield." Peay Is from I Missouri and Lindsey and Hines from Arkansas.</p>
        <p>Prothro said he had not decided on a starting backfield</p>
        <p>the way it is with a man and his newspaper. Rain or shine, year-in and year-out. The newspaper is always taking a stand against someone or lomething. Then why do 95 million adults spend more than half an hour reading their newspaper every day, year after year?</p>
        <p>Because most of us realize that controversy is the measure of an energetic, healthy community. We want to be sure that were</p>
        <p>living the best life we can. And If things could be better wt want to know which things and why and how. Newspapers giva us the answer.</p>
        <p>If you manufacture or sell something that is a little better than what your competition offers, take your story to the newspaper reading public. These are the people who thrive on the original, the different, and the new.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Pitt County's Home Newspaper"</p>
        <p>k.</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0010" />
        <p>10-Th I&amp;gt;aily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.-Tuesday, July 5, 1966</p>
        <p>Pearlie, Wraps Up 47 Years On Campus</p>
        <p>By ROY MARTIN Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Pearlie Moore has faced his last lettuce.</p>
        <p>He. retired Thursday after 47 years with the ECC cafeteria. For 15 of those years he supervised the salad department.</p>
        <p>I started with the college in 1919, said Moore, who is 66. My first job was waiting on tables. In 1942, I went into the salad department.</p>
        <p>He began when the ECC ihning facilities were operated on a table-family style basis. Pearlie Moore served students and dignitaries who visited the campus.</p>
        <p>During those years I waited on Governors Ehringhause, Broughton, Hoey and my last one was Gov. Scott, he said, reminiscing.</p>
        <p>There were others: Mrs. Frances Perkins, Roosevelts Secretary of Labor; V i c e-president Alben Barkley and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt.</p>
        <p>I had the pleasure of seating Mrs. Roosevelt and taking her coat on the occasion of her visit, said Moore.</p>
        <p>He was 19 when he started to work and there were few students and fewer buildings.</p>
        <p>When I came here there were three dormitories, Wilson, Jarvis and Fleming, he recalled, and there was the Austin Building.</p>
        <p>The North Dining Hall existed, he explained, and the laundry and power plants were directly adjacent. There was a small infirmary where the Alumni House now stands.</p>
        <p>There were less than 500 studente, he recalled, a n d they were all girls.</p>
        <p>He served during the terms of five East Carolina presidents, Dr. Wright, Dr. Meadows, Dr. Cook and Dr. Mes- | sick and Dr. Jenkins.  |</p>
        <p>The years have brought i countless changes to the] campus.</p>
        <p>In my early years, he said, I used to know just ab o u t every student and faculty member on the campus because I had a chance to mingle with them. Now I know just a few.</p>
        <p>In the late 1940s the din ing operations were converted to cafeteria style and Pearlie Moore took over supervision of salad-maki^. The job</p>
        <p>L80 salads per day.</p>
        <p>He was always dependable, said Paul Julian, Cafe-</p>
        <p>clock struck the hour, hed always be here.</p>
        <p>Pearlie Moore is married and the father of one child, a daughter, who lives in N e w York City. He is ilso a grandfather.</p>
        <p>I really have no plans for the future, he said, considering his retirement years. Maybe Ill be working in the garden or fish. When I get tired of that Ill probably look for a part-time job.</p>
        <p>After 47 years, there are many memories I will miss my job very much, he said. It is difficult to say good-bye to people you have worked with so long. I will miss tiiem very much.</p>
        <p>The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Absurdities Abound In</p>
        <p>THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW</p>
        <p>PiT'/ POOR HAMMBOWE WHEW HE rURHS UP IN ATRKEV, THE CRITICG ''llE OH THE ABUSE WITH STEAMSHOVELS-</p>
        <p>BuT put HIM INI A HIT SHOW, AMD Will HE GET HIS SHARE OF THE CHEERS hP BRAVOS'? OOM'T 6E SILLAH </p>
        <p>The People i^ouf Us</p>
        <p>Notice Judys comments about the silly behavior of tourist women in Miami Beach. Women are more sheeplike than men in blindly following fashions. They dont seem to realize that men are more interested in an attractive personality, though not dresed in fashion, than in an elephantine fashion plate!</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph. D., M. D.</p>
        <p>Because in the middle teens, young folks lack self-assurance. They are afraid to stand out from the crowd as individuals, so try to merge in the herd reaction.</p>
        <p>And advertisers know this fact, so they cleverly manipulate youth into smoking and drinking, supposedly as symbols of sophistication.</p>
        <p>Women are even more gullible than men as regards fads and</p>
        <p>! fashions so they dress as the  CASE Z-461: Our daughter j pace - setters decree, re- Judy accompanied her husband!ggrdless of how they may look! to Miami Beach last fall for a | jjj those bizarre styles, sales convention.  i Thus, fat women should abhor</p>
        <p>But, Daddy, Judy protest- furs for the latter make them ed after her return, it was so look even more elephantine. Andi cold in the hotel lobby and the; rings make stubby fingers look </p>
        <p>almost even father!</p>
        <p>dining room that we</p>
        <p>froze.  1  But such women dont think.  and swill down liquor because</p>
        <p>In fact, we had to go out-' So they try to flaunt their wealth i they are following the lead doors to get warm!  via  fur  coats,  stoles  and  flashy|sheep.</p>
        <p>So we spent much of our</p>
        <p>The leaders, of course, make</p>
        <p>PEARLIE MOORE . . . after 47 years, a little fishing, jgardening or perhaps a part-time job.</p>
        <p>(Reflector Staff Photo)</p>
        <p>Harry Richman Looks At His Past, Has No Regrets</p>
        <p>time on the beachjust trying! to thaw out.</p>
        <p>For the weather was like summer outside.</p>
        <p>One day I asked the hotel manager why he kept the hotel so cold, and he said that most of the women from New York and other Eastern cities wanted to show off their mink stoles.</p>
        <p>To make them look less ridiculous in Floridas warm weather, the hotels turn on the air conditioning.</p>
        <p>Then those women can strut i around and flaunt their furs in ! the lobby or the hotel dining I room.</p>
        <p>Isnt that silly!</p>
        <p>Remember my often stated admonition that everybody is branded with this tatoo across his or her chest:</p>
        <p>I WANT TO FEEL IMPORTANT!</p>
        <p>Millions of people are thus so stayed for a little public limelight or spotlighting, that they try to flaunt their wealth.</p>
        <p>Thus, fat, waddling women will also flash many diamond rings on their stubby fingers. And wear mink or sable even</p>
        <p>They also suck on cigarettes money out of changing the styl-</p>
        <p>So they will advocate short dresses; then soon swing over to long skirts to force all women to buy entirely new outfits,</p>
        <p>since you cant lengthen short skirts.</p>
        <p>And this zooms the sale of textile goods, so the fabric manufacturers smile happily.</p>
        <p>By BOB THOMAS jhevef hit m Tdi? By the time^ wmTvwnnn  Hnii  i television came along, he had! in the summer weather of Flor-</p>
        <p>i lost his voice and his nerve. ! ida just to ritz their associates. Yet fellow stars who saw him! For the majority of people</p>
        <p>day reading:</p>
        <p>jaunW^traw^W^^  ^  ^</p>
        <p>tWrPT. ^  shows  will testify They stamped into an^ </p>
        <p>was. no greater seller of eyed fashion or habit that ad-</p>
        <p>with vertisers make them thin^</p>
        <p>Gehmao, indicates he bolizes social leadership.</p>
        <p>A nf a  other  qualities  as a sales-! Keep up with the Joneses</p>
        <p>A Hell of a Life, published b&amp;gt; ,  ,  slogan  in  this con-</p>
        <p>Duell, Sloan and Peare^ $4.95. ,  ,  nection.</p>
        <p>Oddly for a performer who |    Our  A.M.A. Journal recently</p>
        <p>new teen-ages</p>
        <p>.cored ith me mass audience. - ^ S Te XI His films were failures, and he</p>
        <p>Cl PC</p>
        <p>Thief Made A Poor Choice</p>
        <p>There were morel girls than I could have counted'</p>
        <p>Along with the girls came troubles, he admits: When I wasnt being sued, I was in other kinds of hot water.  !</p>
        <p>I had around $8,000 to show' lifetime of work during j Id earned around $13</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA (AP) | i had around $8,000 to show' For The Trailer</p>
        <p>While directing traffic in Phila-ifor a</p>
        <p>delphias 100-plus heat Sunday which i d earned around $13,  YORK  (AP)  Do you</p>
        <p>Patrolman John Gunning no- million, he says. And no pros-:know there is now a white side-ticed a man remopng a battery pects. And all my nerve gone. I'^all tire made especially for from a car parked nearby. did the ostrick act then; I went boat trailers?</p>
        <p>Gunmng strolled over to the away and hid in a gloomy old since four out of five pass-car, and remarked, Hot bouse in Santa Monica. I paid a gnger cars today are equipped</p>
        <p>i  TCkrf  r\r&amp;gt;  if  onri  cVnf  ty^xt_  -  i  i    i  *</p>
        <p>lo  ly*, wlth whlte sldcwall tires, the</p>
        <p>^  Ion? Goodyear Tire &amp;amp; Rubber Com-</p>
        <p>Gunmng  ^as sit and stare at television.  ipany thought it only  fitting that</p>
        <p>-Nn -  thp  mpn  Tm  ^^^^nds rescued him from  boating enthusiasts  who use a</p>
        <p>No, said me  man  I m just  seclusion and he began to play a  trailer to transport  their boats</p>
        <p>trying to  get this  battery out so  managing  l</p>
        <p>Seventeen Florida count i e s produced more than 1,000,000 boxes of oranges in the 1964-65 eason.</p>
        <p>few dates, managing a sem-^ should have matching tires, blance of his once robust voice. ^ recent study showed that Now he lives with his memories, about 3.2 million pleasure boats in a small house in the Toluca;are hauled to and from the wa-Lake District, a few miles from | ter on boat trailers, the com-Hollywood.  Ipany  said.</p>
        <p>Philip Atterson, 38, was charged!.  concludes: L The new boat trailer tire is</p>
        <p>with burglary, larceny and re-|</p>
        <p>I can have it recharged. Maybe you had better come with me, said Gunning, putting a hand on the mans arm. That happens to be my car.</p>
        <p>The prisoner, identified as</p>
        <p>t shed a single tear for|n-,ade to run on lower air pres-</p>
        <p>ceiving stolen goods.</p>
        <p>I having made and spent a for- sure, thus reducing bounce on i</p>
        <p>ACROS.S</p>
        <p>1. Emblem 6. Circuits</p>
        <p>10. Constellation</p>
        <p>11. Marble</p>
        <p>26. Dilutes</p>
        <p>27. Shedding crab</p>
        <p>28. Remainder</p>
        <p>29. Unyielding</p>
        <p>30.  Baba</p>
        <p>13. Ice pinnacle 31. Periods of</p>
        <p>14. Sensitive</p>
        <p>light</p>
        <p>plant</p>
        <p>16. Egypt, cotton</p>
        <p>17. Hodge-podge</p>
        <p>19. Possessive adjective</p>
        <p>20. Sp. linen</p>
        <p>21. Begone</p>
        <p>22. Tirade</p>
        <p>23. Dish</p>
        <p>32. Brick carrier</p>
        <p>35jj^Babyfood 37. Elephant' tusk</p>
        <p>39. .Abscond</p>
        <p>40. Coiriflor</p>
        <p>41. Ecniaie</p>
        <p>.sheep</p>
        <p>42. Abyss, weight</p>
        <p>tune. As far as the wonderful the highway. And it will travel words of that old hit of mine</p>
        <p>hands with a millionaire, had a hell of a life.</p>
        <p>I've</p>
        <p>flu</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>k</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>G</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>Iw</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>easier on sand and  in  soft foot-</p>
        <p>still apply  to me,  you can shake  j^g areas.</p>
        <p>I  j-  .....u    ....II  ^  1...  Goodyear says  the  recom</p>
        <p>mended air pressure for the, new trailer tire is 40 pounds  considerably less than the 65 pounds recommended for  the  conventional trailer tire.  And  this new I</p>
        <p>tire is tubeless. thus reducing'</p>
        <p>Things Happen Two-At-A-Time</p>
        <p>, HE GETS.  /</p>
        <p>? GUARD. /  /</p>
        <p>\RD!  !</p>
        <p>SOLUTION OF YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Employer</p>
        <p>2. Sphere</p>
        <p>3. Dagger</p>
        <p>4. Tibetan gar.ellc</p>
        <p>5. Repetitions</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>s</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>//</p>
        <p>IZ</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>If-</p>
        <p>If</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>If</p>
        <p>zo</p>
        <p>Xf</p>
        <p>zt</p>
        <p>ts</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>ZS</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>XT</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>zs</p>
        <p>W'</p>
        <p>St</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>S3</p>
        <p>if</p>
        <p>3i</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>3S</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>ss</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>1/</p>
        <p>6. Sorceress</p>
        <p>7. E.xcliangc prcmiiiiu</p>
        <p>8. C.iril game Ay-d.'hcric</p>
        <p>iJ J.anded property ]Fall fiower ] 8. Went aiitad &amp;lt; .oai</p>
        <p>21.Cn.is:er</p>
        <p>22. 'Ibong</p>
        <p>23. lx)bter . dau's</p>
        <p>24. Amusing 2.5. Iranian 27. Itcniiinera-</p>
        <p>b'on 2 I I'ari? of a liarness</p>
        <p>31. Cat's-Paw</p>
        <p>32. Multitude</p>
        <p>33.HcraJdic wreath</p>
        <p>34. Stainer 36. Dejected 38. Compete</p>
        <p>MILWAUKEE Wis. lAP)  danger of a flat. Harold Berger and Lawrence j Pier seem to do tlnngs alike.</p>
        <p>They're both 20. They grew up in the same Milwaukee neighborhood. They went to the same schools. They were drafted into</p>
        <p>Too Friendly Dog Poses Problem</p>
        <p>...  . ,  ...  BARTON, Fla. (AP)-The</p>
        <p>.TAJ!  P"'  Democrat's circul-</p>
        <p>pfeXs Lt to Viet Nam in : April, and Berger in May.  '  .</p>
        <p>Pier was wounded in June and .    i. lu </p>
        <p>received a Purple Heart  ^ carrier boy Ihrmving pap-</p>
        <p>Bergers wife, Jeanne, ,9  ""'o subscribers awns^ was;</p>
        <p>read about the decoration in a  .P"P  &amp;gt;"!*  &amp;gt;'I</p>
        <p>newspaper and sent a clipping '  .  P^b-</p>
        <p>^ ed un a ----- -  ----</p>
        <p>to her</p>
        <p>husband with this  a  paper in his mouth</p>
        <p>warning: Just because Larry P". Proudly scampered back to got a Purple Heart, don't you go  *'  '&amp;gt;  be  helpless  delivery</p>
        <p>inatchirig htoup. '</p>
        <p>Mrs. Berger got a letter Sat-| urday from her husband ^hich,</p>
        <p>said: I got hit only a few hours: after 1 read your last letter tell-ij^QW AutOITIdtOcI ing me that i.arry got a Purple'</p>
        <p>Heart Woo, iu do  now.</p>
        <p>rHIf'AGO (AP)-The Illinois Central Kailioad has inlrodiicci A B(A' FOR M.AKf.N.A^ |an automatic tickei-eollet liun RKH.ARDSHN, Tex. (AP) -Isystem.</p>
        <p>Mis. Marina (uwald Porter, 24,' system involves use of had a 6-pound, 12-ounce boy'niagnetically coded tickets .Sunday. She had two children which the lines 35,000 commut-jby her earlier marriage to Lce'cr.s insert into gate slots. It was Harvey Oswald.  !designed by Litton industries. i</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0011" />
        <p>.....r</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>t-xfthe Dally Reflector, Greenville, N. C,-Tuesday, July 5, 1966-11SELL* RENT* SWAP HIRE * BUY* SELL* RENT* SWAP* HIRE * BUY * SELL* RENT* SWAP*HIRE</p>
        <p>HIRE * BUY * SELL* RENT * SWAP  HIRE  BUY* SELL* RENT * SWAP * HIRE * BUY * SELL* RENT</p>
        <p>i/</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>See Shortage Of Future Priests</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP)  Candidates for the Church of England priesthood are down by 40 per cent and the Church Assembly meets' today to decide what should be done about it.</p>
        <p>' A report from the Advisory Council for the Churchs Ministry offered four reasons for the ^dropoff.</p>
        <p>^ 1. Current intellectual uncertainty and secularism.</p>
        <p> 2. Greater emphasis on the Importance of the lay ministry.</p>
        <p>3. Certain anachronistic features of church life.</p>
        <p>4. Reluctance of the young to Diai'e a life-long commitment.</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>North Carolina County Of Pitt Tha undartignad having quallfiad as Adminlatratrls, c.t.a. of tha Estata of Jana F. Hadley, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify ell persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned Administratrix, c.t.a., on or before December 30,  or  this  notice  will</p>
        <p>be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to tha undersigned Administratrix, c.t.a.</p>
        <p>This 24th day of June, 19M.</p>
        <p>Bruce F. Hadley 52? Evans Street Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>Administratrix, c.t.a. of tha Estata of Jana P. Hadley June 28 and July 5, 12, 1?, 1?86.</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION</p>
        <p>In The Superior Court</p>
        <p>North Carolina Pitt County</p>
        <p>Giorlstine Blount Joyner</p>
        <p>PlaintlH</p>
        <p>vs.</p>
        <p>Charlie Thomas Joyner  befefidahf</p>
        <p>To: Charlie Thomas Joyner TAKE NOTICE, that a pleading seeking relief against you has been fl the above entitled action.</p>
        <p>the following lands:</p>
        <p>The LiHle Wall tract of land in Swift Creek Township, Pitt County, North Car. olina, bounded by the lands of L. D. Wall et ais. Beginning at a cypress in the run of Swift Creek, Jesse Clark's corner, and runs thence South 80 East 10?'/4 poles to a stake in the J. J. Wall's corner; thence South 30 East 1?8 poles to the run of Swift Creek, thence up the run of Swift Creek to the beginning, containing 75 acres, more or less. EXCEPT 3.10 acres conveyed by T. G. Wall to L. D. Wall which will be fully described at the sale.</p>
        <p>Lands are being sold to make assets.</p>
        <p>Lands have been rented for year 1?00. 2.4? acres tobacco, 10 acres of corn base, about 22 acres cleared. Bidder required to deposit 10 per cent of bid on day of sale pending confirmation. Sale will remain open 10 days for raise of bid.</p>
        <p>This the 24th day of June, 1900.</p>
        <p>S. 0. Worthington, Commluloner June 28, July 5, 1960</p>
        <p>Clarence Harris and wife, Lottie Harris, by Amos J. Evans et al. by deed da*ed January 15, 1959^ and recorded in Book S-30 at page 404 of the Pitt County&amp;lt; Registry. and subsequently conveyed by Clarence Harris to Lottie Harris by that certain deed dated February 9, 1959, and recorded in Book U-30 at page 268 of said Registry.</p>
        <p>Said sale will be subject to confirmation by the Court, and the successful bidder will be required to deposit with the trustee 10 per cent of his bid to show good faith.</p>
        <p>This the 3rd day of June, tfOO,</p>
        <p>R. B. Lee Trustee</p>
        <p>June 14, 21, 28 and July S, 1900.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autos For Saio</p>
        <p>fiUICK  1965 Skylark conver-ble. |l/H, auto, trans, power steering' &amp;amp; brakes, 22,000 znlles. Phelps Chevrolet.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1963 Impala troupe, R/H, 2 speed, 327 engine, one owner, 35,0&amp;lt;r actual miles. Phelps Chevrolet.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1953 4 door, straight shift. $95. Cayton Motor Sales, Green &amp;amp; Dickinson</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1063 BelAir, ^ dr. V8, auto, trans. power steering, R/H, one owner. Extra clean. Stafford Olds.</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the. power of sale  contained  in  that  certain Deed</p>
        <p>of Trust  executed  and  delivered b' Sam</p>
        <p>Cates and wife, Edith Gardne  Cates, dated May 4, 1902, to Dink Jamii, Trustee for A. F. Fleming and wife, Martha R  Fleming,  recorded  In Book B-</p>
        <p>33, Page 73?, In the Public Registry of Pitt County, default havlr&amp;gt;g been made in payment of the debt secured thereby and  other terms  end  conditions of</p>
        <p>said Deed of Trust violated, the' undersigned will offer for sale end self to the h.ghest bidder for cash before the Courthouse Door In Greenville, North Carolina, on</p>
        <p>Priday, July 15, 1900 at 12:00 o'clock noon all of the following described reaf as-tate;</p>
        <p>Lying ar&amp;gt;d being In the Town of Grimesland, Pitt County, North Carolina, and moro particularly described as follows:</p>
        <p>PARCEL NO. fi Lots "A", "B" and "C" each fronting on the south side of Pitt Street 21.25 feet ed|oining home lot of Dr Jones being of regular width and running beck each 150 feet. These being the identical three lots acquired by A. F. Fleming by deed dated January 11, 1919, from J. 0. Proctor and W. E Proctor and their respective wives, of record In Deed Book Y-12, at Page 00 of tha Public Registry of Pitt County reference to which Is hereby directed for more particular and accur-</p>
        <p>"^parcbl'^no. 1: BEGINNING at .drivc, excellent (XMidition. Call</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1964 Convertible, 4 in the floor, power steering, extra nice car, dark blue, white top. Special $1995. F ( D Motor Co., PL 8-4408.</p>
        <p>FIAT  1966, nOO-D, white With red interior. Call 758-2496.</p>
        <p>FORD  1962 Oalaxie 2 door hardtop, like new. $895. Cayton Motor Sales, Oreen &amp;amp; Dickinson.</p>
        <p>FORD  1959 2-dr. straight</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Fmal Help Wanted</p>
        <p>FULL TIME SECRETARY, work includes typing, transcribing, part-time receptionist &amp;amp; bookkeeper. Job carries considerable responsibility and salary would be commensurate with responsibility and Individual past experience. Write giving qualifications, references, pdf dress &amp;amp; phone number toi Transcribing, P. O. Box 40^, Greenville.</p>
        <p>CALL US NOW FOR YOUR long grain bins being erected ^fore the rushri Ayden. Mobile Milling, 756-2016,1</p>
        <p>MeJe-Femele Help Wanteid</p>
        <p>NURSES, AIDS r diERilES</p>
        <p>Greenville Nursing &amp;amp; Convalescent Home is now taking applications for Licensed Practical Nurses, nurses aids &amp;amp; orderlies. Apply In Person 9 to 5.</p>
        <p>DAY TIME CURB BOY OR girl, 16 yrs. of age. Call 8-2205 or 8-2558.</p>
        <p>SHORT ORDER COOK, 6 p.m.-12 midnight. Telephone Mrs. Roberson, 752-9341.</p>
        <p>Male Help Wanted</p>
        <p>WANTED Route Salesmen</p>
        <p>TiJ'ed of being confined Inside? We have openings for several Route Salesmen and would be delighted to discuss these po* siti3ns with YOU. Experience would be helpful, but we will</p>
        <p>(take ISO feet aoutherry from Pitt Street end 103.75 feet easterly from Chicod Street and which point Is tha southeast corner of Lot "C" as shown on map made for Proctor brothers, which ap-</p>
        <p>768-4291.</p>
        <p>MG  1962 Roadster, like new condition. Priced at  only $795.</p>
        <p>TflOUW  TUT P'fU^lUT  UlUinWf^ WniLIl  I  ^  .    x  ^   m</p>
        <p>pears  of  record In  Map Book 2, Page i Cayton Motor Sales,  PL 8-4225.</p>
        <p>26, of tha Pitt county Registry;  lOAR  SaIIH  nrViita</p>
        <p>thence southerly and parallal tor Chicod  MlJoTAPHi  SOlid  wnite</p>
        <p>lied In</p>
        <p>Street-*sd *l&amp;lt;mg the tinfr of property; finish; 6 cylinder, flOOF' shift,</p>
        <p>conveyed to J. D. Heath and wife, this'png owner low mileace B1795 day 50 teet to a stake In the northern  owner, row mueage. giiWO.</p>
        <p>train you if you are interested in an attractive Sales Future. We offer a straight salary with commission on sales with stiurting range from $4,600$6,000</p>
        <p>yearly, plus itiany other fringe benefits  Call 758-3132 for an appointment.</p>
        <p>lina of an alley; running thenca westerly along the northern line of an alley 63.</p>
        <p>rrt.'-</p>
        <p>and parallel to Chicod Street 50 feet to the southwest corner of Lot "A" as stM&amp;gt;wn on the map aforesaid; running</p>
        <p>Is es follows:</p>
        <p>That the Plaintiff seeks divorce upon the grounds year separation.</p>
        <p>an absolute of One (1)J</p>
        <p>S &amp;amp; E Motor 746-3111.</p>
        <p>Service, Ayden,</p>
        <p>vnn  n  thencc  easterly  and  parallel  with  Pitt  1</p>
        <p>:h"pl5nXr.aler7hirt;rn  to  a  sf.k_e,  th.^  point  CAR?</p>
        <p>ARE YOU DRIVING A LOW-PRICED /</p>
        <p>such pleading day of August</p>
        <p>oay or ^ugusw 1900, and upon your fail- .  u 4  -____---    i.  ______</p>
        <p>tJfl io eo sb The  '  Elks'^R^FrSi  itJ</p>
        <p>of BEGINNING, and being part only</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>1900.</p>
        <p>against you will apply for the relief sought.</p>
        <p>This the 24th day of June,</p>
        <p>H. L. Lewis, Jr.,</p>
        <p>Asst. Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitf County, and State of North Carolina</p>
        <p>Richard Powell, Atty.</p>
        <p>P. O. Box-235 Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>June 28, July 5, 12, 19, 1900</p>
        <p>NOTICE OP SERVICE OP OF PUBLICATION</p>
        <p>III The Superler Court</p>
        <p>North Caroline Pitt County Mary Ella Moye,</p>
        <p>Plaintiff</p>
        <p>vs.</p>
        <p>Edward Move, Jr.,</p>
        <p>qated May' 23, 1952, which appears of record In Book L.-20, Page 110 of the Pitt County Registry. Being the Identical lot acquired by A. P. Fleming and wift, Martha R. Flaming by deed from R. Fred Elks and wift, Bobbia Jtan Elks, by datd datad October 30, If51, of record In Book Q-30, Pago 109, of the pm County Public Registry. Being the Identlcaf property conveyed to Sam Catas and-wifq, Edith Gardner Cates PROCESS by deed oated May 4, 1902, by A. F.</p>
        <p>Fleming and wife, Martha R. Flaming, of record In the Public Registry'of Pih County. Further being the same property conveyeif to Charlie ...Wv Edwards and wife, Julia Clark Edwards, by deed from Sam Cates and wife, Edith Gardner Carrs, dated May 8, 1903, and recorded in the Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>,^le vjbiect to .all oytftafylinfl. taxwil Pltr County Tbkes' WWnjo, 'ls6 1^60^ County Taxes; and tha Town of</p>
        <p>Nwt laeAi 'and Twtf'</p>
        <p>Mta  lew prlcad car?</p>
        <p>Then yen haven't driven a ifOO Penttne.</p>
        <p>SALESMAN WANTED, PAID vacation, paid Insurance, plus commtssioii: Call after 4:00 p^.mr. for appointment, telephone 752-5178.</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVICE</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE Broken? Let H. C. Haddock repair it for you. Get first-quality workmanship, PL 2-2619,</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Mitcolltneous For Salo.</p>
        <p>ONE USED 3-PIECE SET AER-O-Pak luggage in good condition. Reasonable priced. Call 752-0390</p>
        <p>FISHING MOTOR</p>
        <p>4-to-14 H. P. McCulloch Worlds Finest Outboards Sales &amp;amp; Service</p>
        <p>CLRK &amp;amp; CO.</p>
        <p>MEMORIAL DRIVE PL 6-2557</p>
        <p>IN TOWN TODAY? SHOPPING? Let us service your automobile. Carr Allens Texaco (beside old post office) PL 2-4838.</p>
        <p>WE TOP THEM ALL  Goodson Roofing can repair that leaky roof or happily install a new one. PL 2-4322.</p>
        <p>AVOID THE RISK OP DRIV-ing an undependable car. Let Holiday 66 Station check; your auto at low cost, PL 8-3533.</p>
        <p>CHEST FREEZER, DOUBLE seal lid gasket, no more messy defrosting, store more food and save more space. 25 $229.95, 19 $187.77, 15 $177.77. Western Auto.</p>
        <p>DONT MERELY BRIGHTEN your carpet . . . Blue Lustre them . . . eliminate rapid resoling. Rent electric shampooer $1. Gliddens</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>SASSERS CAMPING CENTER aU types Saiari-Lite campers ior sate. 2021 N. Williams Sc. Goldsboro, N. C. 784-4616.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Houses For Sal#</p>
        <p>RB4TAU</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER: BRICK Veneer Home near College, 1907 East Fifth Street. Living room, 2-3225. dining room, den. kitchen-dining area combination, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, closed in breeze-way. double garage, closed in backyard, wall to wall carpet, hot water heat, central air condition. Built by a contractor for himself. Large lot, well landscaped. Priced for a quick sale, well below todays market. Can be seen by appointment only. Contact Vance Overton, Overtons Supermarket.</p>
        <p>ONE FIVE ROOM FURNISHED house, Pactolus Rd. Call PL</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD GOODS</p>
        <p>CARPETS AND LIFE TOO CAN be beautiful if you use Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Mary Carters.</p>
        <p>LIVESTOCK</p>
        <p>BUY AIR CONDITIONINO now. Lots of hot weather ahead. Free survey. No down payment necessary. General Heating. Inc. Tel. 752-4187. 1100 Street.</p>
        <p>PUREBRED LANDRACE Boars, 3 mo. to service, age. Call M. H. Alexander, Bethel, N. C. 825-3586 or 826-3271 night.</p>
        <p>LET US FIGURE WITH YOU on your storm windows and doors. Bank rate financing. Tnompsons Discount Furniture, 802-804 Clark St., PL 8-3187.</p>
        <p>Evans VERY BEST PUREBRED MEAT type Duroc Boars for Sale. Joe Moye, Jr., Rt. 2 Box 32 Parm-vllle, N.C,</p>
        <p>FARM EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>CASE TOBACCO HARVESTER with aluminum top. In good condition. Call 752-5567.</p>
        <p>FLORISTS</p>
        <p>LOST R FOUND</p>
        <p>LOST: VICINITY MEADE &amp;amp; Fifth, prescription sunglasses. Reward. Call 752-4270.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER, 2608 S. WRIGHT Rd., 3 BR, IVa baths, LR, Foyer, kitchen-family combination. Pay equity &amp;amp; assume FHA loan. Can be occupied 1 week after sale. Call PL 8-3577 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Resort For Sale</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH COTTAGE, 3 story, 3 separate apts. Priced to sell. Excellent return on Investment. 2 blocks from Pavilion, 1 block from beach. Van D. Hatch, 748-6891, or 527-3110 Kinston.</p>
        <p>Office Space For Ren?</p>
        <p>TWO ROOM OFFICE IN NEW office building. 247 sq. ft. available. Air conditioned. Janitor service, provided. 219 N. Co tanche St. Call Jim Lanierf 752-5505</p>
        <p>Resorts For Rent</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH COTTAGB near Pavilion. Van D. Hatch. 746-6891</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH COTTAGE, nice &amp;amp; clean. 5 BR, between Sportsman Pier and Pavilion, For week June 26 thru July 3, Also, 2 weeks in. August, Bruce Garris, Orliton, N. O. Tel. 524-6916.</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>APARTMENT HUNTERS LOOK! Grier Rental Agency has a listing of the best in Greenville. Check With us first I PL 2-5700.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Linotype Operator THIRD SHIFT</p>
        <p>Thgii vM teavm't grivM a 1900 Paattae.</p>
        <p>Pontiac affart luxuriat not effaratf an; Blood Stream.</p>
        <p>Excellent  Working Conditions, And Fringe Benefits. A Challenging Opportunity" For The Who Has Printers Ink In HU</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE FLORAL, 313 Cotan(Aie is now featuring floral bouquets fresh or permanent. See Bettle or Mae, PL 2-2827</p>
        <p>VACATION TIME? SEE OUR used trailers, repossessed, take up payments. Check our camping trailers too! B &amp;amp; W Mobile Homes, Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Furnlturn - Appliancn</p>
        <p>PINEVIEW MOBILE EOMES</p>
        <p>hag a wide selection of uaed furn-tture and appliances. Come at our E. 10th Ext. location.</p>
        <p>MiS6Uanenu For Salo</p>
        <p>itM an^nHna law-gricae cart. Ya awa It ta yaunalf ta fine ovt why Pantinc hat baan Amarlca't Ire largest tallar &amp;gt;r 4 ttraigm</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD PONTIAC</p>
        <p>pt&amp;gt;ni</p>
        <p>I3H DICKINSON AVI.</p>
        <p>OPL  ^^9iir2 dr. and 5l</p>
        <p>stationwagon, one owner, Vic Pezzulla 758-1123</p>
        <p>call</p>
        <p>To Edward Move, Jr.:  '</p>
        <p>Take notica that a pleading seeking Pitt uoumy i *; .to</p>
        <p>been filed in the i Grimesland Taxes $44.08, also 1966 Town</p>
        <p>rffiel against you Iras</p>
        <p>above entitled action.</p>
        <p>Interest</p>
        <p>Thi* the 13tr day of June, Dink James,</p>
        <p>Trustee</p>
        <p>1966.</p>
        <p>;of Grlnsesland Taxes, plus all</p>
        <p>To secure an absolute divorce from ten (10) per cent of bid at sale, th- defendant upon the grounds that  Sale remains open ten (10) full days p'a.nfiff and defendant have lived sep- foi^ raised b[d  confirrnattom</p>
        <p>erate and apart for more than one year r-1 preceding the bringing of this ac-</p>
        <p>*'^You are required to make defense to; James &amp;amp; Hite, Attorneys tuch pleading not later than August, Greenville, North Carolina 19, 1966, and upon your failure to do so June 21, 28, July 5,^12, ^966 * the party .seeking service against you ^ will apply .0 the court for the relief sought.</p>
        <p>This the 24 day of June,</p>
        <p>H L. Lewis, Jr.,</p>
        <p>Asst. Clerk Superior Court Charles W. Ogletree :</p>
        <p>Attorney for Plaintiff  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>June 28, July 5, 12, 19, 1964</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN - 2   1964 deluxe sedan and a 1963 Karman Ghia. Both cars extra clean. 8e</p>
        <p>W  FL-S</p>
        <p>Call Collect 312-3660 During WofUng Hours JA 3-1900 Otherwise Ask For Bill Evsnt</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION SPERIN-tendent  Immediate employment for Job located In t^^e Greenville area. Mujst be a fully qualified man able to set up, coordinate and final Jobs in the million dollar bracket.</p>
        <p>BUG LIGHTS</p>
        <p>NOW IS THE TIME TO STALL THEM.</p>
        <p>IN-</p>
        <p>Mobile Hemes For Rent</p>
        <p>LARGE, 2 BR MOBILE HOME on 264 By-Pass. Air Cond., Swimming pool, laundrette. Call 756-3515</p>
        <p>RENTALS! RENTALS! AVAIL-able now at Pineview Court, five minutes East from downtown, turn left on Port Terminal Rd. See our luxury equipped 10, 12 Wide HbmS' Ilrstl ShSdy lots, play area. 758-3644.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>UNFURNISHED 2 BR APTS. $40 per month. On Mill St. In Meadowbrook. PL2-4819.</p>
        <p>2 BR APT. CLOSE TO SCHOOL and college, $55 monthly. Call PL 2-4835.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED OR UNFURNISH-ed 1 bedroom apts. Redwood Apts. 804 E. 3rd St. Call 752-6137 or' Night- 758-2386.  </p>
        <p>GREENSPRINGS APT., 2505 E. 5th St. 2 BR unfurnished Call day 752-6137 or 758-2386</p>
        <p>MEN STUDENTS, IF YOTJ need an air cond. room or apt. for summer school or fall quarter call 756-3515.</p>
        <p>SCHOOLS-INSTRUCTIONS</p>
        <p>U.S. CIVIL SERVICE TESTSl</p>
        <p>Men-women 18 and over. Secure jobs. High starting pay. Shoi*t hours. Advancement. Pr^aratory training as long as required. Thousands of Jobs open. Experience usually unnecessary. FREB booklet on Jobs, salaries, re* qv'-ements. Write TODAY giv Ing name, address imd phone. Lincoln Service, Box 408, Oreenp ville, N. C.</p>
        <p>3 ROOM APT. FOR RENT. Available June 15. CaU 758-4564 after 10 a.m. or contact Jessie Tripp Whitehurst in Simpson.</p>
        <p>MOTHERS</p>
        <p>Wee Folks Nursery ti Kindergarten is now open. We offer Daycare, Playschool, and Kindergarten servtcesr For Tnore in* formation, call 758-4833 or come by an^. inspect our facilities at 2601 Ekst 10th Street.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Doug Morgan Director and Certified Teacher</p>
        <p>2 TRAILERS FOR RENT, BOTH 2 BR, privately parked. Call PL 2-3056 before 6 p. m.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APTS. TO COU-ples or groups. Air cond., laii&amp;gt; drette &amp;amp; swimming pool. Gall PL 6-3515</p>
        <p>Call HENDRIX-BARNHILL NOW PL 2-4122</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS Storm windows and doors. Awnings, Venetian blinds, porch enclosures, paint and hardware. Send No down payment. Three years</p>
        <p>A WORKING MANS CAR AT a working mans price still exists.</p>
        <p>RI. PL Jl-4525.  ^</p>
        <p>complete resume showing spe-lto pay.</p>
        <p>and Immediate superior on each: Your Comfort Is Our Business* for confirmation to The Brody |  PL2-6116</p>
        <p>23452. Phone: 703-499-0581^</p>
        <p>1966.</p>
        <p>Edgtcomb* County Drainogt District No. 2 Solo of Property for Assosimtnfs NOTICE OP SALE</p>
        <p>By virtue of the authority vested In me by law, I will, on Monday, July 11, 1966,sell in front of the courthouse doot in* ft city 0# Greenville, North</p>
        <p>WE BUY-WE SELL-WE TRADE New &amp;amp; Used Cars or Trucks Harrington &amp;amp; White Motors, 264 By-Pass. Phone 766-3123.</p>
        <p>Cycles For Salo</p>
        <p>HONDA  dB 180, GOOD CON-</p>
        <p>dition. See at or call 758-2123.</p>
        <p>Blllmyer Ford</p>
        <p>ONE NEW GILEAR MOTOR-cycle, brand new, retails for $600, will sell at dealer cost $387. Call Speight Auto Parts,</p>
        <p>Carolina, beginning at 10 o'clocic A.M., the following described parcels of real estate In the EDGECOMBE COUNTY |</p>
        <p>DRAINAGE DISTRICT NO. 2 to satis-! FarmviUe 753-4100 y the amounts of drainage assessments, interest end costs due thereon.</p>
        <p>Names of the owners of the property and the amounts of net assessments appear below. $pecial notice it hereby</p>
        <p>BOATS A EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>NOTICE OP RESALE OP LAHDI</p>
        <p>B ' virtue of that order of resale made by the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County on the 24tn day of June, 1964 in iha&amp;gt; action pending in &amp;gt;Coort entitled</p>
        <p>* "In the matter of T. G. Well, Executor</p>
        <p>* of the Estate of Llnle Wall", the un-</p>
        <p>^ dersiqned commlwiner will offer for proi  ''''"I., "'' kIuv;,' nVt  Jvinruae  mowr  ei vrox _,._i  -4,4ont  t/v  wnrk  out</p>
        <p>1 resale and sell at public auction for cash given that the  Call  158-1419  after s'  Students  te  WOTtt  OUt</p>
        <p>* k........ ,n..rtKniiu rtnor on  drainage assessments and do not include, traucr.  loo  itiw  asbcr o  durinor</p>
        <p>the Interest and costs. The costs and p.</p>
        <p>Interest ere to be added to the amounts</p>
        <p>17 FT. G&amp;amp;W OUTBOARD, 50</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES 2 BEDROOM good location. Also lot spaces for rent, PL 2-3286.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR FOR RENT</p>
        <p>See our new 10 wide, 2 bedroom mobile homes for $3,295. $29f down and $54 per month. AZALEA MOBILE HOMES Phones: PL 2-.7109, PL 2-5823 3012 East 10th Street</p>
        <p>jPECIAL NOTICES</p>
        <p>I WILL BE YOUR REPRESENT-</p>
        <p>ative, Fit)m .Pltj,xiounty. In Th. . .,., N.C. House. Talk and Support Prank Steinbeck.</p>
        <p>WASH, WAX YOUR CAR IN</p>
        <p>Just 10 minutes at Phillips 66</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM UNFURNIHH ed apartment. Fully air condi- Quick Car Wash, Evans St. off</p>
        <p>tioned. Swimming pool and plenty parking space. Parkview Manor. M. E. Sutton. PL2-em.</p>
        <p>Stand _1 party</p>
        <p>|us^' ilike  Docdl</p>
        <p>may pay balance of WANTED: DAILY  REFLECTOR  I $34 12  or 3 payments  at $12.00</p>
        <p>carrier boys. Must  be 12 yrs.  of  monthly. Can be seen  and tried</p>
        <p>age or older. Call  PL 2-6166.</p>
        <p>SUMMER TUTORING. GRADES 3-6. Call experienced teacher at 758-4328.</p>
        <p>SUMMER</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Collg Studenta High School Grads</p>
        <p>A large international corporation</p>
        <p>out locally. ZIG-ZAGS, DARNS, BUTTONHOLES ETC. Widte: Mrs. Cox Nationals Repossession Dept. Box 280, Asheboro, N. C.</p>
        <p>FIVE PIECE, SUN FADED, red breakfast room suite. For-mica top table with leaf, that seats six and four vinyl covered chairs, $30. Call PL 2-7736 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>MONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>FHA, VA &amp;amp; CONVENTIONAL - 4^ HOMLQANS.v. Now Available For All</p>
        <p>Mortgage Loan Department</p>
        <p>WACHOVIA BANK</p>
        <p>AND TRUST CO. PLAZA 8-2151</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>SELLING IT YOURSELF? IM-prove the picture with a nice "For Sale, By Owner sign. Free on loan. Pick yours up at Pal-lowfield Realty. Comer Cotanche and 3rd.</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Tenth.</p>
        <p>KEEP YOUR CARPET BEAU-* tllul d.eaplte constant footsteps</p>
        <p>of a busy family. Get Blue I.ustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Belk-Tylers.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE</p>
        <p>OCCUPANCY</p>
        <p>VISIT OUR BEAUTIFUL MODEL APARTMENT.</p>
        <p>OPEN 10 A.M. - 7 P.M. DAILY</p>
        <p>Brick house m East Greenville, Call PL 2-5854 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>WANTED MAST</p>
        <p>12^2 ft sailfish Must be teas*   ......</p>
        <p>onable. Call PL 2-4676.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SHOP GEOROETOWNE SUN-dries for your greeting cards.</p>
        <p>has recently relocated offices In sundries, medicine, out-of-town i Eastern N.O. We will train sev- papers. Open Sunday. PL 2-30601</p>
        <p>before the courthouse door on</p>
        <p>SATUaOAY,  9f1 DAY OK JULY, 1946, AT 11:#4 NOON</p>
        <p>SAVINGS</p>
        <p>JUST A FINGERTIP aWAY</p>
        <p>Dial</p>
        <p>PL 2-6166</p>
        <p>To Place Your Deily Reflector Clat$ifiod Ad. lofMrf for 7 Days, Tho Cost It Lets.</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>S LINE MINIMUM 1 Day30c Per Line Per Day 4 Days27c Per Line Per Day 7 Days25c Per Line Per Day Contract Rate* AvaUable</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>$1.50 Per Colamn Ineli Contract Rates Available</p>
        <p>given below.</p>
        <p>R. S. Moy#</p>
        <p>Tax Colleclor-PItt County PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>of</p>
        <p>our branch offices during the summer. We furnish on the Job training and transportation. Students must be 18-25, in college</p>
        <p>Nama Tract M K. Blount  44</p>
        <p>Perry B*ewer  2</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. H. Buffaloa c-o J.W. Rook, Jr.  164</p>
        <p>Guilford Cherry  155B</p>
        <p>John S. Clark c-o D.W. Hollowell J. T. Everette Galen R. Harris Mrs. R.'tha Harris c-o R E. Rogers Roy AA. James RusseJ R. James C. C. Jones Gus Leggett</p>
        <p>Number Acraaga Amount</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>$24.53</p>
        <p>$1.49</p>
        <p>FOR RENT, MODERN 2 BAYj^j. accepted 'to college for next</p>
        <p>CUSTOM BUILT AND IN- i stalled porch railings^ columns, I interior rails, screens ^ dividers. Metal Specialties. 758-4591.</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER IN</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE CALL OR SEB</p>
        <p>BUT8</p>
        <p>E. H. Williford</p>
        <p>113</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>American Service Station. on HWY 17. Excellent volume. Pi-inancial Terms for those who $27.891 qualify. See or contact. Wade I Waters at Waters Oil Co., Wash-$13.39 ihgton, N. C. 946-2646.</p>
        <p>AnMAtTwATED</p>
        <p>term.</p>
        <p>Qaalified students will earn $130 per week salary.</p>
        <p>4 USED 60 X 34 WALNUT j desks. $69.50 ; 4 new floor sample executive swivel chairs, .uphol-</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>159</p>
        <p>141B</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>AAra. Harvay A. AAoora</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>$4.83</p>
        <p>To operate local business. Sensa-</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>35  1S</p>
        <p>SI</p>
        <p>108</p>
        <p>E. p. Norris (Heirs) c-o Gale P. Harris AArs, R. A. Parker R. A. Parker AArs. Sam L. Parker Forrest Parker c-o Alton Barrett AArs. Addle L. Rook c-o J. W.  Rook  171</p>
        <p>J. C. a W. J. Smith</p>
        <p>181A</p>
        <p>AArs. Florence W. Stokes 77</p>
        <p>Clifton J  Weeks  US</p>
        <p>L. J. Whitehurst, Jr. 76 L. J. Whitehurst, Jr.</p>
        <p>George Wimberly  101</p>
        <p>Daisy  Harris  AAoora  4</p>
        <p>Clarence  Barnhill  6E</p>
        <p>Floyd  Harris  (2  tracts)</p>
        <p>6F</p>
        <p>Floyd  Harris  6G</p>
        <p>Gene  Tucker  4A</p>
        <p>Wlllle  Peaden  6C</p>
        <p>T. Chandler AAusa, Atty., Tarboro, N. C.</p>
        <p>Juna 14, 21, 28, July 5, 1944</p>
        <p>$23!o5 i tional new product. Potential $63.93 earnings of $25,000 to $50,000 per 543 20year. $8,500 investment secured-llf you qualify, write: Century $18.22 Brick Corp. of America, Century $11,15 Brick Building, Erie, Pennsyl-W.301 vania 16505</p>
        <p>$25.76 !  --------</p>
        <p>$14.87  dogs  &amp;amp;  PETS</p>
        <p>$146.841 REGISTERED SIAMESE KIT-$18.95'tens for sale. Dial PL 6-3603.</p>
        <p>Call Personnel Manager between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. Rocky Motmt. 442-0833, Durham. 682-2916,</p>
        <p>stered, reg. $78, now $49.50- &amp;lt;10) 1 drawer, letter size, steipl filing cabinets, $5.50 etch. Taff office Equip., 214 E. j 5th, PL 2-2175.</p>
        <p>RETAIL STORE SALESMAN: Married, 25 to 45, exxperienced, to associate with progressive N. C. chain store organization. Good opportunity for aggressive, wide awake man with some knowledge of store operation, good salary, permanent posit-tion. Write/Chain Store, Box 408, City. .</p>
        <p>NEW HOOVER HANDI-VAC light weight, easy to use, 2 filters insure complete dirt moval. Smith Electric Co., Evans St.</p>
        <p>$57.62</p>
        <p>331</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>76</p>
        <p>$136.05</p>
        <p>$8.92</p>
        <p>$43.49</p>
        <p>137</p>
        <p>258</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>$73.60</p>
        <p>$134.56</p>
        <p>$34.57</p>
        <p>$1.56</p>
        <p>$.50</p>
        <p>$.84</p>
        <p>$.50</p>
        <p>$.50</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>No now do. UM  o** tions accepted alter I p.. the day befora publicatleu.</p>
        <p>errors</p>
        <p>Error* nrtwi be reported Immediately. The Dally Reflector can not make allow-E|ices for errors after 1st oay.</p>
        <p>AKC REOISTERED OERk4AN Shepherd Puppies. Can be seen at 203 Millbrook Drive. Phone 756-1825 after 6 p. m.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Fma! Help Wanted</p>
        <p>LADY TO WORK OLD ESTAB-</p>
        <p>lished debit in Ayden &amp;amp; Grifton area. Starting salary $75 weekly, plus commission. Hospital Ins., and Paid vacation. Apply 746-3711 between 8 &amp;amp; 9 a.m.</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVICE</p>
        <p>NO MORE STALE, HUMID, Hot Air! When Coastal Refrig-eration Installs York Air Conditioning. For free estimate, call PL 2-2294.</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF CITY FROFIRTY</p>
        <p>Under end by virtue of the power of sale contained In that certain deed of trust dated April 9, 1965, executed by Clarence Harris and wife, Lottie Harris, to R. B. Lee, Trustee, and recorded h Book E-35 at page 233 III the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, default having baen made in the payment of the debt thereby se-. cured, the undersigned trustee will, on AAondey the llfh day of July, 1966, at 12:(X) o'clock. Noon, at tha courN house onor In Greenville, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash the following described real property, to wit;  . . *</p>
        <p>That certain lot or parcel of land situate, lying and being In the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being located on tho oast side of Hooker Road and being known and designated qs Lot No. 3 In Block 'A' of the Amos J.' Evans property subdivision, as shown on the map thereof made by Joe AA. Dresbach, R. S., dated December/- 1954, and recorded in AAap Book 6 at page 96 In the Office of the Register ot Deeds of Pitt County, to which map reference is hereby made, and be-, Ing the same property conveyed</p>
        <p>HOUSEKEEPER FOR ELDERLY couple. Light housework, live in. Call 746-3723 for appointment.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>painters, PROFESSIONAL coating craftsman for full time employment. Wage scale $2.25 to $2.75 per hour. Apply A. B. Whitley, Inc. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>YOUR TV REALLY TICKS when H &amp;amp; M Radio-TV Shop repairs and adjusts it! 917 Dick inson Ave., PL 8-2436.</p>
        <p>re-</p>
        <p>415</p>
        <p>Llet Your Property With Ut 105 E. 2nd St. PLS-3911. Night PL2-4409</p>
        <p>2 BR HOUSE, 705 WILLOW ST., already financed, water front lot. Call 758-2773.</p>
        <p>1 Bedroom With WaU-to-Wall Carpetli.g, Swimming Pool, Landscaped Grounds. Sound Conditioned For Quiet Relaxed Lir-ing.</p>
        <p>1900 CHARLES ST. PL 8-3572</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APT. 2 BR., $90. Married couple. 704 E. 3rd St. PL 2-4717 June 30, July 5 &amp;amp; 7. PL 2-3804 July 1, 2, 4, &amp;amp; 5.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>1104 ROCK SPRING RD., 5 Bedrooms, 3Mt baths, near college and high school, ready for occupancy. Bill Williams Real EBtate, 752-2615</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>OFFICE CHAIRS, NEW, RE-tail price $100 &amp;amp; $120, selling price $40 &amp;amp; $45. Call PL 8-1933 after 2:00 p.m. (also one used chair In excellent condition)</p>
        <p>FOR THE FINEST CARPET for your home check Hom$ F\ir-nituxes styles by Lees and Cabin Craft.</p>
        <p>PULL SIZE ELECTRIC RANGE, $30. Call PL 2-2400.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITION</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>Add eoolinr to yonr existlnir warm air system. Be comfortable this summer. Prompt serrlce, terms available.</p>
        <p>POLLARD'S</p>
        <p>Plumbing, Htg. ft Air Conditioning Co.</p>
        <p>209 E. Third St. Phone PL 2-72S2 or PL 2-4633</p>
        <p>Pin CAMPING CENTER</p>
        <p>SALES ft RENTALS</p>
        <p>LEES TEXACO</p>
        <p>14th. &amp;amp; Charles St.</p>
        <p>Greenville. N. C,</p>
        <p>PHONE 7SS-4356. 752-4347 WEEKLY RENTAL $3S.M * UP</p>
        <p>MEET ME FOR MONEY</p>
        <p>CASH" SMITH</p>
        <p>MANAGER</p>
        <p>LOANS $50 to $500</p>
        <p> EASY PAYMENT!</p>
        <p> LOW COSTS</p>
        <p>GET MONET WHILE YOU WAIT! . . .</p>
        <p>Great Southern Finance Co.</p>
        <p>405 Evans St. Phone 752-7117</p>
        <p>LAP RUG OR LAP DOG  ClMslfied Ads seU AiiytlilQgl</p>
        <p>ClASSinCD DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>TRUCK DRIVERS FURNITURE MOVERS</p>
        <p>Mutt Have Experience In Driving Truck And Be At Least 21 Yrs. Old. Apply In Person</p>
        <p>ABC MOVING &amp;amp; STORAGE</p>
        <p>Stantonsburg Road</p>
        <p>aflKWilsoii Rhodes</p>
        <p>Electrical Contractor</p>
        <p>The Stiff And I Take Pleasure In Announcing Th Changing Of Our Name, Horne Electric Company, To Wilson Rhodes Electrical Contractor.  </p>
        <p>We. Sincerely Appreciate Your Patronage Pest, And Look Forward To Serving You Future.</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>In The In The</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>ERVICE</p>
        <p>AFETY</p>
        <p>ATISFACTIO</p>
        <p>308 Pennsylvania Avenue 752-4365</p>
        <p>SUNOCO</p>
        <p>Have You Always Wanted A Business Of Your Own But Thought You Didnt Have Enough Money?</p>
        <p>Can You Do Minor Auto Repairs? Brake^ Jobs, Tnne-Upa,! Mufflens, Etc.</p>
        <p>Do You Have Good Credit? Will You Go To A Businem Management School? We Pay You Whle You Train.</p>
        <p>WE ARE INTERESTED IN YOU NOT YOUR MONEY Financial Assistance And Paid Training Are Available</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>RAY PEARCE</p>
        <p>752-7589</p>
        <pb facs="00088154_0012" />
        <p>T</p>
        <p>12-Th Daily RafiMter, Gr^nvllla, N. C.-Ttday, Jly 5, 1966</p>
        <p>Stock And</p>
        <p>HVlarket Reports</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-(NCDA) -The North Carolina hog market is stea(ty to 25 cents higher today. Tops of 24.50-25 at Mur-ireesboro and Robersonville; 24-25 Wilson; 23.75 - 24.75 Rocky Mount, Kinston, New Bern, Benson, Mount Ohve, Newton Grove, Albertson and Lumber-'on; 22 - 24.50 Salisbury; 23.75-4.25 Statesville; 23.25 - 23.75 Jickory, 24.50 Selma and Rich Square; 24 Tarboro, Bethel and Greensboro; 23.75 Goldsboro, Si-lier City and Mount Gilead.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - (NCDA)-North Carolina poultry market is steady. Live at-farm base valuation 1514 cents per pound.</p>
        <p>of 60 stocks at noon was unchanged at 316.2 with industrials________</p>
        <p>up .6, rails off .3 and utilities failure off .3.</p>
        <p>Failed Integrate A Private Pool</p>
        <p>LAWTON, Okla. (AP)-An Independence Day effort to integrate the only swimming pool in this city of 61,000 persons in southern Oklahoma ended in</p>
        <p>Fifty-five of the chanting,</p>
        <p>Umted Aircraft toppled to ! marching demonstrators were 5-pomt loss.  '  </p>
        <p>Airlines sank al-</p>
        <p>American most 2 points and Eastern more than a point.</p>
        <p>Losses of 2 points or more were taken by IBM and Zenith.</p>
        <p>Xerox fell 4%.</p>
        <p>Despite the softness among</p>
        <p>hauled off to jail where 38 adults were charged with trespassing on complaints signed by Ben Hutchins Sr., owner of the segregated private Doe Doc recreation park, Monday.</p>
        <p>Seventeen of the demonstra-may'^ glamor stocks, Du Pont ; tors were juveniles. They were widened an early gain and was released to the custody of their</p>
        <p>nearly 3 points higher. American Telephone, Union Carrbide</p>
        <p>parents.</p>
        <p>The privately owned park has</p>
        <p>,  ..X * MW * tin moderate trading on</p>
        <p>NETW YORK (AP)An ! American Stock Exchange.</p>
        <p>ed market rise was wiped.  _</p>
        <p>out and the market worked un-1  ^ - d  I</p>
        <p>evenly lower early this after- TOIlS Oi DriCK</p>
        <p>and Eastman Kodak were other; been the target of integration blue chips to hold fractional  attempts for a month.</p>
        <p>,, ... I The 38 demonstrators, mostly Negroes, posted J20 bonds and</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>k</p>
        <p>noon. Trading was moderate.</p>
        <p>Stocks posted a slight advance in the first hour as the list showed some continuation of Fridays strength. Prices melted in a number of casw, even whip some blue chips held stubbornly to gains.</p>
        <p>TTie losses were most apparent among previous high flyers such as airlines, aerospace issues, color televisions and other electronics.</p>
        <p>Big Three motors held a series of gains. An early array</p>
        <p>Veneer Tumble, Crush Vehicles</p>
        <p>were scheduled for court appearances at 1 p.m. Friday. They included two white Roman, Catholic priests who have participated in earlier integration attempts at the parkthe Rev. A1 Kelly and the Rev. William Hayden.</p>
        <p>Negroes have been trying to</p>
        <p>CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP)   ,  ,,  u  i .</p>
        <p>The bricks came tumbling  the  pmk smce last</p>
        <p>down, and it was a miracle  when fte Okl^oma Oty that no one was killed, said chapter of fte NAACP s^n-Fire Marshal Albert Schroeder.' sored a 90-mile Oklahoma City-More than 200 persons were h)-Lawton protest march, evacuated Monday from a wing i of a recently opened apartment | building when tons of brick veneer on three outside walls sud-</p>
        <p>of plus signs among the major j denly broke loose and crashed steelmakers turned into a jum-i^ toe ground, ble of gains and losses.  i  The  eas  wmg  of  the  bmld-</p>
        <p>Rails also worked a bit low-1'8 complex^was conmmned er on balance. The picture was by the city building director, spotty among the leading oils  Hunter,</p>
        <p>a^ nonferrous metals.  ,  Th  only  casualty  was  Mrs</p>
        <p>Tlie business news back-r^. Herman, 65, who suf-</p>
        <p>More Powers Of Sukarno Are Erased</p>
        <p>JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)  Indonesias Congress today ordered President Sukarno to re-</p>
        <p>At Least 19 Tratfk Deatlu For NX. Holiday</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>North Carolinas highways were safer than had been predicted for the July 4th holiday wedcend, and much safer than during the holiday period last year.</p>
        <p>The State Highway Patrol counted at least 19 traffic fatalities during' the period from p.m. Friday until midnight Monday. The fatalities pushed the traffic death toll for the year to 76787 more than at the same time last year.</p>
        <p>In addition to the traffic fatalities, nine persons died by other forms of violence.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Auto Club had predicted that 24 persons would die on toe states streets and highways during the 78-hour period. During a similar period last year, 28 deaths were recorded.</p>
        <p>The traffic victims were: Charles Eugene Brim, 21, of</p>
        <p>Turncoat'Never A Communist'</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Clarence Adams, a Korean War turncoat, returned to the U.S. mainland on Independence Day, remarking that with all its faults, democracy is better than what they have in Communist China.</p>
        <p>Adams, his Chinese wife and their two children reached San Francisco on Americas most patriotic day on the liner President Cleveland, their $1,800 fair paid by his mother, Gladys Peoples of Memphis, Tenn.</p>
        <p>I never considered myself a (Communist, he said after spending 13 years in mainland</p>
        <p>gni^d w^ r^ard^d as  - apparent heart attack | n^sh bk autt i^ ^ form Sa^Tldlm , f. deii^^e</p>
        <p>^a-gtog bl there seeme^l d. back injtoes. She ^  ---  -</p>
        <p>littie conviction in the invest-; opening a window in her sec-j title of president for life, ment community  ond  floor apartment when it The new move left the army</p>
        <p>Thp nnw Tnnp?" industrial av- was jerked from her hand by | strong man, Lt Gen. Suharto,</p>
        <p>raw^ nwn ^  bricks. She was ad-; in clear command of Indonesia.</p>
        <p>lYg 39   mitted to a hospital.</p>
        <p>The Associated Press average</p>
        <p>Rt 7, Moimt Airy;^Herman T. Carpenter, of Rt 2, Cleveland; Clarence W. Oakley, 19, of Rt. 1, Rougemont; Donald Robert Gregory, nf Buies Q*eek; Steven V. Mullen, of Louis-burg; Furmage Oxendine, 28, of Philadelphia, Pa.; G. C. Goolsby Jr., 33, of Atlanta; Mary Susannah Wilson, 8, of Rt. 1, Jacksonville, N.C.; and Clayton Dessart Jr., 2w, of Cincinnati.</p>
        <p>Also Cecil Harrison, 23, of Columbus, Miss.; Marjorie Reese, 22, of Hildebran; Charles Ray Huffman, 19, of Rt 4, Morgan-ton, CHarence Brown, 18, of Charlotte; William F. Handy, 56, of Rt 3, North Wilkesboro; Dr. Thomas Jones Huey, 60, of Chattanooga, Tenn.; J. Robert Montgomery, 6, of Rt 1, Fuquay Springs; Ruth Lindsey, 77, of East Flat Rock; and James Conrad Adams, 37, of Moores-ville.</p>
        <p>TVo men were fatally injured</p>
        <p>in the explosion of a type d pressure cookera pulp digesterat the Meade Corp., paperboard factory at Sylva. They were Kermit Lee Harris^ 36, apd Henry Gregory, Jr., 48, both o Sylva.</p>
        <p>Two other men were fatally burned in an explosion at the Dixie Furniture Co. in Lexington. They were Ray Lindsay Crook, 45, of Lexington, and</p>
        <p>Henry Gregory-Jr.. 48, both of Rt 1, Thomasville. Clodfelter died late Monday in a Winston-Salem hospital.</p>
        <p>Ted Glance, 27, of Gastonia was Ikilled and a woman was seriously injured as a result of a double shooting in Gastonia Monday afternoon. The woman was identified as Mrs. Delia Weathers, 52, also of Gastonia.</p>
        <p>Carl Thompson, 24, of Shelby,</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Feirl</p>
        <p>Mr. John Vincent Ferri, 55, died at his hpme, 1808 East Fourth Street, Sunday morning at eight oclock. The body was shipped to Providence, Rhode Island, where funeral services and burial will take place.</p>
        <p>Mr. Ferri was bom and spent most of his life in Providence, Rhode Island, and for toe past four years had lived in Greenville. He was employed as Shift Supervisor for Voice of America.</p>
        <p>Suivfving are his wife, Mrs. Mabel Chase Ferii and three children.</p>
        <p>Queen Elizabeth, Prince Enjoy Belfast* Hospitality</p>
        <p>Kedah</p>
        <p>Graveside services fm* James Earl Kedah, Jr., 26, were held in Greenwood Cemetery at three oclock Tuesday by his pastor. Dr. Edgar B. Fisher. Mr. Kedah was found dead Monday</p>
        <p>something to offer.</p>
        <p>aitted to a hospital.    by the Congress-known</p>
        <p>Fifteen autos were damaged as the Provisional Peoples Con- f, ^</p>
        <p> . J  ---  ^  nism.</p>
        <p>,  ^  ,  Bight in his apartment on Sunset</p>
        <p>went there  because  prisoner of  Avenue</p>
        <p>war camp  officials  convinced  was a native of</p>
        <p>him their way might have  Monroe,  North Carolina, and</p>
        <p>had been a resident of Greenville and Washington during the</p>
        <p>BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP)  Queen Elizabeth II and Prince PhiUp basked in the affection of loyal Orangemen today on toe final day of the royal visit to Northern Ireland. Not even the queens limousine showed any scars from an anti-British incident Monday.</p>
        <p>A large dent in toe hood of the queens Rolls-Royce was beaten out and painted over after toe car had been hit by a cement block Awhile the royal coupl^ drove through the city. It weighed about 12 pounds and was hurled from toe fourth floor of a building under reconstruction.</p>
        <p>If the block had landed a few feet farther back it would have shattered the cars bubbletop. Police arrested a young man in the building and had to smuggle him out the back way to protect him from a howling crowd of</p>
        <p>or destroyed.</p>
        <p>Cbmmunity</p>
        <p>Announcements</p>
        <p>Pastors anniversary will be celebrated this week at Morning</p>
        <p>terly meeting day.</p>
        <p>Purge Expands In Red China</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP) - The Chinese</p>
        <p>had been</p>
        <p>sultive Congress  expected.</p>
        <p>Sukarno had maintained that as the chief executive he was the rightful man to form his Cabinet under the constitution. Congress action is aimed at</p>
        <p>Fight Proposed Economic Curbs</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP) - Left-wing</p>
        <p>past fifteen years. He attended Greenville City School and later was hi the United States Navy. He was a member of Jarvis Memorial Methodist Church. He wa? a former member of the Greenville Police Department and presently employed as an auto salesman.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, SUSan Jones Keziah; a son, Neal jKeziah and a daughter, Kim i Keziah both of toe home; his parents: Mr. and Mrs. James</p>
        <p>Z' Communist party Struck down a giving Suharto power to estab- Laborites and key union leaders</p>
        <p>. i.S?na ^ii  s  ivice minister o culture and one Hsh the Cabinet for a two-year are teammg up to fight a pro-</p>
        <p>y  meetinR  will be  heW  Sun-1  ,  culorit  todav  In its ex- transitional  period.  i  posal by Prime Minister Harold</p>
        <p>pSnrpge  Suhartos  executive  power,:  Wilson to fine companies and</p>
        <p>The  latest  victims  were Vice i sranted bv  Sukarno  March 11  union members that dont  re-</p>
        <p>All  persons  p^ticipaUng  in Minister Lin  Mo-han, who also sunder miiitary pressure, was! strict wages and prices to  le  Ketirfi  isr.,  of  Walshingtoi</p>
        <p>the pl^y, The Great h 11 e |  j  legalized by Congress on June ^^se in national production.  ^  sister.  Mrs.  Fred</p>
        <p>commit-;2L    Many union eaders are  en-jMattoz  of  Greenvilie;  and  his</p>
        <p>iJw  .pight,  over  Ihe  pro^sed bil. Iti grandmotKei,1Mfs';' J. T.</p>
        <p>8 0 clock.  a  ^  and theorist.  |  height  of  tension  m  Ws  requires business and unions to  ofo Monroe.</p>
        <p>Red Flag, theoretical journal i country as a result of public' submit to a national board de-</p>
        <p>angry Belfast citizens.</p>
        <p>Two minutes earlier a woman had hurled  beer bottle at the car. It burst near toe wheels but caused no damage. The woman was arrested.</p>
        <p>The composure of the royal couple seemed jarred iMiefly by the cement-block attack, but the queen was all smiles again Monday i^t at a ceremony on Belfasts military parade ground to mark the 50th anniversary of the World War I Bat-</p>
        <p>ABC Store In Falkland Closed</p>
        <p>^  prices  or  tg*</p>
        <p>at St. Mattoews Church tonight  an opportunist cmirs:  prb-Commuhiist coup at-ii^^f ^ages.</p>
        <p>at 7:30.  counter  to  toe  views  of  party; tompt Oct. 1.  -</p>
        <p>chief Mao Tze-tung.</p>
        <p>The Senior Choir Club of English Chapel Church will meet ^  ^</p>
        <p>Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the* InSUrGS VlCTOiy</p>
        <p>home of Mrs. Alice Moore, 707 qJ Owil MgII</p>
        <p>Imperial St.</p>
        <p>The Gospel Chorus of Selvia</p>
        <p>The key question remaining 10 wo</p>
        <p>agree to give up his power to</p>
        <p>as whether Sukarno</p>
        <p>would Tito Following Up Party Purge</p>
        <p>RIO</p>
        <p>(AP)</p>
        <p>DE JANEIRO, Brazil  President Humberto'</p>
        <p>Chapel will have rehearsal to-,g,  came  on toe heels of major</p>
        <p>night at 8 oclock.  iSie  S 26 sTate  ^ of troops into cen-</p>
        <p> _' toe Pouticai rignis or b siaie tj-gl and east Java to ward off</p>
        <p>The Matrons Club will meet</p>
        <p>t the home of Mrs. M a m i e, move to insure victory for! stfongVo Suk^l Barnhill, 1104 W. Fourth Stiu, candidates in guterna-</p>
        <p>Suharto. If he does he is nothing more than a figurehead, president.  BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia</p>
        <p>'The hard line move against~ President Tito was re-Sukarnos authoritative pow-|Pc^^cd today following up his</p>
        <p>purge of Yugoslavias "</p>
        <p>are</p>
        <p>Wednesday at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>torial elections Sept. 3.</p>
        <p>of Yugoslavias No. 2 Communist with wide-ranging dismissals ii* the courts, military, government and party.</p>
        <p>Some Yugoslavs speculated that the next top official to fall might be Vojin Lukic, a mem-</p>
        <p>The equivalent standard box  ber of toe Communist parb' cen-</p>
        <p>  er if the move is recommended</p>
        <p>1 minister from 1963 to 1965.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE  Mrs. Nannie Moye Lang Humphrey, 77, of East Church Street, Farmville, died early Tuesday morning at her home. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 4 p. m. from toe Church Street Chapel of the Farmville Fungal Home by toe Rev. Jack Daniell. Burial will follow in the Forest Hills Cemetery here.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Humphrey is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Sarah Albritton of Farmville; one son, William Humphrey of Miami, Fla.; two brothers, W. Harry Lang of Kinston and Robert G. Lang of Greenville; two grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The Falkland ABC store has been temporarily closed until a manager for the facility can be secured.</p>
        <p>G. C. Elks, Pitt ABC supervisor, said l^vi T. Wooten of Falkland, former manager of the store, resigned July 1.</p>
        <p>Elks said Wooten resigned after some errors in reports were found. Everything has been straightened out now, though, Elks noted.</p>
        <p>Tbe^st 1)^11 soon as we get a new manager, the supervisor noted, but</p>
        <p>soon that would be.</p>
        <p>tie of the Somme.</p>
        <p>She got an especially warm welcome from the crowd. Thousands joined in a loud rendition of God Save the Queen.</p>
        <p>Belfast police said the two attacks did not seem connected, nor was there any indication they were staged by any political organizations. Some members of Parliament had urged cancellation of the royal visit to Northern Ireland because it came after weeks of religious controversy between Protestants and Roman Catholics which had cost three lives.</p>
        <p>Family Picnic Held Monday At Country Club</p>
        <p>The annual July 4 family picnic for members of the Greenville Golf and Country Club was held yesterday.</p>
        <p>Beginning at 12:15 p.m., proximately 400 were present for the annual event.</p>
        <p>The afternoon events included juke box dancing and games for the children including various races and a greased watermelon contest Quite a few also turned out for a game of golf. -  -    '</p>
        <p>The picnic menu included charcoaled hamburgers, wei-ners, baked beans, potato salad, cole slaw, soft drinks and watermelons.</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>jaMes SiDNey</p>
        <p>GaHNeR POiTieR</p>
        <p>^HiPHNiSChS</p>
        <p>BueLATBiaBLO</p>
        <p>COlORBYDilUXf  UNIIfO  ftRIISTS</p>
        <p>Twdmlooloi^-SlMwa At 18  i -1-4 pjn.</p>
        <p>Storto Thandaj ^TAGECOACH**</p>
        <p>CroobyVmi</p>
        <p>HefUn</p>
        <p>was shot and killed on a crowded dance floor at a community center in Shelby. Grant Foster, 29, of Rt 4, Gaffney, S.C., waa jailed on a murder charge.</p>
        <p>Comeliiis Clyde Mayfield, 35, was shot to death in his hometown of Statesville.</p>
        <p>Kennedy Harvey Brincefield, 8 months old, suffocated when he became caught between hii crib and a bed at Burlington.</p>
        <p>At Gibson, toe body of Virgil Layton, 66, a storekeeper, was found in his driveway Monday night. Police said he apparently ws the victim of a hit and nm driver.</p>
        <p>Benjamin S. Kelly, 52, a lins maintenance foreman for Carolina Power &amp;amp; Light Co., was killed Monday afternoon when he fell from a utility polt in downtown Wadesboro.</p>
        <p>many Ihlngs</p>
        <p>It's a tribute to a panoa. aUy. Ife la mora toa that plaM 4 tm itmOj.</p>
        <p>M to a aymbal af to a toafibte iiarairim af</p>
        <p>mMmmk # all LOTI.</p>
        <p>.  . A ar A,</p>
        <p>It shaald Bal laflI wmmm tort rathar tha teat yaara af warmth</p>
        <p>and affartloB tjptoal af *a Amarlcaa faartlj*</p>
        <p>A- mammeai to hafll thara waa a UfaNat i and with totaOlffaBt aalaatoaa aad proper galdaaea ihatod In-pira rararaaea, fatth aad hapc far tha ttriag.</p>
        <p>af av</p>
        <p>Aa aa aaaaatial part AflMricaa way af Ufa, a maaa. iitBt ahaald apaah aat aa a volea from yeaterday aad today to affoo yat anhwra</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>MarbU &amp;amp; GranifG</p>
        <p>Works</p>
        <p>lOHN OONWAT OWW</p>
        <p>MASONIC NOTICE</p>
        <p>William Pitt Lodge No. 734 A.F. k A.M. will havt s stated communication Wednesday, July 6, at 7:30 p.m. All Master Masons are invited. W. H. Smith, Master W. Bradley Gray, Sec*y</p>
        <p>famous for 0000 fOOO</p>
        <p>CAROLINA</p>
        <p>GRILL</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>fhc MOST CXCiTNq look In biskioN &amp;amp; Fun.</p>
        <p>HiPE DW eiBis</p>
        <p>PLI|A^1S!0N'AK0 METROCOLOR</p>
        <p>Iby toe National Security Council.</p>
        <p>Obituary</p>
        <p>TI^C drive-in</p>
        <p>I I^C THEATRE</p>
        <p>It:^ way Out/</p>
        <p>UCHNICOLOR^</p>
        <p>SPECIAL UUT STARS</p>
        <p>lOBSto</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>FREDDIE' DMAS!</p>
        <p>JONATHAN DALY</p>
        <p>THE ASTRONAUTS'</p>
        <p>Moore</p>
        <p>Mrs. Rena A. Moore diec i Sunday at Pitt Memorial Hospital after a brief illness. Funeral services will be con ducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. at toe Flanagan and Parker Funeral Chapel by Rev. T. M. Carter Burial will be in Brown HU Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Survivors include her husband, Charlie Moore; five sons, Willie James Moore of the home Charlie Ray, Elhert Lee anc David Earl Moore, all of New Haven, Conn. and Curtis Moore of Mt. Vernon, N.Y.; three daughters, Mrs. Retha Mae Trynham and Mrs. Verna Lee Trynham and Miss Eva Davis Moore of Baltimore, Md.</p>
        <p>The body will remain at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>MAKE ROOM TOR THE KING OF THE LOVERS!</p>
        <p>/Whata ROMEO!! What a RIOTlll</p>
        <p>Coiumbia Pictures Prvms</p>
        <p>JBnrtEMns</p>
        <p>JANET LBGH</p>
        <p>Qinn</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>(A JERRY LEWIS PfiOOUCnON) COLUMBIACOLOR</p>
        <p>LAUGHTER STARTS</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>JL</p>
        <p>Last Day TTIIE</p>
        <p>GLASS BOTTOM BOAF     I</p>
        <p>IF YOU ARE NOW USING A 9-12 OR 16 MULTIPLE STOVE GAS CURER OR BUCKEYE OIL CURER AND YOUR CURING COST IS $35.00 TO $75.00 PER BARN:</p>
        <p>We will replace either one for you and all you pay each year is your savings in fuel cost. If you will make the change, the savings will pay for the Florence-Mayo Jet Curer in two to four curing seasons.</p>
        <p>You will be under no obligation to make payment more than you save on fuel each curing season. Florence-Mayo Jet Oil Curers are much easier and safer to operate.</p>
        <p>Florence-Mayo Jet Burners are larger. Only one nozzle required. Undersized burners use shell head or double nozzles which mean double nozzle trouble. Burners that use cadmium cells and shell headcadmium cell overheats, short life. Florence-Mayo uses only dependable stack controls for maximum safety.</p>
        <p>Put more money in the bank by switching to economical, safe, easy to operate Florence-Mayo Jet Oil Curers.</p>
        <p>100% Automatic Thermostat Controlled</p>
        <p>5-YEAR LEASE PLAN</p>
        <p>16 X 20 Barn</p>
        <p>245</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>450,000 BTU Unit</p>
        <p>S LEON L. MOORE OIL CO.</p>
        <p>HEATING OILS</p>
        <p>Dickinson Avonuo, Groenvillo, N. C.</p>
        <p>Soe Domonstration at Cannon's Warahc|^sa Graanvilla</p>
        <p>fhaM It. S-INI ^</p>
        <p>?  s/,  4  r  '-!;</p>
        <p>Want your extra funds to earn more ntrest?</p>
        <p>It*s easy to ba coBfaind wiOi Msji Ine^ that idwat vaikms rates of bank intewsb Usually these figures apply to beidc OertBMlk of  or C/lYs for nhnrt mtiTxlkiss cC</p>
        <p>what other banks msy osH Anm.</p>
        <p>Wachovia C/D rates ne coppetithe with other banks. They may be even higher tfMDi a plan you are considering. But there are two otfnr important factors abont Wacboaia G/Dn</p>
        <p>First, you are not restricted to one er two fivfd plans. Wachovia befisra C/D*ii shoakl ks tailored to suit your qiedfie investment nttpih whether you are an individtud, a bariaeai a non-profit organisation, or a</p>
        <p>Second, Wachovia efien yon w*arimsim mUtjh With $108 million in e^iital fcmds and subordinated debentures and Ofver a biffien doUais in resources, Wadxwia gives deporitets greater protection than any other hanlr |q tht Southeast</p>
        <p>Yon*n profit from experienced counsd en ttm C/D that meets your investment sitaation most effectively. Talk it over with a Wachovia officer soon.</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>WACHOVIA</p>
        <p>BjfiNTK db TRUST COACPAJNIT</p>
        <p>Member Federal Oapoalt frannnea CorporatteM</p>
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