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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0001" />
        <p>WEATHER</p>
        <p>'l^rlable cloudiness through with scattered rain Uy. Somewhat cooler.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>85th Year MO 990 associated press</p>
        <p>  _UNITED  PRESS  INTERNATIONAL</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. C</p>
        <p>ti TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 26, 1966</p>
        <p>12 Pages Today</p>
        <p>DEPENDABLE TV</p>
        <p>Repairmen are listed in f&amp;gt; day's Classified Section undor "Expert Services".</p>
        <p>Price 10 Cents</p>
        <p>I7i Per (eiri Pay Raise Goal ^^taited</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The 1967 North Carolina Legislature will asked to approve $65.8 million for a 17.5 per cent pay raise for public school teachers during the next biennium.</p>
        <p>The State Board of Education proposed the pay raise Saturday in asking the Advisory Budget Commission for $116.7 million to provide increased or expanded services during the two-year period.</p>
        <p>Under the proposal, the Board</p>
        <p>national average.</p>
        <p>The United Forces for Ekluca-tion, which also presented its budget requests Saturday, called for teacher raises of 10 per cent each year of the biennium.</p>
        <p>The state board requested 705 new teaching positions at a cost of $5.6 million. Of these, 400 would be used for teaching edu-cable mentally retarded students.</p>
        <p>The board also called for</p>
        <p>Gordon Tired Before He</p>
        <p>Oi2 Space Strolh</p>
        <p>of Education would raise sal-1 elimination of high school text-aries 8.7 per cent the first year book fees at a cost of $3 mil-of the biennium and 8.8 per cent lion, or $5 per child. It request-toe second year. It would cost ed $1.4 million to provide trans-$65.8 million.  portation for children in mu-</p>
        <p>This would give A-certificate nicipalities who live more than teachers a salary schedule rang- a mile and a half from school.</p>
        <p>ing from $4,606 to $6,345 for 1967-68 and $5,004 to $6,854 the second year of the biennium. The range for graduate certificates would be $5,111 to $6,974 the first year and $5,605 to $7,-520 the second year.</p>
        <p>The present range for teachers with A certificates is $4,200 to $5,800 and for teachers with graduate certificates, $4,700 to $6,384.</p>
        <p>Controller A. C. Davis of the Board of Education said the salary raises would be additional iteps in making North Carolina lalaries competitive with the</p>
        <p>Another $3.7 million would go to help pay school food service personnel. The funds would be allotted on the basis of 1.4 cents for each lunch served.</p>
        <p>The State Department of Community Colleges requested $20.5 million for expansion and enrichment of the community college system and $400,000 for an education program for prison inmates.</p>
        <p>The Advisory Budget Commission will review these and other requests and then present its budget recommendations to the legislature next February.</p>
        <p>By RONALD THOMPSON AP Aerospace Writer</p>
        <p>SPACE CENTER, Houston, Tex. (AP)Gemini 11 space-walker Richard Gordon revealed today he was tired and had a pretty high heart rate even before he started his fatiguing stroll in orbit.</p>
        <p>He told a news conference that space walking should be confined to realtively simple tasks until better restraint equipment is developed to help man keep his position while at work in orbit.</p>
        <p>Gordon said what he thought would 5e a 30-second task of tying Gemini 11 to an Agena with a 100-foot cord turned out to be a monumental task of about 30 minutes.</p>
        <p>His walk in space during the record-smashing flight of Gemini 11 was eventually cut short</p>
        <p>because he worked so hard sweat poured down his face into his eyes.</p>
        <p>We have to keep task simple, he said, so that they can be done with one hand until we develop some sort of restraints.</p>
        <p>If you can provide proper restraints so he can use both hands I think the nuts and bolts operation will come by naturally, he added. Eventually we will be able to do that.</p>
        <p>He said he and his flying partner, Navy Cmdr. Charles Conrad Jr., got about two hours ahead of time in preparations for Uie stroll and considered asking officials to let Cmdr Gordon begin one orbit early.</p>
        <p>So essentially I was setting there with no cooling, Gordon said, noting that he was already bundled up, just waiting, in his</p>
        <p>Bombers Attack Link To Red China</p>
        <p>bulky spacesuit. At this point we was off the spaceships coolant system, and the pressure suit environment system was not yet turned on.</p>
        <p>They stopped the preparations and Gordon went back to the spacecraft system for cooling.</p>
        <p>As a result, he said, I was tired and had a pretty high heart rate before we opened the hatch.</p>
        <p>Gordon said he really got tired while straddling the nose of the (jemini 11 while it was linked to an Agena rocket they had captured in the worlds quickest rendezvous. He looped the cord from the Agena to the Gemini for a later formation-flight experiment.</p>
        <p>He called this the Biggest shock of my life.</p>
        <p>Gordon explained that in sim</p>
        <p>ulations on earth he could do the experiment in about 30 seconds, but found it difficult in space to sit on the nose of the spaceship and use both hands.</p>
        <p>I was unable to sit on the spacecraft like I had done in Zero-G aircraft, he said. I kept floating up.</p>
        <p>Astronauts use airplanes on earth to take steep dives and simulate weightlessness for brief periods.</p>
        <p>All I had done in about 30 seconds (in simulations) turned out to be a monumental task of about 30 minutes, Gordon said. It was easy to perform in training, but was really work in space.</p>
        <p>Conrad described the quick rendezvous during which they caught an Agena during the very first orbit as right on the money.</p>
        <p>Guide For Future</p>
        <p>Anti - Aircraft Along N Viet</p>
        <p>Guns</p>
        <p>Nam</p>
        <p>Silenced Rail Line</p>
        <p>Malaysia Urges Peace Talk Try</p>
        <p>I SAIGON, South Viet Nam</p>
        <p>KAP)  U.S. bomber pilots reported silencing 10 antiaircraft gun positions in North Viet Nam Sunday along a main rail line to , Communist China.</p>
        <p>SAM</p>
        <p>area.</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM N. OATIS</p>
        <p>UNITED NAnONS, N.Y. $AP)  The deputy prime minister of Malaysia asked all other</p>
        <p>mosa should be allowed to remain a member of the United Nations while mainland China I attack could be admitted to this organ-'</p>
        <p>U.N. members today to help get ^ ?^e so agrees.</p>
        <p>a peace conference of the immediate parties* to the war in Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>Speaking in the assemblys general debate, Abdul Razak also urged U Thant of Burma to</p>
        <p>To us in Southeast Asia, he declared^ the Viet Nam conflict ]X)ses a real and proximate threat to the peace, progress, safety and security of the whole region.</p>
        <p>Razak said Malaysia would</p>
        <p>sites  in the Thanh  Hoa</p>
        <p>and the spokesman said they heavily damaged all three. The fourth  missiles site,  nine</p>
        <p>miles from Hanoi, was pounded by Air Force bombers.</p>
        <p>During 127 bombing raids in; U.S. Moines operating near the North, U.S. fliers also at-the demilitarized zone between tacked four surface-to-air mis-'North and South Viet Nam resile sites including one only nine ported a possible kill of 60 North miles northeast  of Hanoi.  Navy  Vietnamese  army regulars  in a</p>
        <p>attack bombers  reported  de-  Rerce fight Saturday.  The</p>
        <p>stroying a North Vietnamese'Leathernecks were hard hit</p>
        <p>torpedo boat 50 miles northeast of Haiphong in the Tonkin Gulf.</p>
        <p>Ground fighting in South Viet Nam dwindled to small and scattered actions aftw a weekend in which U.S., South Vietnamese and Korean forces re-</p>
        <p>themselves, reporting moderate</p>
        <p>New Hurricane</p>
        <p>MIAMI, Fla. (AP)Tropical storm Inez grew into a hurricane today and roared to-</p>
        <p>continue as UN serretarv-ven- aza* saia Malaysia would ^ j 7 Vaa Vr' * TT  .  roarcu  lo-</p>
        <p>*ral, haUed the' recent enl of continue to take every  wd  the  Lwward  Islands  with</p>
        <p>Indonesias war acainst Ma-ary and appropriate iniave'    top  winds  of  80  miles  an  hour.</p>
        <p>Indonesias war against Ma-f'^^^^^PP^priate  During  the  raids over the</p>
        <p>laysia, and welcomed Indone-a comprehensive  a  US  Air Force F105</p>
        <p>sia:s impending return to the^-A--Sordol^l Iiniierf Nt,nn,  isoluuon  to  the  Problem.</p>
        <p>the 386th plane reported lost in!</p>
        <p>United Nations.  'solution  to  tne  problem</p>
        <p>Deploring Communist Chinas!  ^  to  the  par-</p>
        <p>demands for a reorganized involved to find a formula United Nations, Tazak said For-i^o solve their problems and our ------1  efforts  should  be  directed  solely</p>
        <p>the war over North Viet Nam. The antiaircraft gun positions</p>
        <p>6-Point Auto Safety Plan Put Forth</p>
        <p>to bringing them together. noti"i *ir Frce Thun-</p>
        <p>tA iiaaAcf iaoc wrwvees  i derchicfs wcrc part of a chain</p>
        <p>isolutoT</p>
        <p>Razak,</p>
        <p>Razak said.</p>
        <p>Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman of Thailand and Philippine Foreign Secretary Narciso Ramos last month invited 17 Asian countries to male a joint appeal to the warring</p>
        <p>artery 50 to 55 miles northeast of the Red capital, a U.S. spokesman said.</p>
        <p>Navy planes from the aircraft carrier Coral Sea attacked three</p>
        <p>The Weather Bureau hoisted hurricane warnings over the Leewards at tic east end of the Caribbean Sea from Marie Galante to Antigua.</p>
        <p>It was expected to strike the Leewards sometime Tuesday, then threaten Puerto Rico.</p>
        <p>TTie hurricane was centered 350 miles east of Guadeloupe and 675 miles east-southeast of San Juan.</p>
        <p>It was still 2-100 miles east-southeast of the Florida coast.</p>
        <p>casualties.</p>
        <p>In a predawn attack over the demilitarized zone Sunday, Air Force B52 bombers hammered North Vietnamese infiltration routes and supply and storage areas.</p>
        <p>U.S. sources reported three helicopters lost in South Viet Nam Sunday, one by enemy ^oundfire, one by U.S. artillery fire and the other in a crash. Two crewmen were killed and two injured when one helicopter crashed in a mine field at Bien Hoa. Two persons aboard a helicopter knocked down by ground-fire 21 miles southeast of Saigon were injured.</p>
        <p>Flood waters continued to rise in the Mekong Delta, reaching rooftops in some sections of the hard-hit provinces of Chau Doc, An Giang, Kien Phong and Kien Tuong. Some 20,000 Vietnamese have been made homeless and thousands more face evacuation, but no deaths have been reported.</p>
        <p>The first armed forces television station in a combat zone in Viet Nam was formally opened in a tape-cutting ceremony Sunday at Qui Nhon. The station, which eventually will operate 56 hours a week, will beam news</p>
        <p>grams to some troops in the area.</p>
        <p>24,000 U.S.</p>
        <p>Murder Is Charged In Shooting Case</p>
        <p>State Board of Higher Education member Dr. Henry M. Poteat of Smithfield has issued a statement in an attempt to clarify the entire picture about the findings of the consultants report on East Carolina.</p>
        <p>He said East Carolina has been an institution designed to train teachers and, as such, it has done a superb job over the years. Now we see ECC emerging as a great liberal arts college with aspirations to expand its sphere of usefulness.</p>
        <p>Poteat said that when ECCs administration began looking into the feasibility of establishing a medical school it knew quite well that its undergraduate program was not geared to the preparation of pre-medical students.</p>
        <p>"rhe science departments were oriented primarily to teacher training and not to the more sophisticated and detailed study required by pre-medical students.</p>
        <p>With this knowledge of their deficiencies, Poteat continued, the administration sought and obtained inspection and advice from tl^ee competent, distinguished medical educators.</p>
        <p>He said the three consultants pinpointed the deficiencies and made recommenda</p>
        <p>tions for their correction.</p>
        <p>This is the point of the whole issue, Poteat emphasized, the consultants had no criticism of the departments as they are presently teacher oriented but they did find deficiencies in the curriculum and faculty for the preparation of pre-medical students.</p>
        <p>A medical school does not evolve overnight. The consultants recommended the establishment of an institute of Life Sciences which would of necessity involve the expansion and development of tht undergraduate science departments and in time bring them out to the point that adequate pre-medical training can be achieved.</p>
        <p>He said that whether or not ECC is ever able to develop a medical school is really a moot question. The results of the inspection will be improvement, he noted.</p>
        <p>The entire undergraduate curriculum is bound to benefit from it and all of us should be grateful to the administration of EC for having the intestinal fortitude to ask for evaluation when it knew in advance that the report would not be complimentary and would probably bring unwarranted criticism down on its head.</p>
        <p>Typhoon Japan Is</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP) - Hundreds of police and soldiers were pressed into disaster duty today to clean</p>
        <p>Julius Teel, 51-year-old Negro has been charged with murder in connection with a 2:30 a.m.</p>
        <p>Sunday shooting.</p>
        <p>Charlie Whichard, 59-year-old Negro of 1819B Norcott Cir. died  debris, restore communi-</p>
        <p>Sunday afternoon at 4:15 in Pitt cations and dig out the dead Memorial Hospital from head from the worst typhoon to hit wounds received when Teel al- Japan in seven years, legedly shot him, Pitt County Typhoon Ida smashed into the Coronor E. W. Harvey report- heartland of Japan, the Tokyo cd.  and  Mt. Fuji area, early Sunday</p>
        <p>Police Chief H. F. Lawson while Typhoon Helen was still quoted detectives as saying beating southern Japan with Whichard was shot in the face less ferocity.</p>
        <p>with a .410 guage shot gun following an argument. The shoot ing took place on Deck Street at a Negro grill.</p>
        <p>Police quoted doctors as saying had Whichard lived he would have been blind in both eyes.</p>
        <p>Teel is scheduled to be given hearing in Municipal Record-</p>
        <p>and American television pro- ers Court Thursday morning.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-A six-point program of safety</p>
        <p>calling for tighter enforcement . . *  . .</p>
        <p>of traffic laws and increased  m  Asian  conference.</p>
        <p>measures  Viet Nam for a peace</p>
        <p>ful and honorable settlement</p>
        <p>Will The Voters Get The Message?</p>
        <p>State Highway Patrol manpower was proposed today by Rep. Archie McMillan, D-Wake.</p>
        <p>McMillan suggested an increase in the use of the chemical test for drunken drivers, making it more readily available throughout the state. He has iso suggested the use of motion pictures of drunken drivers $s evidence to be used in court.</p>
        <p>Another McMillan proposal alls for greater use of the license revocation, of jail terms end cooscation of motor vehicles to combat drunken driving, feckless driving and speeding.</p>
        <p>McMillan also would enlarge Ihe driver education program, specially for adults and reduce peed limits for night time driving.</p>
        <p>McMillans other two points  call for some added control pver outdoor advertising, par-bcularly those signs which are Ki motion and draw the drivers eye from the highway and an Increase in the number of state hoopers.</p>
        <p>South Viet Nam endorsed the peace move North Viet Nam and Communist China rejected it.</p>
        <p>Jokers Awaiting Couple's Return</p>
        <p>SAUNA, Kan. (AP) - The bedroom of Mr. and Mrs.  Charles Francis* home is stuffed with wadded paper from floor to ceiling.</p>
        <p>Today the couple was to re-| turn home from their honey-i moon. The bridegrooms three' children and the brides only child, by previous marriages, allowed friends to pull off the i practcal joke.  j</p>
        <p>MILITARY TOUR |</p>
        <p>BONN, Germany (AP)  Gen. Ulrich de Maiziere. West' Germanys new armed forces  chief, will fly to North America! late this week to tour military' installations in Canada and the; United States, the Defense Ministry announced today.</p>
        <p>National Police headquarters said the latest count was 211 dead, 103 missing and nearly 1,-000 injured. Damage to U.S. military installations was estimated at more than $6 million.</p>
        <p>Government officials estimated Japanese damage at more than $300 million.</p>
        <p>It was the highest typhoon casualty toll since 5,041 died near Nagoya on Sept. 26, 1959.</p>
        <p>U.S. Army headquarters said no Americans were badly injured.</p>
        <p>A third big typhoon, June, was churning in the Pacific. Weathermen said it might approach Japan Thursday if it</p>
        <p>Toll In Rising</p>
        <p>stays on its present course.</p>
        <p>The weekend typhoons, and particularly Ida, caused mul-timillion-dollar damage, including 60 per cent of the pear and grape crops in Yamana^ Prefecture, site of Mt. Fuji.</p>
        <p>Salty rain carried by the typhoon also did widespread damage to harvests.</p>
        <p>Ida hurled the most violent winds ever recorded by Japanese weathermen  202-mile gusts  at the top of Mt. Fuji.</p>
        <p>Derelict Dies Of Burns Set By Teenagers</p>
        <p>Avers Salary Is $9,000 Too Low</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-Dr. Charles F. Carroll, state superintendent of public instruction, says the salary for his office should be increased $9,000 a year.</p>
        <p>Carroll asked the Advisory Budget Commission Saturday to boost the salary from $18,000 to $27,000 a year, effective Jan. 1, 1969at the beginning of the next term of office. He noted that the governors salary is to be increased by $10,000 next year.</p>
        <p>STATE VISIT</p>
        <p>HERE'S HOPING ... Dr. E. B. Aycock, chairman of the Greenville School Board, looks hopefully across the land that may in tha near future become the site for a center of learning if the message on the sign gets through.</p>
        <p>BELGRADE, Yugoslavia Walter Ulbricht, president of East Germany, arrived here to-'day for a seven-day state visit.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Leonard Benton Jr., an ordained minister whose life had drifted onto the Bowery, died Sui\day of burns suffered last week when teen-agers doused him with kerosene and set him afire.</p>
        <p>The derelict, 51, one of three men similarly attacked in the space of a week, was taken to a hospital last Monday from an off-Bowery doorway where he had been sleeping on a pad of cardboard cartons when attacked.</p>
        <p>He was burned over 75 per cent of his body. Five youngsters, ranging in age from 12 to 15, were arrested the next day in connection with the incident and charged as juvenile delinquents.</p>
        <p>From his home in Kentucky, Bentons father, Leonard Sr., said his son had left for the city 13 years ago after he got in with the wrong crowd and got to drinking.</p>
        <p>The elder Benton said his son was ordained as a minister in the Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ) and preached in some small churches in Kentucky.</p>
        <p>Both of the other burn victims are reported recuperating.</p>
        <p>School Recommendations Arrived At After Lengthy Study</p>
        <p>By LINDA EVANS Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>The Survey Committee for itt County schools set up in 164 continued its study into le areas of curriculum, faci-ties and other related facits the county school system. It was after a concentrated id detailed study of these eas that the committee for-lulated their recommenda-&amp;gt;08.</p>
        <p>Curriculum Needs</p>
        <p>In a study of 1963 grades from the county schools, ^rcent of graduates were  as entering callege</p>
        <p>or nursing programs. This represented 117 students out of the total of 322 graduates for the year.</p>
        <p>The Pitt County school system is made up of 25 schools which are not large enough in size and personnel to offer more than the basic requirements for the college-bound student.</p>
        <p>As a result, the 64 percent of students who either du not wish to attend or are not capable of attending college are forced to take the same course offerings as those who are in the 36 percent college-bound group.</p>
        <p>Thus, a student needing remedial work sits in the same grouping with a student who needs advanced work.</p>
        <p>On the other hand, with limited course offerings, few coliege-bound students have an opportunity to take the advanced bourses they need for competing with students from other schools.</p>
        <p>Both groups, therefore, are too frequently not exposed to materials that meet their needs.</p>
        <p>If schools are to meet the needs of all students and to prepare them for competition with students graduating in</p>
        <p>neighboring schools, it would appear that the curriculum in most schools would need to be broadened at the earliest possible time.</p>
        <p>The need is for both the college-bound student, and the student who goes into trade school or who goes directly to work.</p>
        <p>Facilities To measure the adequacy of the county scliool facilities, the survey committee set up a score sheet with a possible number of points. Each school was then scored accordingly. Generally, those schools</p>
        <p>scoring the highest were either elementary or high school. Union schools, of which there are 11 in the county, score low inasmuch as both the elementary and high schools cannot be adequately served in the same facility.</p>
        <p>Only two schools, the Ay den Elementary and Grifton High School, actually compared favorably with educational specifications fur schools. Of those school facilities housing only grades 9-12, the Bethel and Ayden schools were found to offer the best possibilities.</p>
        <p>n the other extreme, three</p>
        <p>other schools, Simpson, Haddock, and Nichols, are frame buildings with pot-bellied stoves.</p>
        <p>According to the survey, of the 27 plants in 1964, 21 appear to be woefully lacking in library, music, and multipurpose rooms.</p>
        <p>Pitt Ctounty has many building needs. Before these needs can be met, it is necessary that a thorough evaluation of the school organiztaion be made.</p>
        <p>Survey Recommendations</p>
        <p>After a thorough examination of these areas plus the</p>
        <p>areas of personnel, finance, school districts, and transportation, the committee formulated the following recommendations.</p>
        <p>1. That the 12 special districts of the Pitt County Administrative Unit be consolidated into one district for the purpose of providing financial support for its schools.</p>
        <p>2. That the membership on the Pitt County Board of Education be representative of the various school ai*eas in the countywith a total of not less than nine members with one representative position allotted to the Greenville area.</p>
        <p>(This recommendation has been complied with and the board now consists of the specified representatives.)</p>
        <p>3. That three to four enlarged attendance areas be created for the purpose of consolidation of high schools.</p>
        <p>4. That the Board of Education appoint a special committee from the membership of the Survey Ck)mmittee for the purpose of discussing with the Greenville School Board the merits of a merger of the two units.</p>
        <p>(This recommendation has also been fulfilled by th county.)</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0002" />
        <p>2Th* Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Monday, September 26, 1966</p>
        <p>Goren on BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN</p>
        <p>tC If By TDt CMcat* TribvM]</p>
        <p>AiNSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ Q. 1As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>AA J53  0AK109  4J432</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: East  South  West  North</p>
        <p>1  Dble.  1  A  Dble.</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass  2  ^  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass  7</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Two spades. West has been try Ins to psych you out of your suit, but Norths double of the one spade bid combined with Wests escape to two hearts has exposed him. North has let Wests runout come around to you for appropriate action and it is now Incumbent on you to eomplete the exposure.</p>
        <p>Q. 2Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>4J43 ^A106 OKQ832 A12 The bidding has proceeded: North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>10  XA  2 0  Pass</p>
        <p>3 O  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Three hearts. If partner has suitable protection In the black suits he can now try three no trump. The delayed "cue bid does not show overpowering strength since your original competitive raise has limited your hand.</p>
        <p>Q. 3Neither vulnerable, as South you bold:</p>
        <p>4975 &amp;lt;^Q43 OKQIO 4J632 The biddihg has proceeded; North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass  Pass  1 4</p>
        <p>Past  1 A  Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>Dble.  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Obviously partner is unwilling to concede a part score effort to the opposiUon and Is asking you to select one of the red suits. It is always Irksome when your only four card suit has been adversely bid but this situstlon should not be regarded as a calamity. If you haven't a four card suit to bid, you must try to get along as well as possible with a three card suit. Whether you should bid two hearts or two diamonds is a matter of temperament. Our own taste runs to two hearts.</p>
        <p>Q. 4As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>4A84 ^A75 0AK92 4A106</p>
        <p>The biddiil^ has proceeded: South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>10  2 4  2 0  Pass</p>
        <p>?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.This is a very powerful hand facing a partner who Is able to make a free bid and the possibilities are unlimited. A leap to three no trump would be ultra-conservative and the recommended procedure is</p>
        <p>to make a cue bid of three clubs, postponing further aggressive action until partner is heard from again. Needless to say, you will not settle for anything less than game.</p>
        <p>Q. 5Both vulnerable, as South you hold;</p>
        <p>4KQ32 ^AK1093 0 103 4A6</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1 ^  Pass  Pass  1 4</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass  2 0  Pass</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Pass. Partner has admitted possession of a trickless hand by falling to keep your opening bid alive, and no effort should be made to improve the contract. In fact, every inducement should be given the opposition to carry on the con-test. If West should contrive to dig up a belated spade raise, you might find it reason for rejoicing.</p>
        <p>Q. 6-&amp;gt;.^ South, vulnerable, you hold;</p>
        <p>4K52 ^43 0 95 4J109875</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: West  North  East  South</p>
        <p>1  Pass  1 NT  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass  Dble.  Pass  2 4</p>
        <p>Pass  2 ^  Pasi . ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A,Pass. Obviously, partner has the hearts, which accounts for his pass over the opening bid. With two trumps and a doubleton, your hand may - be regarded as tolerant of hearts and It is not recommended that you increase the contract by e return to clubs.</p>
        <p>Q. 7Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>4AJ1083 ^76543 010949</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: North  East  South</p>
        <p>1 ^  14  2</p>
        <p>What do you bid?</p>
        <p>A.^Two hearts. A direct and slm&amp;gt; pie raise seems to us the most appropriate action altho we would raise no strong objection to an immediate bid of four hearts. The preemptive bid might serve to inhibit the enemys finding a minor suit fit which they would surely do if you were Ingenuous enough to double one spade.</p>
        <p>Q. 8As South, vulnerable, you hold:  ^</p>
        <p>4Q108 ^AQ7642 0QJ3 4K</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1  Pass  2 4  Pass</p>
        <p>2 ^  Pass  3 4  Pass</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Three no trump. Altho part-ners rebld is not forcing. It is seml-encouraging, since he was at liberty to pass two hearts. The king of clubs looms es e highly Important card.</p>
        <p>East Calls For Privacy Rights</p>
        <p>Life Is Brighter For Young Twins</p>
        <p>By MKE COCHRAN</p>
        <p>NEW BERN  At a nublic  WORTH,  Tex.  (AP)  -r</p>
        <p>raSyUe my nighrSi;,F^ Nancy and Mary Freeman Jota East declared that be-a &amp;lt;:atf.sh  that</p>
        <p>lyond doubt the need has beenlf'^-established for a bill of rights  ,</p>
        <p>to protect federal employes. ^ also a cat named Miracle,</p>
        <p>The First District Republican candidate, in speaking to a group of Craven and Pamlico county supporters, noted, Preliminary findings of the Senate judiciary subcommittee on constitutional rights yield compel</p>
        <p>ling evidence of the need for legislation to protect the privacy and dignity of the 2.5 million men and women who work for the federal government.</p>
        <p>Many of these dedicated public servants, he said, work in the First Congressional district, and in particular, many of them live and work right here in Craven and Pamlico counties.</p>
        <p>The GOP hopefill stated, It is common knowledge that in recent years the federal government has been intimidating private citizens, public school officials, and others, but evidence is now unfolding that the federal government under the Johnson Administration is even Marys survival, intimidating and coercing its ~ own loyal and dedicated employees.</p>
        <p>A Bill of Rights for federal employees, East concluded,</p>
        <p>would, among other things, prevent abuses resulting from personality inventory tests, political fund-raising campaigns, high-pressured savings bond drives, and would forbid irrelevant questions concerning religious beliefs, personal finances, and other questions of a purely personal nature.</p>
        <p>Youth Sought In Percy Case</p>
        <p>KENILWORTH, 111. (AP) - A 19-year-old youth was sought for questioning in the Valerie Percy slaying today as police beefed up their forces for a long investigation.</p>
        <p>The investigation is going to take a long time, said Kenilworth Police Chief Robert M.</p>
        <p>Daley. He said state troopers had joined his 11-man force trying to track down the slayer of Miss Percy, 21, daughter of Charles H. Percy, GOP nominee</p>
        <p>for the U, S. Senate from Uli-'  ---</p>
        <p>nois.</p>
        <p>Police sought for questioning New 4,000-Foot</p>
        <p>a youth about 19 who spoke to _  I  i %</p>
        <p>Valerie and her twin sister,'TUnnGl IS DGQUII Sharon, some 30 hours before i Valerie was killed.</p>
        <p>Police said the girls sat near the youth in an elevated train car as they returned home from their fathers Chicago campaign</p>
        <p>Police reported that Percy and Sharon Percy had given them new leads. Chief Daley said the information had been relayed by a family friend.</p>
        <p>Without disclosing specifics, Daley said they had given him the names of new possible suspects and additional information on persons previously considered suspects.</p>
        <p>Also Percy was beaten and stabbed repeatedly Sept. 18 in the Percy home.</p>
        <p>BOSTON (AP)  Ground has been broken for a 4,000-foot subway tunnel under the Charles River.</p>
        <p>The Massachusetts Bay I</p>
        <p>Red 'Invention' Still Inadequate</p>
        <p>ST. PAUL, Minn.It is commonly said that two things work well in Russia: the subway and the telephone. According to the Catholic Digest, phone service is cheap, about $3 a month, with no limit on local calls. A call from Moscow to Orkutsk, a distance of 3,300 miles by rail, costs only 43c a minute. But there are only 7 million phones for a nation of 232 million people, or one phone for every 33. In the U. S., there are 45 phones for every 100 persons.</p>
        <p>Only about 60% of the phones have automatic dialing', and there are few up-to-date phone books. Moscow has no directory at all! Unless you happen to know a persons number, you have to call him at work, and explain to his supervisor the purpose of your call.</p>
        <p>When Nikita Khrushchev was on vacation his colleagues, maneuvering to oust him from the premiership, changed the phone numbers of all top officials and instructed the operators not to give out the new numbers. Khrushchev thus was prevented from calling officials to enlist support.</p>
        <p>headquarters. 'They quoted!Authority says Sharon as saying her sister  $22-million  tunnel should be</p>
        <p>troduced the youth by his first I completed in 1969.</p>
        <p>name only.  t   </p>
        <p>Sharon told police the conversation then ended. She said the youth transferred trains with them and got off at their stop, walked behind them a short distance and then took another path.</p>
        <p>FOR CONVERSATIONS</p>
        <p>VALLEY FORGE, Pa. (AP) The American Baptist Commission on Christian Unity has named a six-member committee to carry on conversations with</p>
        <p>Catholic representatives The Percy family went into to seek better understanding</p>
        <p>and strengthened relationships between the two bodies.</p>
        <p>seclusion at an undisclosed location.</p>
        <p>BE MODERN WITH</p>
        <p>MOEN.</p>
        <p>Mateos Recovers From Reaction</p>
        <p>MEXICO CITY (AP) -Former Mexican President Adolfo Lopez Mateos is reported out of danger after an illness caused by a reaction to medication.</p>
        <p>His wife Sunday was quoted as saying Merico Cityu cold weather gave him arm pains, and medicine he took for it caused a reaction.</p>
        <p>ly, friends and school.</p>
        <p>In other words, a normal life for the twins, now 12, robust, eager and apparently reluctant to consider what might have been.</p>
        <p>For the twins sisters, Laura, 9, and Stella, 8, and their parents, Mr. and Mrs. D.C. Freeman, each day provides a new experience/ approached, they say, with a wonderful new spirit.</p>
        <p>The whole attitude in this house has changed, as you might imagine, said a smiling Mrs. Freeman.</p>
        <p>The Freeman twins underwent surgery Nov. 5, 1964, when six doctors performed a transplant, giving Mary one of Nancys kidneys.</p>
        <p>Doctors said Marys kidneys were too small to function properly.</p>
        <p>It was the only chance for said Mrs. Freeman in an interview. There was almost no chance of causing Nancy any harm.</p>
        <p>At the time of the operation, Mary weighed 37 pounds, Nancy 93. Mary since has gained more than 40 pounds and grown seven inches.</p>
        <p>Shes a different child, said her mother. Shes in perfect health. Weve had no problem at all. Nancy also has done beautifully.</p>
        <p>Previously, Mrs. Freeman said, Mary realized she was sick, but she didnt know the seriousness. She did not realize</p>
        <p>how bad she felt. We kept her going as much as possible. Mary followed a strict diet and her activities were limited.</p>
        <p>No restrictions now, said Mrs. Freeman.</p>
        <p>The twins talked of many things: Marys craving for fried chicken, a delicacy once denied her; an interest in myths and legends and Greek heroes; her coin collection and freckles; Nancys delight in rock n roll; her love of swimming and a tiny, smiling catfish that rules a miniature aquarium.</p>
        <p>And theres Miracle, the cat. I told them it was a miracle that they got to keep the cat, said Mrs. Freeman. And Stella said lets call it Miracle.</p>
        <p>She said the twins were especially excited about entering junior high school.</p>
        <p>Nancy has been a better student, Mrs. Freeman said, probably because Mary didnt feel well. But her teacher last year said Mary had shown exceptional comprehension of her school work.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Freeman recalled that Mary once told her;</p>
        <p>Mother, you know Im a straight A* student  I just dont make them.</p>
        <p>With the crisis past, and four vibrant girls scurrying about, ^s. Freeman, whose husband is an industrial engineer, remarked:</p>
        <p>The neighbors accuse us of having a four-ring circus over here, and its the truth!</p>
        <p>Small French Grocery Stores Are Dying Out</p>
        <p>Iroquois was a confederacy of Iroquoin tribes of Indians known as the Five Nations. Each tribe had a chief but topics having a bearing on the entire group were handled by a general council.</p>
        <p>By JOHN D. PARRY</p>
        <p>United Press International</p>
        <p>PARIS (UPI) -The comer grocery, that essential part of the typically French scene, is going the way of the horse and buggy and the supermarket is taking over.</p>
        <p>Each year the number of small grocery stores, butchers and bakers going out of business grows as as the American - s t y 1 e supermarts, which sell the same things more efficiently, often more cheaply and usually in cleaner surroundings, increase.</p>
        <p>Statistics recently published by the French government show that supermarket sales now account for 13 per cent of all food sales. There is a general feeling the percentage will more than double by 1970.</p>
        <p>There are now 7,500 supermarkets in France according to the same set of statisticsan increase of 400 per cent over the number existing in 1960. Each year sees hundreds more being built, often with customer parking lots attacheda revolutionary departure for France.</p>
        <p>The Real Story But the statistics do not tell the whole story. For that it is necessary to talk with some of</p>
        <p>lPfORD FUZZIE</p>
        <p>ACROSS 1. Superior in position 6. Bill of fare</p>
        <p>10. Religious work of art</p>
        <p>11. Levels off</p>
        <p>13. Dawn of</p>
        <p>day</p>
        <p>15. Oust</p>
        <p>17. Musical .direction</p>
        <p>18. Three-toed sloths</p>
        <p>20. Bacchanalian cry</p>
        <p>21. Flightless bird</p>
        <p>23. Extinct bird</p>
        <p>25. Dawn goddess</p>
        <p>26. Ital. commune</p>
        <p>28. Seizes 30. Pleasure craft</p>
        <p>33. Fodder plant</p>
        <p>34. Sickly</p>
        <p>35. Harbor boat</p>
        <p>37. Plunge 39. Defect 41. Make lace 43. Spread to dry .</p>
        <p>45. Indian pole 47. Service man 49. Buddhist gateway</p>
        <p>51. Fragment</p>
        <p>52. Nevada resort</p>
        <p>53. Goose genus</p>
        <p>SOLUTION OF SATURDAY'S PUZZLE</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Poisonous tree</p>
        <p>2. Shoshone-an: var.</p>
        <p>3. Baby carriage</p>
        <p>4. W. W. II area</p>
        <p>5.  avis</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>B</p>
        <p>9 '</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>IX</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>\i</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>IB</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Zl</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>2S</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>ze</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>3i</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>52</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>6. Myself</p>
        <p>7. Twilight</p>
        <p>8. Glacial snowficld</p>
        <p>9. Institutions of learning</p>
        <p>12. Ladle 14. Purpose 16. Hardy heroine 19. Trifle 22. Vase 24. Ibsen character 27. Play a role</p>
        <p>29. Woolly pyrol</p>
        <p>30. Hoist</p>
        <p>31. Ration</p>
        <p>32. Shack 36. School of</p>
        <p>whales 38. Eng. money 40. Existed 42. Bark cloth 44. Wild animal 46. Human being 48. Jap. coin 50. Negative</p>
        <p>Traffic Toll</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)- Tlie Nortti Carolina Motor Vehicle Departments report of traffic deaths and injuries between 4 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. today: Killed10</p>
        <p>Injured (rural)157 Killed this year1,176 Killed 1965 to date-1,093 Injured to Sept. 1, 196632,748 Injuted to Sept. 1, 1965-32,178</p>
        <p>the thousands of M. and Mme, Duponts whose carefully tended family businesses are being hurt badly.</p>
        <p>You dont get the personalized service in a supermarket that you get here, said Armand Montbrisson, who has run his tiny store in a southern Paris district for 40 years. All thishe gestures at the shelves jammed with canned goods, the fresh vegetables in their racks, the display of cheeses he painstakingly takes out of the refrigerator each morning and puts away again each nightall this is something the supermarkets cant match, because here we treat customers as people.</p>
        <p>Maybe so, but the younger Frenchman and woman isnt prepared to wait in a line half an hour just for the privilege of being treated as a personnor having to go to one store for meat, another for bread, another for milk and yet another for vegetables as motiier and Dad used to do.</p>
        <p>Another thing in favor of the supermarkets is they dont close for lunch as does the corner grocery. It traditionally</p>
        <p>closes from 12:30 to 4 p.i while the proprietor and family eat a leisurely meal.</p>
        <p>Hard To Change Older people still cling to th&amp;lt; corner store tradition, and th: line waiting patiently in Mi Montbrissons store shows _ large percentage of old ladies in black and elderly gentlemeiL dressed in the traditional teret.| I dont like the supermarkets because I dont think all| that packaged and frozen lod is fresh, said Mme. Helen! Gerard a faithful customer at Montbrissons for 30 years. Ive always shopped this way and I see no reason to change. The traditional resistance of the French to frozen and prepackaged foods was something the supermarkets had to overcome before the boom could start. They are winning the battle.</p>
        <p>Frenchwomen wont accept anything that isnt first class, said one supermarket manager. The only difference between the things we sell and the things you can get in the corner store is that its quicker and cheaper to buy them here and we move a lot more stock in a day.</p>
        <p>Ducked Five Bullets And Grabbed Cash From Thief</p>
        <p>Colorful Bridge Now Is Surplus</p>
        <p>MADISON, 111. (AP) - Madisons old Chain of Rocks bridge across the Mississippi has become surplus property since the new Interstate 270 bridge opened this summer.</p>
        <p>The new bridge, located a few hundred yards upstream, is free and Mayor Stephen Maeras asks, Who is going to give us a quarter? to use the narrow, 36-year-old bridge.</p>
        <p>Only about 1,200 cars use the bridge daily. Another 12,000 to 14,000 cars now travel the new, four-land bridge.</p>
        <p>Since 1939, the old bridge earned enough in tolls to create a $2.5-million backlog and an annual investment return of $100,000, Maeras said</p>
        <p>Par Hm 28 min.</p>
        <p>9-25</p>
        <p>Soviet Has Edge In Doctor Count</p>
        <p>BONN, Germany (UPI)  The Soviet Union has more doctors i^r capita than any other nation, according to the Statistical Yearboik, releasee in Bonn.</p>
        <p>aqj sXbs noiun lafAOs eqx Yearbook, has one doctor for every 467 persons. Austria has one for every 550 persons, Wes Germany one for every 696 and the United States one for every 760.</p>
        <p>ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Rl. (AP)  Im sort of glad he was a lousy shot, said William Wallenbecker Jr. after ducking five bullets and snatching $4,000 back from the man who robbed him.</p>
        <p>He kept telling me he was going to kill me while, he was shooting from about 20 or 30 feet away, the 21-year-old Northwestern University graduate student said.</p>
        <p>I didnt hear the bullets, but I could smell the gunsmoke.</p>
        <p>The slender youth said he was leaving his employer, Monaco Drug and Liquors, Sunday night when it happened. He climbed into the delivery truck with the nights receipts and the man accosted him.</p>
        <p>When he told me to hand over the money, I was just kind of mad at this guy, Wallenbecker said. We sort of wrestled in the car a bit. He was trying to push me over and drive away, but the key fell to the floor. He ran.</p>
        <p>I ran after him.</p>
        <p>Wallenbecker said the man fired  witnesses said five times as they ran to a field.</p>
        <p>Thats where we had the fight, said Wallenbecker. He hit me with the gun and threw it into the weeds. I got on top of him and took the money.</p>
        <p>Witnesses summoned polict, who broke up the fight and arrested Anthony Lizio, 34. Lizio. was charged with armed robbery.</p>
        <p>Wallenbecker, who weighs 155 pounds and stands 5 feet 7, said he has never had a fight and knows nothing about guns.</p>
        <p>I really dont know why I did it. I just didnt want to sec him get away.</p>
        <p>JESUS</p>
        <p>SAVES-HEALS</p>
        <p>ACHES, PAINS. SICKNESS AND INFIRMf. TIES ARE SIGNS THAT PMYER IS NEEDED FOR HEALING. TO REQUEST PRAYER FOR HEALING FROM JESUS OR OTHER REQUEHS, WRITC YES__ ANO PRAYER WILL BE OFFERED t A PRAYER HANDKERCHIEF SENT TO YOU  ACTS 19; JESUS BORE OUR SICKNESSES BY THE STRIPES ON HIS BACK. AND HE BORE OUR SINS BY HIS DUTN ON THE CROSS. YOU CANT 60 TO HEAVEN UNLESS YOU ARE SAVED. MOST PEOPLE ARE LOST, ONLY A FEW PEOPU ARE SAVED. TO RECEIVE JESUS TO BE</p>
        <p>SAVED WRITE YES  HCRL TO RE*</p>
        <p>QUEST AN INSTRUCTION SHEH TO RECEIVE THE HOLT SPIRIT, THE C0I6 FORTER, AND BE HAPPY. WRITE YES AU FREE. JUST SEND THIS AB TO THE RAINBOW CHURCH, MB S. VERMONT AVE., LOS ANGELES, CALIF. fOOOI.</p>
        <p>Eltfritfg* a Pirtfe HMktll</p>
        <p>Churchill Family Adds A Girl</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP) - Winston Churchill Jr. has become a father for the second time. His wife gave birth Sunday in London to a girl, bom prematurely, the infant is the great-granddaughter of Britains wartime Former Mexican President Churchill. His journalist son, Randolph Churchill, is the father of Winston Jr.</p>
        <p>Painting Or Daeoratlngf</p>
        <p>The Decontlni rid DtiigR DepaiiMRt of tbt A. 1. Vhitley Co. it a dtcoratots advcnturo! Fine drapaiy adbncs, nigt, carpeta, wall covaringa and yaa, evea Bm fumitur* to match.. .for tht moat diacriminatiif taate for homo, bnaineta or iadnitry. Ptofaaaiooal tafT deiignert aro on hand to holp ytm achim Mi **txta-plua** ia your decorating ratalta.</p>
        <p>A B. WhiHiy, Inc</p>
        <p>3H Boyd Avetnia Gromtville, N, C</p>
        <p>DEVOE</p>
        <p>PAINT</p>
        <p>gvmmxomtmjkJL,</p>
        <p>MILLINERY SECOND FLOOR</p>
        <p>newest hairpiece on the fashion circuit</p>
        <p>It's Beautiful! Made of the finest, versatile, manageable Dynel and Acetate to give you an all new personality you'll love ... in a jiffy! A complete range of colors, from raven black to many browns and all the blondes . . all the way to platinum ... and all at this amazingly low price, each beautiful fall boxed and rests on Its own styrofoam block, with a pamphlet glying care and styling Instructions.</p>
        <p>amazing at just</p>
        <p>1098</p>
        <p>LADY TRIUMPH</p>
        <p>Delicate new epring colore bring brightnees to reiny days ... joy and comfort when ite cool. It'a the man-tailored look by Rainfair vrith popular atand-up collar and easy fitting ragUn shoulders. A perfect wash-and-wear blend of 66% Daoron* polyester. 35% combed cotton treated with DuPont Zepal*. Choose from maize, powder blue, navy, frost white or tan.</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0003" />
        <p>1 o Get Nurse Back In Hospital-Salary Is irst Line. Of Attack</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTE: This is the second in a series of three articles discussing the varied causes (rf the crisis confront* ig the nursing profession and offering some unique suggestions for its cure.)</p>
        <p>By^ STEWART BROOKS</p>
        <p>Womens News Service</p>
        <p>The first line of attack in getting the nurse back into the hospital  and at the bedside  is through salary, and if there ever was an occasion for a justified raise in pay it is certainly in this area. The nursing profession has, in effect, been underwriting medical care for years by accepting low wages and unsavory working conditions. Although in many instances the situation is improving  the nurses in Boston area hospitals are due for a 20 per cent increase in pay this fall  the rumblings of discontent are going to be heard more often and more loudly.</p>
        <p>Nurses deserve an adequate living wage the same as anybody else and for the first time it looks as though they are really going to do something about it in an organized way. Uprisings in the past have b^n hit and miss affairs and without real results, but the picture is now fast changing. The historic events which set the ball in motion was the recent victory scored by 3,000 nurses in New York Qtys 21 municipal-hospitals. Threatening to resi^ en masse unless they got what they considered to be a fair wage, these nurses won a base pay in the vicinity of $8,-000.</p>
        <p>Now the clamor is spreading across the country in all directions 4^nd from the latest developments the nurses are</p>
        <p>jttls.</p>
        <p>In Georgia, R. Colley Bwn- DUblic relations man, eiaimfr vts efforts to organize the states 8,000 nurses into an arm of the AFL-CIO is meeting with much success. Similar overtures are heard elsewhere. Whether or not this sort of treatment of our nursing ills will prove desirable remains to be seen.</p>
        <p>Something Repugnant Actually there is something repugnant, at the outset anyway, about a profession falling under the aegis of the union, and it does seem most desirable for the public at large and profession itself to arrive at a solution via oUier avenues, if at all possible. As a matter of fact the topic of salary might well be settled by the solution of other factors relating to the problem. That is to say, low pay per se may possibly count somewhat less than one would be led to believe. Too, much will be accomplished if other towns and cities follow Bostons approach of upping salaries before turmoil is allowed to gain a foothold.</p>
        <p>qualified people with a background in medical science. In the college or university degree program, the prospective nurse is usually taught by graduate students not necessarily attuned to the needs of the nursing profession.</p>
        <p>But the conventional three year hospital (R.N.) program  which turns out approximately 70 per cent of our nurses  is not without its flaws. Some of its courses should Jbe thrown out for reasons oi worthlessness and duplication (why should a nurse need to know the ins and outs of the running of a supply room or how to make custard when every hospital has personnel equipped to run the supply room and kitchen?) and one or two courses should be added  for instance, a bread and butter course in English grammar.</p>
        <p>Marriage Gets Off To A Bad Start</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Monday, September 26, 19663</p>
        <p>Calendar Of Events</p>
        <p>DeG/L^Atf)</p>
        <p>By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Five weeks ago my daughter, 21, married a 29-year-old man. The day before the wedding, he announced he</p>
        <p>iSInT*  Si'mind "S, brwh cS</p>
        <p>personal reasons. AU the  ^</p>
        <p>move to pay his share, so my</p>
        <p>donut Same time, same place  around the comer from where we work. Several of the guys and gals who work where we do sit with us because the place is rways crowded. We dont</p>
        <p>Bridge Winners Are Announced</p>
        <p>Winners in the monthly master point game of the Wednesday Afternoon Duplicate Bridge During the past few months jClub, played at Planters Bank, there have been rumors on were:</p>
        <p>North-South, Mrs. Larry Ea-</p>
        <p>Capitol Hill about subsidizing nurses salaries, much in the same fashion that community mental health centers are currently assisted in meeting their staff requirements. Whether or not ttiis materializes apparently will depend upon what happens in the forsee-able future at the local level. At the very least it does seem that the hospitals could take more interest and exercise .more imagination in those ; little matters, such as the lack of parking space and administrative disinterest in</p>
        <p>being listened to everywhere i restrooms and nurses loung-.  many  of which cost little</p>
        <p>considering the bearing they</p>
        <p>in dead earnest.</p>
        <p>Though the events to date have centered about improvised bargaining committees, unionism appears ready, willing and able to enter tiie fra-</p>
        <p>Ayden</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Bryce McCoy of Durham was a local visitor on Thursday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. E. Burgess of Raleigh spent last week with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Jr., of</p>
        <p>have upon nurse morale. Why not, for instance, provide the nurses with a comfortable eating place and an air - conditioned retreat? Perhaps this is about to happen, for the latest development is that New Yorks rickety but proud Belle^me Hospital is in the procesa of putting in just such attractive loughes.</p>
        <p>Again, nursing should have a'Voice in the overall running of the hospital, not merely in matters pertaining to the</p>
        <p>Dunn' spit' the weekend ^i</p>
        <p>me...  I  ly  wouldnt  cost  anything,  the</p>
        <p>Mrs. Blanche Kitrell.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ray McGlohon is a patient in Lenoir Memorial Hospital, Kinston.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Harry Sumrell of Norfolk, Va., is visiting her parents.</p>
        <p>Frank Hart has return e d home from Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Enroute from a trip to Niagara Falls, Canada, and the New England states, Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Holley came by Arlington, Va., for a visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Holley and by Ayden for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Worthington before returning to! their home in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sexton of Rocky Mount were the din-</p>
        <p>effect on morale would be critical judging from the occasional institution which has gone along with this policy.</p>
        <p>Gennine Shakeup</p>
        <p>But, foremost, there must be a genuine shakeup in the training of nurses, an area in which the profession in general and the so - called Schools of Education in particular contribute to a perpetual state of much ado about nothing. A dozen years of on - the - scene involvement has convinced this observer that a most excellent nurse can be turned out in two years ~ and right at the hospital.</p>
        <p>As matters stand today, precious time and talent flow down the drain as a consequence of sheepskinitis and</p>
        <p>ner gueste of Mr. and Mrs. R., pedagogic ailments.</p>
        <p>H. Worthington recently.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Johnny 0. Bannon and daughter of Madison, Va., are visiting Mr. * and Mrs. J. R.</p>
        <p>Taylor.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Anna Tripp returned ^ _ _______ _________</p>
        <p>horne from a visit with the B.  degree program, for example)</p>
        <p>L pairs last week.  ,,  that a girl or boy contemplat-</p>
        <p>Mrs. Joe Respess att^d e dj ^</p>
        <p>a family reunion in Johns o n</p>
        <p>TTiere are so many varied programs in vogue today (the three year hospital program, the two year junior college program, the four year degree program, the five year</p>
        <p>County on Sunday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Violia Wadkins) and Randolph Corbitt spent S u n-day in Wilson. ' &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Melchou of Winston-Salem, and Mr.^ipd Mrs. R. G. Knight of Roano|te Rapids, spent Wednesdaj)</p>
        <p>Mrs. Max McGlohon. ^  ^</p>
        <p>Mrs. Wilner Heavy, Mrs. N.</p>
        <p>mg a career in nursing is easily bewildered, especially so if they are led to believe an R.N. is on inferior attainment and cannot afford a college education.</p>
        <p>In; addition, the baccalaureate people would have us believe that the hospital curium is not good enough, lly, there is a just reason for believing the opposite</p>
        <p>C. Tripp and Mrs. Kent Tripp | }g jjg gggg because the</p>
        <p>spent Thursday in Durham.</p>
        <p>Buster Miller is a student at State College enrolled in the School of Design.</p>
        <p>basic sciences (anatomy, physiology, chemistry and microbiology), the true backbone of what the nurse needs to</p>
        <p>Mrs. Guy Taylor has return-,  gj-e  customarily  taught</p>
        <p>ed from Fayetteville.</p>
        <p>Miss Bonnie Brown is enrolled at Bob Jones University in South Carolina.</p>
        <p>Pete Abene, Carlton McLaw-horn and George Corbitt are students at State College this year.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Marjorie McLawhorn is a patient in N. C. Memorial</p>
        <p>Hospital.</p>
        <p>David Cavilecr is a student at Massey Tech in Jacksonville, Fla.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mark Dixon has returned home from a visit in Hou^</p>
        <p>ton, Texas.  ,  ^</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Rormie Tnt&amp;gt;|l and daughter of Wilson were local visitors Thursday.</p>
        <p>in the hospital program by</p>
        <p>GENERAL</p>
        <p>Appliance Sales Sc Serrloe</p>
        <p>SEWING MACHINE  SALES  RENTAL ^UfARTS  SERVICE</p>
        <p> Y ALL MAKES ^AT DISCOUNT PRICES</p>
        <p>^  VISIT</p>
        <p>Our Fabuloua Rhjthm ' Sewbif Center At 12S St. In Down-tim Greenville.</p>
        <p> .......</p>
        <p>gles and Mrs. George Pennington of Tar boro, first; Dr. and Mrs. George Martin Jr., second; Mrs. J. S. Rhodes Jr. and Mrs. Roger Q'itcher Jr. of Williamston, third; Mrs. Irvin Adler of Tarboro and Mrs. Wiley Corbett, fourth.</p>
        <p>East-West winners included: Mrs. Leonard Noble and Mrs. Robert Barnhill, first; Mrs. Walter Thompson and Mrs. Jack Cuthertson, second; Mrs. Worth Johnson and Mrs. W. E. Thrasher of Wilson, third; Mr. and Mrs. Eustace Conway, fourth.</p>
        <p>Winners in the side game were Mrs. J. L. Savage and Mrs. Preston Cannon, first; Mrs. C. R. Whittington and Mrs. A. W. Harman, second; Mrs. G. M. Fleming and Mrs. I. L. Alexander, third</p>
        <p>The Faculty Duplicate Club held its weekly game at the Planters Bank Friday evening with eight tables in play.</p>
        <p>Winners North-South were; Mrs. Frank Moseley and Mrs. Norman Garrison, first; Mrs. J. W. H. Roberts and Mrs. Lacy Harrell, second; Mrs. W. Z. Kennedy and Dr. James Stewart, third.</p>
        <p>Winners East-West were: Mrs. Jack Cuthbertson and Mrs. I. G. Murphrey, first; Mrs. A. R. Peters and Mrs. L. D. Harris, second; Mr. and Mrs. Eustace CJonway, third.</p>
        <p>The director announced an area winners game at Tarboro for Saturday, Oct. 1, at 1:30 and special charity game for Greenville for Satunday, Oct. 29, at 1:30 at the Planters Bank.</p>
        <p>plans were made and my daughters beautiful gown lay upstairs on her bed. She broke into tears, so he agreed to go thru with the wedding.</p>
        <p>When it came time to cut the cake, the groom was nowhere to be found, which was very embarrassing. It seems he took the car and went riding around to think things over. Since then my daughter has been miso-able. She has a good job, but he sells on straight commission (no salary like he said he made) so she is practically supporting him.</p>
        <p>He had two children by a previous marriage, which my daughter agreed to keep on week ends and vacations. Now, Abby, is this marriage worth saving?</p>
        <p>HEARTSICK MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: That is for your daughter and her husband to decide. Her first mistake was in Going thru with the wedding, knowing the groom was unwilling.</p>
        <p>Calling it off might have been embarrassing and costly, but not nearly so traumatic as the divorce which may be in your daughters future. The couple should talk it over with their clergyman, and soon.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: What would you make of this? A girl friend of mine went to a party ^th her boy friend. She said it was a real lively party and she was having a swell time when all of a sudden her boy friend said, Lets get out of herethis party is a flop.</p>
        <p>He took her straight home at 10 oclock. She found out later that HE went back to the party and stayed until 2 oclock in the morning, and had the time of his life.</p>
        <p>THE FRIENDS FRIEND DEAR FRIEND: Its obvious. The boy friend had enough of your friend, but he didnt have enough of the party.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: How can a person avoid a situation like this without making himself look without making himself look My boy friend meets me every morning for coffee and a</p>
        <p>big - hearted boy friend picks up the tab for everybody.</p>
        <p>I suppose this sounds like Im making a big deal out of nothing, but day by day it mounts up. Is there a way to get them to pay their share without looking cheap?</p>
        <p>IRKED</p>
        <p>DEAR IRKED: Yes. When you order, ask the waitress for separate checks. That will separate the men from the mooch-ers.</p>
        <p>CONFIDENTIAL TO NO NAME, PLEASE IN BURLINGAME: In California incurable insanity IS ground for divorce. Check with your attorney.</p>
        <p>Problems? Write to Abby, Box 69700, Los Angeles, Cal. 90069. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self - addressed envelope.</p>
        <p>Hate to write letters? Send |1 to Abby, Box 69700, Los Angeles, Cal., 90069, for Abbys booklet, How to Write letters for All Occasions.</p>
        <p>TOOTHACH</p>
        <p>Why wffr atMVT &amp;gt; HMiiitM tt rtIM that lasts with ORA-JtL Spaa4-ralsasa fanaula yata t ta work aokkly to raliova tbrobbini toothacha pato. Roc ORimoiidod hy Muy tfootista.</p>
        <p>All drag ataros.</p>
        <p>ora-jeT</p>
        <p>off"</p>
        <p> . but her shoes are as pretty as shel They gleam with black patent leather radiance and they go with secure fit and gentleness.</p>
        <p>trs NEW/</p>
        <p>SILVER SHOE till*dwithsurpris9s givtn with aeh purchast of POLL-PSRROT SHOES</p>
        <p>Quality</p>
        <p>Service</p>
        <p>% WAYS TO BUY! CASH-&amp;gt;CHARGELAY AWAY</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.Rotary Club 6:45  p.m.Optimist Club</p>
        <p>meets at Civic Room of Georgetowne Shoppees 7:00 p.m.Lions Club meets at Holiday Inn 8:00 p.m.Lodge No. 885, Loyal Cfrder of the Moose 8:00 p.m.Delettante Book Club meets with Mrs. Donald Bailey</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 1:00 p.m.Christian Business Mens Committee meets in Civic Room of Georgetowne Shoppees 3:30 p.m.Inglish Fletcher Book Club meets at the home</p>
        <p>Club Program Given By Miss Manning</p>
        <p>BETHEL  Miss Mary Anne Manning gave the program at the Dilettante Book Club meeting held Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. R. J. WWte-hurst.</p>
        <p>Miss Manning, who is club president, gave a picture presentation of her trip to Europe and the near East.</p>
        <p>'This was the first club meeting for this year.</p>
        <p>I of Miss Venetia Cox )  6:00-9:30  p.m.    New  Eng</p>
        <p>land style dinner at the Greenville Golf and Country Club</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Creasy K. Proctor, Order of DeMolay meets at Masonic Hall 8:00 p.m.Naval Reserve meets in basement of Austin Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Withla Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m.Pitt Co. Alcoholic Anonymous meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville Hwy.</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 10:00 a.m.Girl Scout leaders meeting at the home of Mrs. Wyatt Brown 1:45 p.m.Wednesday Afternoon Duplicate Bridge Club weekly game at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m.Kiwanis Club meets</p>
        <p>7:45 p.m.American Legion</p>
        <p>Mrs. Womack Is Bridge Hostess</p>
        <p>BETHEL  Mrs. James Womack entertained her bridge club at a luncheon meeting at her home on Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. C. Wynne Jr. and Mrs. Harold Staton were score winners.</p>
        <p>Guests included: Mrs. Dennis Hardy; Mrs. R. J. Whitehurst; Mrs. Curtin Martin; Mrs. J. R. Hunniecutt; and Mrs. Walter Latham.</p>
        <p>Personals</p>
        <p>Mrs. Charles Manning of Wilmington, Del., arrived here Saturday to visit her sister, Mrs. Marshall Joyner, who is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Don Manning of Colonial Heights Va., were here for the weekend.</p>
        <p>Miss Ruth Flake is a surgical patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital, room A-114.</p>
        <p>Auxiliary meets at the Legion Home</p>
        <p>THURSDAY 10:00 a.m.Ladies Day at Brook Valley Country Club. For bridge or luncheon reservations telephone Mrs. Teddy Proctor, 758-1019 7:00 p.m.Winterville Kiwanis Club meets in Community Bldg.</p>
        <p>7:00  p.m.Civitan Club</p>
        <p>meets</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Alpha Iota Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa meets with Mrs. Vernon Tyson 8:00 p.m.Open meeting of Alcoholic Anonymous Friendship Group at Hooker Memorial Christian Church</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>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.</p>
        <p>SUNDAY 12:30 p.m.Luncheon buffet for members of Greenville Golf and Country Club. Make reservations by telephoning PL 6-1237</p>
        <p>FRESH ROLLS DAILY</p>
        <p>Diener's Bakery</p>
        <p>Short and Smart</p>
        <p>LONDON (WNS)-The South Korean Embassy, which has been advertising locally for competent secretaries, has made the most unusual demands of the year. The embassy requests that all applicants have university degrees and be under five feet tall.</p>
        <p>.Instant Ancestors</p>
        <p>ANTWERP, Belgium (WNS) Gerda Meeks, 34, who used to paint abstract paintings until she almost went baitoipt, now makes a good living selling ancestor protraits. Whose ancestors are portrayed in the old-fashioned paintings? They are your ancestors once you buy them, Miss Meeks tells customers.</p>
        <p>HAY-FEVER</p>
        <p>SIN U S Sufferers</p>
        <p>Ham' good nW lor ymt Exclusivo now hard coro'* SYNA-CLEAR DocongosMl MWotu act instantly and continuously to drain and doaC oR Ac^-dnus cavitios. Ono hard coro taNet givos up to 8 hours rwkif from pain and prossuro of congestion. Allows you to broatho easilystops watory oyos and runny nose. You can buy SYNA-CLEAR at your favorito drug countor, without nood for a proscription. Satisfaction guarantood by maker. Try It today.</p>
        <p>INTRODUCTORY OFFER WORTH $1.50</p>
        <p>Cut out this adtake to a drug store. Purchase ono pack of SYHA'CLEAR 12's and recoivo ono more SYNA-QEAR 12 Pack Free.</p>
        <p>BISSETTE'S DRUG STORE</p>
        <p>416 EVANS ST.  TEL.  752-3131</p>
        <p>SHOP MON. THURS., FRI. NITE ^IL</p>
        <p>9 pm</p>
        <p>For those cool nights ahead!</p>
        <p>Moms, It's Time Now To Prepare Your Toddlers For Cool Weather</p>
        <p>BUSY B** COTTON FLANNEL FAJA^ HAS IXTBA PAIR OF PANTS FOR CHANGE</p>
        <p>1.99</p>
        <p>Such o smart Mms ene* lop, fwo boHomsI Gay litHe eW prints in pink, blue or red. Contrasting plpihg detail outlines collar, yoke. Straight and kMlidzidpieg ponli. Si* 2-3-4.</p>
        <p> fuHcutsizee 6 months, 1-2-3 yeart</p>
        <p> oil moin seams double-stltched</p>
        <p> lively elastics at bock e snop-fasteners  no buttons to lose</p>
        <p> woshfosf posteh pink, blue, maize, mint</p>
        <p> choices V-neck or crew style</p>
        <p>ALL THIS AND OUR OWN BRAND TOOl</p>
        <p>*HUSY B** COTTON FUNNEL PAJAMAS DETAILED JUST LIKE BIG BROTHERS</p>
        <p>1.69 Sizes 2-3-4</p>
        <p>Two piece winterweight. Piping bound coot style or colbrlets cardigan with circus print top, ftriped bottoms. All moin seams doublc-sh'tched.</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0004" />
        <p>Monday, September 26, 1966</p>
        <p>Progress Rests With The Voters</p>
        <p>In little more than a week Pitt County voters/ vote in favor of the adjustment in school district will decide the course of their public school systems^ lines Jhat are beng proposed, for years to come. Either the schools will be provided with the kind of modern structure and financial base with which to meet their needs, or they will be denied these things which are necessary if they are to do the job which is expected of them.</p>
        <p>If citizens of Pitt vote in favor of the school proposals, the schools will be able to move forward as they should. If, on the other hand, voters reject the proposals, Pitt County will find itself in the impossible position of trying to operate a modern, quality school system with an inadequate structure and without funds with which to meet its construction needs.  m</p>
        <p>Voters should give their support to the proposal that the county assume the outstanding debt of all its school districts, and in the future that school bonds be issued on a county-wide basis. They should also vote in favor of the $7.9 million bond issue which will be used for construction in the school administrative units. Affected citizens should also</p>
        <p>These propositions have been carefully developed by local study committees and the countys school officials. They have been endorsed by other officials of the county as well. They represent the foundation upon which Pitt can continue to build its public school systems to meet the needs of its youngsters in the years to come.</p>
        <p>The future of public education throughout this county rests heavily upon these school proposals to be adopted or rejected at the polls on October 4.</p>
        <p>Citizens who vote in favor of these proposals will be voting to provide better public education for the youngsters of this county in the years to come. Those who vote against the proposals will be signifying their indifference to the future of the county, its schools and its youngsters.</p>
        <p>Technical Institutes</p>
        <p>ohiison loves me... ...this I know...</p>
        <p>Deciding Soon  Popular</p>
        <p>On LBJ Visit</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM A. SHIRES DECIDE  A decision apparently will be reached in about a week on whether to issue a formal, official invitation to President Johnson to campaign for Democratic candidates in North Carolina this Fall.</p>
        <p>This is the word from state Democratic chairman I. T. (Tim) Valentine Jr., who has the matter under consideration. Valentine along with Gov. Dan K. Moore will make the final decision on whether an invitation will be issued by the state party headquarters.</p>
        <p>We plan to talk further with all of the (Democrat) candidates for Cong res s,</p>
        <p>WILLIAM</p>
        <p>SHIRES</p>
        <p>Valentine said. We should reach a decision in about a week.'*</p>
        <p>DIFFERENT  It is known that various Democratic candidates hold different ide a s and have different feel i n gs about a presidential visit to their districts prior to t h e Nov. 8 elections.</p>
        <p>Several are flatly opposed. At least twoThe Democrats challenging Republican Reps. James T. Broyh i 11 and Charles R. Jonasare urging a Johnson visit.</p>
        <p>And a couple of Democratic Incumbents facing GOP opposition in November apparently are still on the fence. One of these is reported to have gone so far as to have his aides begin researchi n g possible speech mater i a 1 for the president.</p>
        <p>FORMAL  A formal, specific or even blanket invitation is really not necessary in the event the president wants to visit North Carolina this Fall. An occasion can be found, or the National Committee and the White House can make one.</p>
        <p>In fact, the White House already has several specif i c</p>
        <p>invitations and couldif the president chooses  decide to accept any one of them.</p>
        <p>If the president wants to come to North Carolina, we should be more than happy to have him and welc o me him, the state party vice-chairman, Mrs. Harry Mc-Donnold, told a reporter.</p>
        <p>The states national com-mitteewoman, Mrs. John Robinson, added that the question of whether a formal invitation would be extended is up to the governor and Mr. Valentine.</p>
        <p>KEMP  Several w e e ks ago reports circulated that State Sen. Ed Kemp of Guilford, a member of the Tax Study Commission, was in line to become chairman of the tax-writing Senate Finance committee.</p>
        <p>What is news now is Kemps published view that a tax cut may be in order.</p>
        <p>The majority report of the Tax Study C!ommis s i o n, which Kemp signed, suggested a possible two cents per pack cigarette tax and a local option piggyback increase in the sales tax to produce local government revenue.</p>
        <p>Kemp now says the Tax Study report was widely misinterpreted. The commission, he says, did not ask for a tobacco tine. It was suggested as one of several possible alternate revenue sources, if needed.</p>
        <p>t&amp;gt;OUBTFUL  Kemp says he is doubtful that any additional state taxes will be necessary.</p>
        <p>With the prospect bright for a general fund surplus of $150 million I see no need for new taxes of any sort . . . he says. State Treasurer Edwin Gill recently predicted a possible general fund surplus of 1150 million if present economic trends continue.</p>
        <p>Even earlier, Lt. Gov. Robert W. (Bob) Scott said he doubted the wisdom of and would be opposed to a state tax on tobacco. Scott will appoint the chairmen and membership of Senate committees when the 1967 legislature convenes.</p>
        <p>It is unlikely that Scott would name a Finance committee favorable to a tobacco tax which he opposes.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED</p>
        <p>Established 1882</p>
        <p>Published Monday Through Friday Afternoons and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers</p>
        <p>Entered at Post Office, Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>M second class mail matter</p>
        <p>IP</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES Home Delivery by Carrier or Motor Routt Week 40c By Mail, Payable in Advance</p>
        <p>One Year .......................................... $18.00</p>
        <p>Six Months .......................................... 9  50</p>
        <p>Three Months ....................................... 6.00</p>
        <p>One Month ......................................... 2.00</p>
        <p>(Prices include salc-j tax where applicable)</p>
        <p>MEMBCIt ASSOCIATED PRESS The A^^bciated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all uewg diepatchea credited to it or not otherwise credited to tbif paper and also the local news pubUshed herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
        <p>Enrollment at Pitt Technical Institute of almost twice as many full time atu-dente this fall as were enrolled a year ago indicates the rapidly increasing demand for the type of training offered by this institution.</p>
        <p>The record enrollment of 307 full time students at Pitt Tech this fall also reflects the increasing impact that institution is having on the total educational opportunities of this county and area.</p>
        <p>Certainly President Fulford is correct in pointing out that it is imperative for Pitt Tech to move into a program of expanding its physical facilities as quickly as possible. This fall's enrollment of full time students taxes the existing facilities to capacity. It is reasonable to expect the enrollment a year from now will be even higher than it is today, and if the rate of increase corresponds to that of the past three years, existing facilities will be grossly inadequate to meet the demand of potential students.</p>
        <p>When consideration was being given a few years ago to the establishment of Pitt Technical Institute, proponents of the idea asserted the institution would in time become a major factor in a total educational program for people of this and surrounding counties. In the brief three years since the institution began its operations, Pitt Tech has shown conclusively the important role it is filling in providing much needed educational service to citizens of this area.</p>
        <p>Its enrollment growth the past two years indicate it is both filling a real need anil generating greater demands upon itself in doing so.</p>
        <p>Crab Picking Class No</p>
        <p>1 pra) llic Iartv will...</p>
        <p>j</p>
        <p>...also...</p>
        <p>ClfM C A TImB SVi.DCAti</p>
        <p>gf)( (iotiricr-^onrnah</p>
        <p>By ART BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>A Risk Of Burning Ears</p>
        <p>oKe</p>
        <p>UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL</p>
        <p>Member Audit Bureau o Circulation.</p>
        <p>Advertiaing rates and deadlinea available upon request.</p>
        <p>By WINFRED L. GODWIN</p>
        <p>A course in crab picking was no laughing matter for more than 100 residents of a small coastal community in North Carolina. Not was it a joke to the surrounding countys seafood industry, or for that matter, to the states economy.</p>
        <p>Because of unskilled workers, a crab processing plant in eastern North Carolha was on the brink of closing down. After plant employees received on-the-job instruction and training through an industrial education unit of one of the states community colleges, the tide was turned. The business was saved and the workers kept their jobs.</p>
        <p>Such is the story told in a current report from the North Carolina community college program. Through its statewide network of comprehen-s i V e community col 1 e g e s. North Carolina is reaching out to create opportunity where previously none existed. The seafood industry, one of the states oldest and once among its largest aad most lucrative businesses, was drowning beneath 19th century methods. Fishermen, bound by tradition, continued to use yesterdays skills in todays world. For the marine industries to prosper once again. Tar Heeli realized that they must take advantage of modern - day advancements through education.</p>
        <p>A far - reaching program of vocational and tecmcal courses in the fiaheries occupations was set up, ranging</p>
        <p>from net making and mending to marine engines, electronic and navigation, and made available throughout the North Carolina coastal counties under the community college system.</p>
        <p>Since the establishment of these industrial training programs, people have money in the bank, new seafood processing plants have located along the coast, and ultimately the economy of the entire state will share in the rewards of the new life of the states seafood industry  all because of a training program unknown a few short years ago.</p>
        <p>Although the first two - year college was established more than 65 years ago, the dramatic emergence of the junior college as a comprehensive community institution respond* Ing to the varied concerns, interests and aspirations of the times is a fairly recent development</p>
        <p>In 1900 there were eight two-year colleges in this country; by April, 1966, there were about 800 community and junior colleges in 49 states with a total of 1,250,00 students. Almost one out of every three etudentg begins his college in one of these institutions, and enrollment increases at the rate of 20 percent a year.</p>
        <p>The community college has an important role to play in American society today. TOle everywve who finishes high school should not necessarily go on to college in the traditional sense of that term, (Cootmied On Page 5)</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - It has been reported that President Johnson has a bugging device in his specially built limousine which has a reverse twist on it. Although the people along the route cant hear what be is saying, the device makes it possible for him to hear what the people are saying.</p>
        <p>This is a very danger o u s thing for any politician to do.</p>
        <p>Those of us who have covered many political campaigns know that what the people seem to be yelling and what they are actually yelling are two different things.</p>
        <p>I truly fear for the consequences.</p>
        <p>Suppose the President is driving down Main Street and he turna his bugging system on. This is what he might hear.</p>
        <p>Other Editors Saying Come The Huks</p>
        <p>(Rieimioiid, Va-, News-Leader)</p>
        <p>When overpowered, it is the nature of Communists not to give up, but to withdraw. They remobilizc for the next battle, taking care to perfect the techniques that failed in the initial encounter.</p>
        <p>Now word comes from the Philippines that the Peoples Liberation Army, or the Huk-balahops (Huks), are mounting a new offensive in the rice fields and swamps of central Luzon. They are working toward control of the countryside near Manila with the familiar (tommu n i s t methods of assassinat i o n and terror. Although the Huks and their supporters represent only a fraction of the population, many towns and rural communities are believed to be dominated by them. Local residents are intimidated into cooperating with the guerrillas; this year more than 65 people are known to have been killed by Huk squads.</p>
        <p>The horrors of communism are not new to the niip-inos. Shortly after World War II, the Huks attempted to take over the government Years of bloody guerrilla</p>
        <p>warfare followed. At their peak, the Huks had in the field 12,000 armed men; they claimed 100,000 members. In the fifties Ramon Magsay-say, a charismatic Filipino president and a strong anticommunist, combined military force with land reforms to thwart the rebellion. With his death in 1957 his program dissolved, but it had halted the Huks.</p>
        <p>The Huks, however, were down but not out. Former Huk leaders, jailed for instigating the rebellion, are being released. Modern weap o n s are disappearing from Clark Air Force Base, an American post, and turning up in Huk hands. So as they go back on the offensive after lying low for 10 years, the Huks are launching a new phase of the same old war. And the FUi-pinos, devoted friends of the West, are digging in for another brutal round.</p>
        <p>Surely there is a less o n here for those who suppose that the evils of communism diminish in time. In one guise or another, in Saigon, or New York, or Manila, the Communist enemy keeps probing. The West must stay forever armed against it.</p>
        <p>! Hubert</p>
        <p>On The</p>
        <p>iraii</p>
        <p>Officer, when is this parade going to be over? Im trying to get to the shoe store before it closes.</p>
        <p>Dont ask me, lady. But you cant cross until the President goes by.</p>
        <p>Why not? I didnt vote for him.</p>
        <p>Thats not the point. We have orders not to let anybody cross the street.</p>
        <p>But what about my shoes?</p>
        <p>Lady, how often does the President of the United States drive down the Main Street of Ranpucket?</p>
        <p>How often do I get a chance to buy a new pair of shoes?</p>
        <p>Hey, you kids, get back there. The Presidents going by.</p>
        <p>Crazy, man. We thought the fuzz on the motorcycles were looking for us.</p>
        <p>Look, hes waving at us. Dont wave back. Hell think were for his policy in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>If you don't stop pulling my ears Im not going to let you sit on my shoulders. Which one ig the President, Daddy?</p>
        <p>I cant see. Youve got your shoe in my eye.</p>
        <p>We want Bobby. We want Bobby. We want Bobby. What about the cost of living, Mr. President?</p>
        <p>Send George Hamilton to Saigon.</p>
        <p>Okay, folks, now get back. Get back.</p>
        <p>Free Adam Clayton Powell.</p>
        <p>Whos the fellow in the car with Congressman Hea-</p>
        <p>ly?</p>
        <p>Thats the President, you dope.</p>
        <p>Hell never save Healy. Healy could lose the election for the President. Martha, Martha, Im over here.</p>
        <p>I see you but I cant get (Continued On Page 5)</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>DES MOINES, la. With all his cheerful exuberance. Vice President Humphreys toiling in the campaign vineyard this fall is a lugubrious business.</p>
        <p>Wherever he goes, the inevitable questions about whether President Johnson will drop him in 1968, and why is it that Bobby Kennedy comes out so much higher in the polls, are asked with erhbar-rassing frequency.</p>
        <p>It was in response to just such a series of pin - point questions that Humphrey allowed himself for the first time to risk a small offensive on the vital question of 1968. When a reporter probed deeply during the vice presidents rescue mission to niinoU last week for Senator Paul Douglas, Humphrey broadly hinted that Mr. Johnson has all but guaranteed that be will be on the ticket.</p>
        <p>Even though he quickly added that Mr. Johnson owes me nothing and that he would understand if the President switched running mates, this was the sort of initiative that President Johnson is not known to appreciate.</p>
        <p>Beyond this, moreover Humphreys campaign travels this fall lack the clear element of self-help that conspicuously ntarkeo the 1954 and 1958 campales of Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Blessed with a President wl)o did not care for the rough grind of Congraiiional campaigni, Nixon adrotily used the off-year elections to advert i s e himself as the political head of the Republican Party. At his disposal were a sympathetic Republican national chairman and the entire, well-oiled Republican National Committee, not to mention pro-Nixon state organizations.</p>
        <p>Not Complete Master</p>
        <p>This fall in Humphreys first political swing since he became vice president, there is no one in the Democratic National Committee to i^r-form these services for him. The national committee has all but ceased to exist as a working political organization. The key figure if Marvin Watson in the White House, which means that the basic planning is done by Humphreys own overworked staff.</p>
        <p>Requests for Presidential appearances that Mr. Johnson refuses are automatically sent to Humphrey, an elaborate calendar of cabinet campaign travels is kept by Robert Kintner, ah increasingly influential Johnson aide in the White House. Humphrey and all other major Democratic speakers must check Kintner before accepting e bid on their own to make sure they wont be competing in the same state with other top party figures from Washington.</p>
        <p>What this means is that Humphrey is not the complete master of his own travels, and some questionable scheduling has crept into his campaign. For example, twice within the space of ten days the vice president found himself nudting major appearances in a single district here in Jowa, the vulnerable district of John Hansen, a freshman Demoaat Hansen is at the best no better then 50-50 to best Republican William Scberie and if he loses despite Humphreys two efforts in his behalf the vice</p>
        <p>(Ck&amp;gt;ntinued On Page i)</p>
        <p>Strength For Today Corporat6 Tax Hik0 Plaa Ssen</p>
        <p>By EARL L. DOUGLASS PLAYING GAMES</p>
        <p>A great scholar some years ago was everywhere looked upon as one of the best-informed men on baseball in this country. This scholar, who lived most of his life in an ivory tower, could give you at any time the standing of all the principal professional baseball clubs in the country, and, most astounding of all, the batting averages of the outstanding players. Yet from one year to gnothcr this scholar never attended a baseball game. He would have been immeasurably bored by the whole procotdipg. To him baseball was a matter of statistics, and he had the items at his fingertips.</p>
        <p>Some people take the items at the same attitude toward religion. They can explain to you the differences which exist between the churches, the number of missionaries .sent</p>
        <p>out by each, and the sum of money raised every year to support these endeavors. Others take a negative attitude and are never too happy as when they are assailing what they call the hypocrites that fill the Church to overflowing.</p>
        <p>Of course they could not be more tragically and ridiculously wrong in their estimate about hypocrites, for everyone who has ever had intimate dealing with the Church knows tbit bypoqizy in the Church is a rare vice. One minister who bad parved as paptor for thirty years repiazked racept-</p>
        <p>ly that tn that period of time he had encountered Just one genuine hypocrite.</p>
        <p>Christians of all varieties (including ministers) are weak, stumbling beliieveri who are deeply conscious of their weaknesses but who at least are trying to correct these weaknesses.</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER</p>
        <p>It is certain that the administration will ask for an increase in tbt OOTporate income tax rate after Elect i on Day.</p>
        <p>It is likely that the administration will also ask for a rise in personal income tax rates.</p>
        <p>The immediate reason is</p>
        <p>ELMER</p>
        <p>ROESSNER</p>
        <p>that action taken so far to curb inflation is Ineffect i v e. President Johnsons proposal for a suspension of the 7 per cent corporate income tax credit for spending for new plants and equipment won't</p>
        <p>do much.</p>
        <p>It may mop up some of the current corporation profits. But it wont curb the inflationary spending for expansion. Business investment in new plants and equipment this year is estimated at p60.9 billion by the Department of Commerce, 17 per cent above 1965.</p>
        <p>THE SIGNIFICANCE</p>
        <p>And, note this: contracts for the incompleted portions of this total have already been signed. And so have contracts for other expansion running into 1967 and beyoni</p>
        <p>Thus it would take a full year even to slow down such spending.</p>
        <p>Other ways to use federal taxes to slow down inflation would be to increase corporate income taxes and personal income taxes.</p>
        <p>And thats what the administration will have to do, but It will postpone action u n 111</p>
        <p>after the voters go to the polls. Neither the administration nor the candidates for re-election in Ctongress want to upset the voters now.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, blame Congress more than Lyndon Johnson for part of the inflationary movement, (kmgress has consistently voted more money for various projects than the President has asked. This means another deficit and deficits are directly inflationary.</p>
        <p>While the economy continues to push to new highs with pOTsonal ineom wnd in-^triil production both rising In August  there are some indications that a slowdown will diminish the rate of inflation.</p>
        <p>HOUSING, INVENTORIES, DURABLES</p>
        <p>The decline in housing construction has become so chronic that builders are beginning to reassure themselves that a</p>
        <p>big deferred demand for new housing is building up. A big want for new housing is growing, of course, but want is not demand until it is backed up with money, and that backing is difficult with interest rates so high.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, manufacturers inventodcs continuo to rise, and thats a nasty sign. Inventories rise when sales fall below expectations. And when inventorias reach hit points,! manuficturars cut back pro- ductton, and wbsn they cut back production, they lay of! workers.  ,</p>
        <p>These invantorias til July] made their largest atiifla monthly advance In 10 years, rising almost |1 billion. A survey in August by the Department of Coramarca ahow- ed manufactuars expect inventories to increase in the third quarter, although they expected sales to increase as weU.</p>
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        <p>M^'&amp;lt;rS</p>
        <p>Democrats Open Campaign In Rally At ECC Tonight.</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>y &amp;lt;fjC</p>
        <p>0^&amp;lt;  -*s</p>
        <p>BALL CARRIER FOR A WEEK  Lynda Libby, 17, a high school student in the Minneapolis iUburb of Robbinsdale, keeps her eye on the football carried by a Robblnsdale player. When a Robbinsdale player makes too many fumbles, the therapy of Coach Irv Nerdahl calls for the offender to carry the ball constantly for a week. This ball has an improrised handle. The football player has to carry the ball to and from school, to his classes and lunch, and even in the shower. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Spencer Tracy And Kate Are Reunited</p>
        <p>By BOB THOMAS  ition, and his condition was criti-</p>
        <p>AP Mevia-TeltvifioB Writer cal lor a 24-hour period.</p>
        <p>HOUYWOOD (AP) ~ Pro-ducer Stanley Kramer announced today he will reunite Kafharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy in a aocial comedy,* *Guesa Whoi Coming to Dinner, which will also star Sidney Poitier.</p>
        <p>The Columbia production will start shooting in February with a script written by William Rose, author of Kramers Its a Mad World and of the current The Russians Are Coming. Kramer will direct location scene? in San Francisco and interiors in Hollywood.</p>
        <p>Tracy hasnt made a movie since 1963 when he was stricken with a lung ailment as he was about to drive off for a picnic</p>
        <p>Im feeling fine, Tracy said in a recent interview, his pink Irish face beaming and he looked it I read in TV Guide about television actors who turn down 30-35 movie scripts, he muttered. Well, I havent turned down 30-35. I havent been offered 30-35. I turned down a couple, and they were made, and 1 cant say I was sorry I turned them down.</p>
        <p>I also have had offers to do TV specials. One was a good script I accepted it, but Abe Lastfogel (his agent) didnt. Another actor is doing the show, and I dont want to mention his name, which happens to be Jason Robards. They couldnt</p>
        <p>Im going to overcharge a great deal.</p>
        <p>Oh, yes. I also got a letter from William Dozier, saying perhaps I had some grandchildren who would be trilled to have me do a cameo in Batman. My reply cited what Maggie Sullavan said when she was offered a Hardy family picture. She said, Tll do one when it is titled Death Comes to Andy Hardy.</p>
        <p>And Ill do a Batman when its called Death Comes to Batman.</p>
        <p>East Carolina Ck)llege will see the formal opening of the Democratic campaign on the campus tonight at 8:00 oclock at Old Austin Auditorium.</p>
        <p>The Young Democratic Club of East Carolina College has announced that there will be a Walter B. Jones Rally on that date. The rally will be an attempt to recapture a true political rally. The speakers will include: Henry Harrell, chairman of the Pitt C!ounty Democratic Party; Representative W. A. Forbes and Horton Rountree, both candidates for the North Carolina House of Representatives; and Representative Walter B. Jones, Representative of the First Congressional District of North Carolina to the United States House of Representatives.</p>
        <p>Students, faculty, and townspeople are cordially invited to attend. Jim Kimsey, co-ordin</p>
        <p>ator of the Walter B. Jones Rally, stated, We are looking forward to the rally with great entliusiasm. This will be the first rally on campus for the Democratic candidates who</p>
        <p>have helped East Carolina College so much in the past. We hope to create a spirit of enthusiasm on campus that will help send our Democratic candidates back to the captol.</p>
        <p>Arthritis Fund Dri ve Launched</p>
        <p>with Miss Hepburn. Last year | meet my price, and I told them he underwent a prostate opera-1 that when I do go into television,</p>
        <p>SAVE ON</p>
        <p>DRUGS</p>
        <p>AT</p>
        <p>mr HAZA SHOPPINO CCNTBI</p>
        <p>Moore Schedules Week Of Travel</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Gov. Dan Moores schedule this week includes a trip to Pinehurst Tuesday morning to speak to the North Carolina Independent Telephone Association convention.</p>
        <p>Mo(M*e will have a news conference Thursday at 10 a.m.</p>
        <p>On Friday afternoon, the governor will address the opening session of the North Carolina Young Democrats State Convention at Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p>Space Try</p>
        <p>UCHINOURA, Japan (AP) Japan failed today in its first attempt to orbit an artificial satellite but succeeded in focusing attention on its space and missile program.</p>
        <p>Around the country hundreds of thousands stopped work to watch a telecast of the launching from the Tokyo University space center at the southernmost tip of Japan.</p>
        <p>No other nation in Asia has come so close to orbiting a satellite. The shot almost succeeded.</p>
        <p>The four-stage rocket had a 15.6 pound satellite at its tip. Each of the four stages fired successfully. Japanese scientists said a mechanism designed to stop the last stage from spinning did not function properly. The satellite went off course and presumably burned upon re-entering the atmosphere.</p>
        <p>Funds for the Arthritis Foundation will be collected in Greenville in a three day house to house campaign beginning today.</p>
        <p>Approximately 400 Pitt County citizens including members of Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Phi, Kappa Delta and Fletcher Hall at East Carolina will be soliciting.</p>
        <p>The Foundation has a five point program.</p>
        <p>Functe for research supp o r t efforts to find the cause and a cure for arthritis. Money is collected for treatment and rehabilitation.</p>
        <p>Contributions are also earmarked for professional training and to mobilize public interest and support in the fight against the disease.</p>
        <p>Defer Action On Ousting Official</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-The North Carolina Board of Elections has deferred action on a petition asking the ouster of Wilflam C. Reeves as chairman of the Buncombe County Board of Elections.</p>
        <p>A report from the State Bureau of Investigation is awaited by the elections board.</p>
        <p>The SBl is investigating the disappearance of six voter registration books from the Buncombe Board of Elections Office.</p>
        <p>BUY</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>SAVE!</p>
        <p>AMERICAN</p>
        <p>TOURISHR</p>
        <p>LUGGAGE</p>
        <p>Effective Oct. 1 the prices of American Tourister Luggage will be increased. Now is the time to fill in your luggage set and save money.</p>
        <p>AmiricaaTsuristsr Is vsry difiaitily ths worM'i most winlsd luggage. And here's why: Its light, but incredibly strtng wltN I mwlded body that insures you extra packing space. Scuff-resistant Permanite coverings shrug off the roughoil knocks of hard travel. Stainltai steal closures ban dust and damp forever from the rich fleril brocade interiors whila accidant-proof swing-action locks let you travel high, wide and hand-some without a worry In lha world. And American Tourister tops off every good-looking case with palm-pam-ering foam-rubber padded handles set off delighMully with jewel-like chrome highlights. See it for yourself. Sunertun Ttwrister Lu|gage in eight fashion approved colon and twenty-two sues for men and women.</p>
        <p>Colon: Whitt, Fawn</p>
        <p>Blut and Scarlet</p>
        <p>New Books For Carver Library</p>
        <p>Mrs. Belle M. Atkinson, librarian of George Washington Carver Library, announced today that the shelves are being replinished with the best sellers and books for all occasions.</p>
        <p>Beginning today, the library will open from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. Monday through Friday and on Saturday from 2 to 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Atkinson also announced that teenage girls and boys, from 14 through 17 years old, who are interested in becoming members of a book club are asked to meet with Mrs. Olivia Armwood Wednesday afternoon at 5 oclock in the adult division of the library.</p>
        <p>TODAY AND THIS WEEK . . . Volunteers like these ECC coeds will be celling on Greenville residents to solicit contributions for the Arthritis Foundation Drive.</p>
        <p>Cameo Support Stockings are on SALE!</p>
        <p>Too Whoo..*yoii who Kvo in CAlfBO</p>
        <p>Supports (and all the rest of yon) come a-running! Up to 24% off the regalar prices of these elegantly sheer sopports and these stnrd/, long-wcnring Mpporta. They mean so much to jFoar hnsy Kfe* Ton</p>
        <p>are weloome to these extraoc^anry ings doring this Sale.</p>
        <p>REG. 5.95 REG. 4.95</p>
        <p>SALE 4.79 SALE 3.79</p>
        <p>SBptBmbBr 26-Octobr 8</p>
        <p>challenges Rival To Public Debate</p>
        <p>HENDERSON, N. C. (AP) -Republican congressional candidate Reece B. Gardner has challenged Rep. L. H. Fountain, his Democratic opponent, to a public debate of the issues at a time and place of his choosing.</p>
        <p>Gardner said he was not interested in a cut and dried political debate, but one in which the people can actually find out what my opponent has been doing and what he can be expected to do as a loyal member of the great societys political ball team.</p>
        <p>Gardner said in a statement Saturday that Fountain had deceived the people by hiding behind a curtain of press releases, the contents of which he never states on the floor of Congress.</p>
        <p>Buchwald...</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4) over to you until this damn parade is over.</p>
        <p>Officer, Im from the press. How many people would you say are lined up along the street.</p>
        <p>The chief of police told us not to say.</p>
        <p>Could you hazard a guess? About 2,000, but the chiefs a Democrat so hell probably tell you 10,000.</p>
        <p>We want Bobby. We want Bobby. We want Bobby.</p>
        <p>All right. Ill buy you a popsicle as soon as its ov-</p>
        <p>.AM</p>
        <p>er.</p>
        <p>There he is. There he is. Oh, I wish hed stop and shake hands with us.</p>
        <p>The President immediately shouts something to his driver who stops the limousine. The President climbs out and goes over and starts shaking hands. Then he gets back into the car again, smiling and very pleased.</p>
        <p>He stopped and shook hands with us, Gertrude! Its almost as if he hears exactly what you wer# Mying.</p>
        <p>Evans-Novak ...</p>
        <p>(Continued On Page 4) president will suffer.</p>
        <p>Finally, there are those in the Humphrey camp who are skeptical of the advantages of whistle-stop campaigning by the President and vice president on behalf of local Democratic candidates.</p>
        <p>Huddle with President</p>
        <p>Humphrey and the President huddled for two hours recently in the White House oval offices analyzing how they could best help the party out its losses in this off-year election. Mr. Johnsons view was that the more they could get around the country and campaign the better off the Democrats would be.</p>
        <p>The President may turn out to be right, but some of the vice presidents advisers disagree, partly on grounds that with Viet Nam, inflation and other national issues cutting back the administrations popularity, the Congress! o n a 1 candidates are far stronger today in their own districts than the administration in Washington.</p>
        <p>But with all this, Humphrey has taken to the hustings this fall with the outward style and polish of a veteran campaigner who loves to work the fences, coo over the babies and praise Lyndon Johnson. He gently mocks his own fortunes with a vivid and humorous description of the vice presidential seal that always accompanies him. Its only a pale image of the Presidential seal, he explains, depicting an undernourished eagle, wh his wings drooping down who looks like hes coming in for a crash landing.</p>
        <p>Godwin Col....</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) most high school graduates do need additional opportunities for education or job training. Jobs today demand increasingly sopliislirated skills. One recent survey revealed that only five of 70 different jobs could be held by persons with less tlinii a high school degree.</p>
        <p>One of the advantages of the community college is that of being in a position to offer educational programs directly related to local needs.</p>
        <p>Why not kick up. your Titile Heels*'.</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>caver07f</p>
        <p>MimMmK</p>
        <p>pBtof</p>
        <p>fcuttka, Rpo. Jter for</p>
        <p>Shop Monday, Nights</p>
        <p>SIZES 5-9 WIDTHS  S-N-M $14.00</p>
        <p>Thursday, Friday Til 9 PM</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0006" />
        <p>-Tli Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.-Monday, September 26, 1966</p>
        <p>Humphrey SeesjMore People Caught</p>
        <p>Johnson HavingBy The Rising Costs More Malurily</p>
        <p>roeiecAST</p>
        <p>fifwrM fliew low Tempe#tvr#i lapected Mnftl fvM^ey Memief</p>
        <p>WEATHER FORECAST  Scattered sliowers and thunderstorms are expected Monday night in the Pacific Northwest, Rocky Mountains, southern Plains and mid-Atlantic areas It will be cooler in the Northwest and Plains while warmer temperatures will prevail in the Gulf coast. _____   Wirephoto  Map)</p>
        <p>Weekend Ranch Date For Lynda And Actor</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON AP)  Presi-i TTiey were gay, smiling com-dent and Mrs. Johnsons daugh-| panions at the Johnson ranch ter Lynda Bird and actor but gave no hint of anything</p>
        <p>more serious than just another date.</p>
        <p>T III  </p>
        <p> -    -w    H</p>
        <p>GE Proposals</p>
        <p>George Hamilton had a water skiing, picnicking ranch date in</p>
        <p>Texas over the weekend and' Hamilton, 26, and Lynda, 22, speculation heightened about flew to Texas from Hollywood t their romance.  ^ Johnson family reunion at</p>
        <p>jthe ranch with newlyweds Luci and Patrick J. Nugent and Nugents brother, Marine Lt. Gerard P. Nugent Jr., just back from Viet Nam duty and vacationing with his wife, Phyllis.</p>
        <p>The presence of Hamilton in this close family group was NEW YORK (AP)  A sam-what gave a bit more impor-pling of voting by General Elec-! tance to this weekend date. He trie Co. employes across the was with the Johnsons on their country showed today a trend flight back to the capital early toward rejection of the firms 1 today.</p>
        <p>proposed new contract to re- * Lynda has been off on a visit place one expiring at midnight^to Hawaii with friends. She re-2.  I turned by way of California,</p>
        <p>Balloting  began  Sunday  and where Hamilton squired her</p>
        <p>will continue  through  the  week, around and gave a Hollywood</p>
        <p>At some plants, only the re-;  la her honor,</p>
        <p>jection was announced by union i recent weeks, both Lynda leaders, without giving vote to-1 Hamilton have been report-tals.  led dating other friends.</p>
        <p>At plants where vote totals!  beaming when she</p>
        <p>were supplied, the balloting  P Hamiltons arm to</p>
        <p>attend Sunday church services with her parents at Blanco, Tex., 14 miles from the LBJ ranch.</p>
        <p>The young couple sat side by side in a pew with the Johnsons.</p>
        <p>who are Catholics. Then, at 11, he attended St. Michael and All Angels Episcopalian Church with his wife, Lynda and Hamilton.</p>
        <p>The President is a member of the Christian Church. When asked if he would go to his own church, too, the President smilingly replied:</p>
        <p>All of them are mine.*</p>
        <p>NewStrikeVote Facing Airline</p>
        <p>generolly was heavily in favor of rejecting GEs latest offer for a 38-month pact.</p>
        <p>In Lynn, Mass., about 2,000 members of the AFL-CIO International Union of Electrical I  -.....  ~</p>
        <p>Workers  largest of some 1001 Hamilton, a Christian Scientist, unions bargaining with GE held the hymn and praher rejected the proposed pact. - i books, and Lynda, an Episco-Business agent Hugh McMan- palian, leaned over his arm to us said: An overwhelming ma- *ead responses. Occasionally jority of the membership (in they exchanged smiling glances. Lynn and Everett, Mass., The President, spending a plants) expressed the opinion weekend at his ranch, was being that the proposals were peanuts  ecumenical with his family. He and not enough, that the 38-| went to 8 a.m. Mass at St. Fran-month contract proposal wasicis Xavier Roman Catholic out of the question.  Church with the young Nugents,</p>
        <p>Science Shrinks Piles</p>
        <p>New Way Without Surgery Stops ItchRelieves Pain</p>
        <p>9m Twk. R  Per the</p>
        <p>Ant time mAmm has fooed a sew</p>
        <p>hnlinir rabttaaca with the aitoa-ttking abilitx te ahriak kemor-fkeida. stop iteklap, aad relieve paia  withoat sarpery.</p>
        <p>la case after case, whfle pently aiieviaf paia, aetaal redoction i) took place.</p>
        <p>tsdaM tiAtiwarB</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - After the Transport Workers Union disclosed that its members would take new strike votes concerning American Airlines, the line announced Sunday it had offered TWU employes a record-breaking contract.</p>
        <p>The AFL-CIO union had no comment on the latest airline offer. American said the offer tops the terms won by the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists last month after a 41-day strike against five of Americas competitors.</p>
        <p>Americans offer was made to 12,000 nonoperating employes ground crezs, mechanics, clerks, communications workers and supply personnel.</p>
        <p>It came after the TWU said it would take new strike votes across the nation in the wake of whatt he union said it considered a break-off of negotiations Saturday night.</p>
        <p>The lAM won raises of 56 cents an hour over a three-year period on a base pay scale of 13.52 hourly. The agreenjfi^ went above President Johnsons a n t i-inflationary guideline which recommended that no wage hike go beyond 3.2 per cent.</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey spoke about U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy today as he began a tour of California.</p>
        <p>Comparing President Johnson with Kennedy, the vice president said: Resident Johnsons view is a little more mature, a little more responsible, a little more in the puMic interest.</p>
        <p>Humphrey talked about Kennedy and his own political future on a television news interview taped for released in Southern CaliforrJa tonight.</p>
        <p>It began a two-day tour of the state in which he planned to visit federal installations and help Democratic candidates, including Gov. EMmund G, Brown in his race aginst Republican Ronald Reagan.</p>
        <p>Humphrey took an optimistic look at his own chances for sharing the 1968 presidential ticket with Johnson.</p>
        <p>Asked if the President had promised him a place on the ticket, Humphrey said: In the realities of politics, the President is required to have an option. I dont know who he will want as his running mate. Ill give him the full measure of devotion and if I do that, youll find the President wont be dissatisfied with me and well be walking side by side for many months and years.</p>
        <p>Humphrey also said the war in Viet Nam will continue fw* some time. He said financing the conflict is not beyon the means of the economy by a long shot.</p>
        <p>'The war, he said, takes a smaller slice of the gross national product than the Korean conflict and I do not think you can say it is beyond the means</p>
        <p>By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business News Analyst</p>
        <p>of the economy to bear if we use restraint.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The fine drizzle of inflation that dampened the outlook of economic forecasters earlier this year has now become a steady rain. Everyone is wet, consumer and manufacturer, worker and employer.</p>
        <p>Most importantly, housewives now have been caught in the downpour longer than nearly any other groupmainly because food prices have been at the head of this inflationand everyone knows a wet housewife is an angry one.</p>
        <p>Noyconsolation, either, to le^rn that the big manufacturers of our basic products are now having the same problem, for they might resolve their costs in higher consumer prices.</p>
        <p>Inflation now has become a basic issue in almost every home the White House included.</p>
        <p>So all-pervading is that seldom can you consider the war in Viet Nam, disturbing as it is, without also considering the inflationary impact at home of our heavy military spending.</p>
        <p>Military, government, consumer, business and labor have been competing hard for the nations available goods and services, and in some instances, the rising cost of certain products is a reflection of this.</p>
        <p>The cost of living index shows these higher prices concentrated in an area disturbing to householders, in food for example, in items such as milk, bread, eggs, bacon. The housewife remembers she had been I told food prices would drop. She is angry.</p>
        <p>Moreover, vacations cost more this year and medical bills went way up. Back-to-school clothes cost more in some areas</p>
        <p>ments around the kitchen table after the kids are in bed. The conclusion often is this: We need more money. Tnus, more pressure is generated on upcoming labor talks.</p>
        <p>And look at whats ahead:</p>
        <p>In October alone contracts expire at General Electric Co., 80,000 workers; Westinghouse,</p>
        <p>55.000, and Bell Telephone, 91,-300. In January the Lady Garment Worker contract expires,</p>
        <p>81.000, and in March the Teamsters, about 340,000.</p>
        <p>Auto labor contracts dont come up for renewal for a year, but the heat already is on.</p>
        <p>1 In many areas of the economy there is a dearth of cledit available and the goods arent always there either. Neither are the guideposts present to restrain wages and prices. But demand seems to be present.</p>
        <p>In theory, nothing now can stop labor from demanding a wage increase and business from seeking a price rise. And, in trip-action fashion, one frequently sets off the other.</p>
        <p>DEEDS</p>
        <p>J. C. Parker, al to Housing Authority $10.00 Maggie V. Mills to Alton Lee Mills, al $10.00 Ruth Evans Crawford, al to William B. Rouse Jr., al $10.00 William M. ONeal, al to Glenn H. Potter, al $10.00 Charlotte Roberts to Va. Electric &amp;amp; Power Co. $38,850.00 Sam E. Nelson, al to Percy B. Boyd $10.00 H. B. Sugg to Daisy Armfield $10.00</p>
        <p>Fred C. Englehart, al to Union Carbide Corp. $10.00 John H. C3eve, al to Charles S. Mangiapane Jr. $10.00 Martin Mailman, al to George A. Weimer, al $10.00 Judson H. Blount Jr., al to James M. Moye, al $10.00</p>
        <p>Thedc W. Bowers, al to Ray. mond M. Harris, al $10.00</p>
        <p>EXTENDED WEATHER</p>
        <p>Tuesday through Saturday temperatures will average near normal along coast but two to five degrees below normal over inland sections. Precipitation of about thre^uarters of an inch or more is expected during first part of period and possibly again near end of the week.</p>
        <p>Louise Shelton Clapo to James Wadell Robbins $10.()</p>
        <p>J. C. Paige, al to Bertram H. Groene, al $10.00 Apostolos Nicopoulos, al to W E. Flanagan, al $10.00 Theodore T. Reed Jr., al to William L. Lloyd $10.00 Louise H. Moseley to Elaine H. Harris $10.00 Paul A. Hampton, al to Donald Nelson Crawford $10.00 John B. Lewis, Tr., al to Willard L. Ellis, al $10.00 R. B. Lee, Comr. al to $4,675.25 Elizabeth Moore Mabry to C. Heber Forbes $10.00 J. C. Lanier, al to State of North Carolina $10.00 Pearl B. Owens to Carl B. Hannah, al $10.00 Sam C. Barwick, al to Grif-ton Methodist Church $8,500.00 Johnnie F. Edwards to Ka-therine K. Slay $10.00 R. B. Lee, Tr. to Ola L. Smith, al $10.00 Randolph F. Shifflett, al to William H. Millard $10.00 Ola L. Smith, al to R. B. Lee, Tr. $10.00</p>
        <p>Women Worry About The Men</p>
        <p>PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - The Arizona Governors Commission on the Status of Women wants the status of men improved.</p>
        <p>In its first report, the commissions 33 women members said the lot of men should be helped in two ways:</p>
        <p>Farm workers should be brought under state labor laws which provide minimum work standards.</p>
        <p>Men should be covered by the state equal pay law, which was designed to protect working women and minors.</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT - Ch. 9</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>5:00 Dennis 5:30 Dead-Alivt 6:00 News 6:10 Sports 6:25 Weather 6:30 Newt 7:00 Mars. Dillon 7:30 Gilligan 8:00 Run, Buddy 8:30 Lucy Show :00 A. Griffith 9:30 Fam. Affair 10:00 Jean Arthur 10:30 Got a Secret 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 Caroline 8:35 News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 Can. Camera 10:30 Hillbillies 11:00 Andy 11:30 Van Dyke 12:00 Noon News</p>
        <p>12:15 Farm News 12:25 Weather 12:30 Search 12:45 Gdg. Light 1:00 Love Life 1:25 Timely Tips 1:30 World Turns 2:00 Password 2:30 Houseparty 3:00 Tell Truth 3:25 News 3:30 Edge Night 4:00 Sec. Storm 4:30 Cartoons 5:00 Dennis 5:30 Dead-Alive 6:00 Early News 6:10 Sports 6:25 Weather 6:30 News 7:00 Marshal 7:30 Daktarl 8:30 Red Skelton 9:30 Petticoat 10:00 News 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>than they did during the summer. And compared with a year ago clothing was up substantially-</p>
        <p>All this is causing a few argu-</p>
        <p>GIVEN OVATION</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (AP)  An ovation greeted composer Dmitiri Sho.*;-takovich at a special concert Sunday night honoring him on his 60th birthday.  '</p>
        <p>IF YOU EXPECT THE FINEST IN Carpet and the Best Installation</p>
        <p>CALL S. J. WATERS AT</p>
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        <p>M thorMfli that ittifereri stonithiuff eUtementi like **Pilae have ceased to be a proUomt</p>
        <p>The secret is a new healinf ea^ stance (Bio-Dyne*)discoTeiy of a n orld-famoQs raseareh institata.</p>
        <p>1 kis sabstanca la now availabla in tuppotitwrit or esatmsnC frm ander the aame AtaU</p>
        <p>NO FLAP</p>
        <p>I VATICAN CITY (AP)-Pope Paul VI marked his 69th birthday today with a normal 18-hour work schedule and no arrangements for any special observance.</p>
        <p>WITN - Ch. 7</p>
        <p>Almost half of Greece is more! than 1,590 feet above sea level.'</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Car 54 7:30 The Monkees 8:00 Jeannie 8:30 R. Miller 9:00 Road West 10:00 Run for Life 11:00 News 11:15 Sports 11:25 Weather 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 Aspect 7:00 Today Show 7:25 Debnam 7:30 Today 9:00 Mr. Ed 9:30 Girl Talk 10:00 Eye Guess 10:25 News 10:30 Concentrat. 11:00 Chain Letter 11:30 Showdown 12:00 Debnam 12:15 Farmer</p>
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        <p>12:55</p>
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        <p>11:00</p>
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        <p>Our Lives The Drs.</p>
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        <p>Learn to speak effectively Meet People Easily Become a leader Increase your income Improve Your Memory</p>
        <p>ATTEND FREE DEMONSTRATION</p>
        <p>WNBE - Ch. 12</p>
        <p>MEETING</p>
        <p>Wednesday Sepl. 28rii - 8K)2 PM</p>
        <p>PLANTERS NATIONAL BANK</p>
        <p>COR. WASHINGTON &amp;amp; 3RD STREET</p>
        <p>Dale Carnegie Course</p>
        <p>j MONDAY</p>
        <p>5:00 Fun Hous* 5:30 Califor.</p>
        <p>6:00 News : 6:10 Weather I 6:15 News ' 6:30 Iron Horse 7:30 Rat Patrol 8:00 Felony : 8:30 Peyton PI. 9:00 B. Valley 10:00 News 10:10 Weather 110:15 B. Story 10:45 L. Young . 11 ;15 Untouchables tv sched gs TUESDAY 7:00 Compass j 7:30 Top of Morn. ! 8:00 R. Room 9:00 Early Show &amp;lt;10:30 Dating 11:00 D. Reed 11:30 Knows Best</p>
        <p>12:00 B. Casey 1:00 Newlywed 1:30 Time for Us 1:55 News 2:00 G. Hospital 2:30 Nurses 3:00 D. Shadows 3:30 Action Is 4:00 Market 4:30 Seahunt 5:00 Fun House 5:30 Hopa long 6:00 News 6:10 Weather 6:15 News 6:30 Combat 7:30 Rounders 8:00 Pruitts 8:30 On Rooftop 9:00 Fugitive 10:00 News 10:10 Weather 10:15 Rebel 10:45 L. Young 11:15 Movie</p>
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        <p>MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -Residents of suburban Oak Creek erected a 12-fot monument this week to the vanishing elm tree, victim of dutch elm disease.</p>
        <p>The stone monument, bearing jan engraved image of an elm i was erected in Forest Hill Memoral Park where five elms survive from an estimated 200 planted in 1930.</p>
        <p>At a Free Demonstration meetinf you wUl discover how Dale Carnefic traininy helps you develop self-confidence and knowhow to put your ideas across to Individuals and groups . helps you develop new skills In handUng people.</p>
        <p>Attending A Free Demonstra lion Meetinc May Be A Giant Ktrp Forward In Helping You Kcall/e Vour Goals And Aiu-bitioos In Ufe, Inereasing Your lucome And Happiuess.</p>
        <p>Presented By Leadership A Sales Training, Inc.</p>
        <p>Charles E. Kavanangh Representative</p>
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        <p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The Internal Revenue Service here received $8 recently from an anonymous giver, along with a hand-penned note reading: IJear sir,</p>
        <p>Here is a little more for you people to spend. Please spend it wisely. I try to be loyal to myj government.</p>
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        <pb facs="00088225_0007" />
        <p>w THE DAILY REFLECTORMONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 26, 1966</p>
        <p>Smith Edge Snead, Souchak In Match</p>
        <p>Hogan Hits Practice Balls</p>
        <p>Bantam Ben Fires 70 In Brook Valley Exhibition</p>
        <p>Then Smiles At Applause Snead Putts Pendulum Style</p>
        <p>Souchak Finds Ball In Odd Lie</p>
        <p>Stas: Therell</p>
        <p>and the Open, this year, was making a rare exhibition appearance. His last was eight years ago.</p>
        <p>The normal wordless Hogan</p>
        <p>fitted in this</p>
        <p>Brook Valley definition.</p>
        <p>He noted that too many courses now were just long shots. I dont rememoer play-</p>
        <p>Eighteen holes of golf yesterday left little doubt that Bantam Ben Hogan and the Slammer, Sam Enead, were still one of the greatest pair of golfers iive.  was  set  aside  for a few minutes jing on those courses, but I can</p>
        <p>The pair, playing in an fhe dressing room as he took | tell you every shot I made to-cxhibition match at Brook  difference with those who be-day, because  I like  this  one.</p>
        <p>Valley Country Club, along with  lieve a  course has to be 7300  Hogan also  noted  that  moving</p>
        <p>Durham pro Mike Souchak andiyrds long.  the  tees  back  and  forth  could</p>
        <p>Gastonia amateur Charlie Smith,  I You  dont have to have it make many  different  courses</p>
        <p>both broke par, but had their  he said. Youll just out of one,  and  that  Brook</p>
        <p>Be Changes</p>
        <p>Crown</p>
        <p>Heavy</p>
        <p>Of</p>
        <p>in</p>
        <p>Favorite</p>
        <p>Southern</p>
        <p>Rides</p>
        <p>Race</p>
        <p>An unhappy Clarence Stasa-</p>
        <p>problems on the putting green.</p>
        <p>drive your members away be- Valley</p>
        <p>this.</p>
        <p>Hogan turned the 7,007 yardi^^^ij  </p>
        <p>course in 70, while Snead had a |  he  iiked  to  play</p>
        <p>71. Smith carded an even par f.  that had charm, de-</p>
        <p>72, while Souchak had to settle  **&amp;lt;hbility,  and  one</p>
        <p>had the capacity for</p>
        <p>for a 74.</p>
        <p>In the match play, Hogan and Smith earned a one-up victory, coming back from being one down on the first nine.</p>
        <p>The match stayed even during the first eight holes, and Snead and Souchak grabbed the lead on the ninth hole. Snead and Hogan had both birdied the second hold, a par five, but Hogan slipped with a bogey on three, while Snead carded a bogey on</p>
        <p>I requiring certain skills. He said' rounding area.</p>
        <p>The exhibition, set up by Reynolds May, attracted some 4,000-5.000 people from the sur*</p>
        <p>A Gallon Of Gas Makes Fred Lose</p>
        <p>vich, after watching his Pirates go down to a 21-14 defeat at the hands of a team they had beaten 45-0 last year, promised that therell be some changes made this week.</p>
        <p>We didnt play as well as we should, he said, and the loss of additional men made it even harder for us to operate. Two more players were injured in the game, defensive end Bob Reynolds and tackle Bill Livermore. The latter will be out three weeks, while it is not certain yet how long Reynolds will miss.</p>
        <p>dislocated elbow in the open</p>
        <p>ing game and will miss most of the season.</p>
        <p>These three losses, coupled</p>
        <p>By ED YOUNG Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>Uneasy lie the heads that near-</p>
        <p>with the loss of Worth Springs, who dropped out of school, leaves the first two men at both ends and tackle on the left side of the defensive line out.</p>
        <p>ly everybody thought might</p>
        <p>wear the crown this year in Southern Conference football.</p>
        <p>William and Mary and East Carolina were most often mentioned as likely champions be-</p>
        <p>Because of these, Coach Stas- fore the season started. The sea-</p>
        <p>avich anticipates making a number of changes in his lineup, trying to shore up the hole in his defenses.</p>
        <p>son now is two weeks oldand neither has won a game.</p>
        <p>Some thought West Virginia would claim a third straight ti-</p>
        <p>in the game was that the offense moved the ball a little j r. ,  u better, he said. We got hurt Schnurr by those illegal procedure pen-on the sidelmes. He suffered a    </p>
        <p>The only encouraging thing tie, and some sU do. Thanks to</p>
        <p>a 24-13 conquest of W&amp;amp;M last Saturday, WVU today it tied for the league leadand worried</p>
        <p>Contest Scores</p>
        <p>By KEN RINGLE Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>MARTINSVILLE. Va. (AP) -live IifUi hole.  Theyre  still  arguing  about  the</p>
        <p>nineTi;f bLrot'thr^^^^^^  ol  sSndaTs  m</p>
        <p>hole. While slea^d P^ed^lslKrillfsptd^r^^^^^^^^^</p>
        <p>shot almost to the green, chipped  .  ,  .  ,.</p>
        <p>to within two feet and putted ,  .  wheel-base  cars  are</p>
        <p>out for the birdie to give him </p>
        <p>a front nine, 34, and a one-up Fairlane driver Fred Lorenzen</p>
        <p>a junkyard during NASCARs northern tour during July.</p>
        <p>Sunday he led 145 laps of the race in the Chevelle, which now is powered by the engine of Chevrolets upcoming answer to the Mustangthe 1967 Camero. And he had to fight his way up from 17th position in the starting pack.</p>
        <p>Dieringer, too, carried the ball</p>
        <p>for the small cars. He arrived </p>
        <p>Alabama 34, Louisiana. Tech 0 The Citadel 24, Richmond 6 Furman 28, Davidson 27 N.E. Louisiana 21, ECC 14 Florida 28, Mississippi State 7 Georgia Tech 42, Vanderbilt 0 Mississippi 17, Kentucky 0 Maryland 34, Wake Forest 7 Memphis State 16, South Carolina 7 Kinston 17, Rose 6 Oklahoma 33, Iowa State 11 New Mexico 28, Kansas State</p>
        <p>Saturday after the first day of qualifying and handily won the 20-lap qualifying race.</p>
        <p>kad in the team match. * of Elmhurst, 111., was the first But on the back nine, Hogan nian to finish  the 500-laps, but</p>
        <p>came up with a birdie on the, inspectors for  the National As-  x- ,, .</p>
        <p>par-three 12th hole to even the sociation for  Stock Car Auto  . We were  pretty tickled to  just</p>
        <p>match and leave him a stroke Racing (NASCAR) said he got  .  off  the truck and</p>
        <p>l^hind Snead.  , there with an illegal gas tank,  ^  ^be  qualifiers,</p>
        <p>said Dieringer, who started 21st</p>
        <p>Harvard 30, Lafayette 7 Louisville 16, South Illinois 0 Michigan State 42, Penn State</p>
        <p>It steyed that way until the i They say the first-place money 16th hole, when Hogan sank an- should go to second-place finish-other birdie shot and Snead er Darel Dieringer of Charlotte, took a par. That gave Hogan :N. C., who drove a 1966 Mercury and Smith the one-up lead, and Comet.</p>
        <p>evMed Snead and Hogan. i who finished third?</p>
        <p>On the long-par five 17th,   .,  </p>
        <p>Hogan and Souchak reached the .  Hueytown.</p>
        <p>peen in two. Souchak missed a'   Chevelle.</p>
        <p>and for the last 460 laps was seldom out of the top five, despite seven pit stops.</p>
        <p>For Lorenzen^ the day was one frustration after another.</p>
        <p>Though he started in second spot and led 171 laps the lead I changed hands seven times, and</p>
        <p>JO-footer for his eagle. Both' ''^batever happened to the bigjspeed-minded types like Allison,</p>
        <p>pulled down birdies however, cars, anyway?  i  Johnson  and  Ned  Jarrett of</p>
        <p>Snead missed the green, made a  Well, one thing may be that bad chip shot, and two putted the stock car pilots are learning for a bogey six, giving Hogan a  what drivers learned five years two-shot advantage in the medal i ago on the Grand Prix circuit in play.  Europe, at sportscar tracks in</p>
        <p>But the match almost evened this country, and recently at In-iip on Ihe final hole, a par- dianapolis, mainly that a light three. Hogan barely made it i car with a small engine can pay across the lake, and was 70 j dividends in fuel economy, hand- feet from the pin. He three hng and tire wear.</p>
        <p>putted for a bogey, giving him a 70 for the day. Smith got his par, halving the hole with Snead and Souchak, also with pars, and saved the match.</p>
        <p>All four of the golfers had praise for the course. Hogan called it excellent, while &amp;amp;uchak said it was head and ishoulders above many courses on the tour.</p>
        <p> The Durham golfer went on to say that he had never seen a course designed by Ellis Maples that he didnt like, lie said it couldnt compare with The Dunes or Pinehurst Number Two, but was as good as anything else around the Carolinas.</p>
        <p>Hogan, who played in only two tournaments, the Masters</p>
        <p>Old pro Junior Johnson saw the handwriting even before the start of the Martinsville race.</p>
        <p>Sure, Im going to a Fairlane next year, said the Ronda, N.C. roadrunner who won the pole at Martinsville in a full-size Ford Galaxie.</p>
        <p>Id have had one this year, but Ford wanted me to stick</p>
        <p>Greenville, S. C., in another Fairlane, were always on his tail.</p>
        <p>With all that come-from-be-hind action, the race was easily the most exciting in Virginia in recent memory for the fans, but for Lorenzen it was one long struggle.</p>
        <p>And the disqualification was the last straw.</p>
        <p>The inspectors ruled his car illegal, but ignored his request to check the fuel tanks of other cars to see if they, too, held 23.2 gallons instead of the regulation 22.</p>
        <p>Ix)renzen was plenty mad.</p>
        <p>If they give this win to some-1 body else, you've seen the last</p>
        <p>Minnesota 35, Stanford 21 Tennessee 28, Auburn 0 Clemson 40, Virginia 35 Duke 14, Pitt 7 Florida State 23, Miami 20 Virginia Tech 49, George Washington 0 Georgia 43, VMI 7 Rice 17, LSU 15 UNC 10, N.C. State 7 West Virginia 24, W&amp;amp;M 13 Indiana 26, Northwestern 14 Oregon State 17, Iowa 3 Kansas 35, Arizona 13 Michigan 17, Colifornia 7 Missouri 21, Illinois 14</p>
        <p>cities, and our receivers couldnt hold onto the passes.</p>
        <p>Work is planned this week to try and get rid of these problems.</p>
        <p>Stasavich felt that the offensive backs for the Bucs were much improved over the William &amp;amp; Mary game, and that the defensive backs had most of the work to do when tiie Indians had the ball.</p>
        <p>Turning to Northeast Louisiana, Stasavich said they played as hard for the first 10 minutes last year, but the Bucs got ahead, and began to intercept and killed the spirit. This year, the Indians didnt give up, and this was the difference in the game.</p>
        <p>This week, the Pirates will be playing host to Furman University in their second conference game of the year. Furman, fresh from a 28-27 victory over Davidson, is much improved over last season, when it upset the Pirates 14-7 in South Caro-ina.</p>
        <p>The Bucs should want revenge, and if the defenses can be straightened out, it may be a different story this Saturday night.</p>
        <p>Standings</p>
        <p>SOUTHERN CONFERENCE</p>
        <p>stiff.</p>
        <p>Ironically, if West Virginia is stopped short of the championship, a non - conference team probably will do the stopping. With dangerous W&amp;amp;M out of the way, WVU will be highly favored to win its only remaining bona fide conference games, with George Washington and The Citadel.</p>
        <p>But first, on the next two Saturdays, the Mountaineers must meet Virginia Tech and Pitt in games that count as SC encounters. And theres the rub.</p>
        <p>Hardly had WVU beaten W&amp;amp;M with Garrett Ford cast in the starring role, when Mountaineer coach Jim Carien started worrying about this weeks clash with Tech at Blacksburg,</p>
        <p>Well have to improve in every way to beat them, said Carlen. We have a running attack, with Ford, but we have to improve our passing and our defense. They look tough as anyone well play.</p>
        <p>W&amp;amp;M coach Marv Levy, whose Indians arent out of title contention yet, agreed on the im-portance of the WVU-Tech collision.</p>
        <p>I have to say it is the key</p>
        <p>game in the Southern Conference standings, said Levy, as strange as that sounds. I havent seen Tech, but I must say West Virginia is stronger than East Carolinawhich tied W&amp;amp;M 7-7.</p>
        <p>The weekend news from Blacksburg was no comfort to Carlen, for as his team beat W&amp;amp;M, Tech was exploding past George Washington 49-0.</p>
        <p>With a 1-0 conference record, WVU now is tied with The Citadel and Furman for the SC lead The Citadel, with Bill Ogburn scoring twice and amassing 235 yards offense, clouted Richmond Saturday night 24-6. Furman, meantime, got two touchdowns from Johnny Talkington and a pair of 'TD passes from Clyde Hewell to Robbie Hahn and shocked Davidson 28-26.</p>
        <p>GW was only one of three conference teams that went outside the league Saturday to their sorrow.</p>
        <p>East Carolina was the most notable casualty, getting upended 21-14 by Northeast Louisiana</p>
        <p>a team it had walloped 35-0 a year ago  despite some fine work by tailback Bill Baileh.</p>
        <p>VMI didnt come that close, although it scored first, in a 43-7 loss to Georgia in Roanoke. Hill Ellett passed to Jimmy Breck-enridge for a first-period VMI touchdownand then the deluge set in.</p>
        <p>SaturdayWilliam &amp;amp; Mary at George Washington; Richmond at Mississippi State; VMI at Boston College; West Virginia at Virginia Tech; East Tennessee at Ihe Citadel (N); Furman at East Carolina (N).</p>
        <p>Bill Campbell, a native of Homestead, Pa., will coach Columbia Universitys freshman football team next fall.</p>
        <p>Saadis Shoe Shop</p>
        <p>Prompt Expert Seirice AU Work Guaranteed Service While You Wait Located In College View Cleaners Main Plant</p>
        <p>Public Auction Sole</p>
        <p>Furman ..........</p>
        <p>The Citadel ......</p>
        <p>West Virginia ____</p>
        <p>Davidson .........</p>
        <p>East Carolina ........ 0</p>
        <p>VMI ................. 0</p>
        <p>William &amp;amp; Mary .... 0 George Washington .. 0 Richmond ........... 0</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>" jShlTon^stoid have been in a  f'acetacpTe</p>
        <p>Fairlane. After leading the race for 83 laps, his Galaxie packed up the differential wilh only 47 laps to go.</p>
        <p>For Allison, there was no argument at ali for the big cars. He started the trend to lighter engines with a 327-cubic inch Chevrolet engine he picked up at</p>
        <p>said. Apparently, in either big cars or small.</p>
        <p>, New York Universitys basketball team next season will include two sophomores of 6-feet-7.</p>
        <p>A TV FIRST</p>
        <p>LONDON (UPI) -The first boxing match to be televised was between Len Harvey and Jock McAvoy for the British light heavyweight title at</p>
        <p>Profesional Contract Malntvnance Janitorial Supplies Auto Cleaners Swimmini: Pool Supplies</p>
        <p>J.W. ALDRIDGE CO.</p>
        <p>307 Spruce St., Phone 758-4621</p>
        <p>FOR CASH AT PITT COUNTY COURTHOUSE DOOR 12:00 NOON FRIDAY, SEPT. 30, 1966 GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p>1966</p>
        <p>/2 TON CHEVY PICK-UP TRUCK, Serial No. C1446B113182 Heater, Heavy Rear Springs, Painted Rear Bumper, Undercoating &amp;amp; Mud Grip Tires. 375 Actual Miles.</p>
        <p>I960</p>
        <p>1949</p>
        <p>PONTIAC STAR CHIEF SEDAN, Serial No. 460W4679. Radio &amp;amp; Heater.</p>
        <p>CHEVY STAKE BODY 2 TON TRUCK, Serial No. 14SWG-2955. Motor Changed 1966.</p>
        <p>State Bank &amp;amp; Trust Co.</p>
        <p>TRUST DEPT.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p>4/5 QUART</p>
        <p>80 PROOF, OISTILLfO FROM GRAIN YLRELSKYi CIE.. HARTFOM. CONN . * MENLO PARK, CALIF.</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0008" />
        <p>Da9f  Gfwitv,  N.  Uf$&amp;amp;mt9i  2,  966</p>
        <p>Cubs Edge Ko ufax, Dodgers As Pirates Lose; Giants Get Win</p>
        <p>Atlantic Coast Quarterbacks Find Going Rough In Saturday's Games</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED</p>
        <p>  ^ battffed and</p>
        <p>^ fy  CHAS  National League lead- Glenn Beckert's triple Beckfrt  in  the AUan-</p>
        <p>Afriaard Pras Sftm Writer Bot Koate and the Dodgen ers M.  scored when seco! baseman *^  Conference  teDs the</p>
        <p>^  soon forget fWtzznan.  Despite  the loas the Dodgers Jim Lefebvre dropped Emie'*^'</p>
        <p>^  ieft-faander  od-  retained  their 1^^-game lead Banks two-oet pod flv  Duke's  Blue  Devils  have</p>
        <p>^ prtched Koofaz Scmday. hokfing over the second-place Pitts- Hank Aaron hil tiro homers ^ noiKMnference victories, Angeles Dodgers. People soch the Dodgers hitless fiw eight burgh Pirates, who lost tn At. ijwini? hhn a?  but  tbeir M-7 defeat of</p>
        <p>loss to</p>
        <p>PRESS Gamecock  _.  ^  State.</p>
        <p>bruised _  .  _</p>
        <p>Oemson quarterback Jim</p>
        <p>Addisoo, who suffered a {H^-sea-</p>
        <p>soo shookier injury, had his</p>
        <p>Memphis I Orvald went in and did a tre- structions and finished the game mendous job, Harp said.  He with 12 pass completimis, no in-knew be to get the job done terceptions and s yards poss-because we didn't have another ing gained. A 75-yard pass in quarterbadL The rollout was the final four minutes from Ad-</p>
        <p>Baseball Standings</p>
        <p>the Chicago Gibs cisco remained four back fay k-as the</p>
        <p>mg to Houston 54.  Pirates</p>
        <p>Holtzmans start was his last Pirates had the bases loaded retarning to the Univer- and one out in the eighth inning</p>
        <p>sity of minoiswhereheisase-but Qay Carrn c^mTw^</p>
        <p>shoulder bandaged at halftime   effective  play,  but  dison  to Jacky Jackson gave</p>
        <p>but led the Tig^ to a 40-35  be  ran  it  I  cringed., Gemson the victory,</p>
        <p>come-froiD-behiSh\victiHry over H be had gotten hurt . . j Chapel Hfll, Coach Jim</p>
        <p>  ______.______ A&amp;lt;k^  OTmpl^  12  Coach  Paul  Dietzel  kxAcd  oniHickcy  was  real  tickled with</p>
        <p>ft^ves Drevested tlw s^^^ing qoartohack A1 Woodallyards ^ South Carolinas beating at the the victory bis Tar Heels -_:___ HM_ - far two or thrM veek. Ffa rfku three touchdown aenais. ! hands of rnaffad M*mnhi gfata gained thrwgfa a field goal, a</p>
        <p>standnh</p>
        <p>~wcss im igw. uurjsx: f-irates, woo lOSK 10 Air giving him 42 for tfw s^asMi  oeieai  of  Pitts-    "T</p>
        <p>^  ^  ^  added his 21st  Satiinlay wffl cost them  .  ------------------ .</p>
        <p>rett Browiana are more hzmar. two4utti&amp;gt;r as tha rht^itmn nihi rtm^  f.  w,wa,  w  i..,.  __ ^ ft^ves oreventad th#  quarterback  A1  Woodall'^  ^  passes  for 283 yards and South Carolinas beiding at the the lictay bis Tar</p>
        <p>^ far two or three weeks. He  toucbdoi^ ai^.  of  rugged  Memphis  State</p>
        <p>located his elbow in the Pitt</p>
        <p>By</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>'Los Angeles PIt burgh San Fran. Philapma Atlanta St. Louis Cinannati .. Houston New York</p>
        <p>Satardays</p>
        <p>Atrkaa Lcaghe</p>
        <p>W . L. Pet G.B. m</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>71 76</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>79 86</p>
        <p>87</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>K</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>.615</p>
        <p>.551</p>
        <p>-545</p>
        <p>.516</p>
        <p>503</p>
        <p>.404</p>
        <p>.452</p>
        <p>.446</p>
        <p>.443</p>
        <p>.436</p>
        <p>Id</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>154</p>
        <p>174</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>zBalti. ...</p>
        <p>Detroit .</p>
        <p>Minnesota Chicago . .</p>
        <p>Cievtiand ..</p>
        <p>Cabfomia Kansas Gty Washn.</p>
        <p>Boston  70 88  .443  27</p>
        <p>New York , 68 88 .436 28 r-Clincfaed pennant.</p>
        <p>Satdniay's Reswhs Baltimore 6. California 3 Detroit 8, Mmnesota 1 Chicago 6, Washington 2 New York 1, Bo^ 0 Cteveiand 3, Kansas Gty 1 tidays Resslts Cahfomia f, Baltimore 1 Mfanesofa 1, Detroit 0 Cleveland 4, Kansas Gty 2 Washington 6-2, Chicago 4-1, 2nd game 11 innings New York 3, Boston 1 Todays Games Boston at Washington, 2 Detroit at California, N Only games scheduled Tnesdays Games Detrwt at California, N Geveland at Minnesota Boston at Giicago, 2, twi-night New York at Washington, N Kansas Gty at Baltimore, N Nadonal League  I</p>
        <p>W,</p>
        <p>91 90 87 84 83 79 74 68 64 58</p>
        <p>Resahs</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh 8, Atlanta 6 Chicago 4, Los Angeks 0</p>
        <p>. L. 64 66 68</p>
        <p>72</p>
        <p>73 76 80 88 92 99</p>
        <p>North Carolina's Danny Tal- this way:</p>
        <p>bolt, one of the few healthy</p>
        <p>____ tiuue OD ano I South Carolina is winless in ACC quarterbacks, threw the</p>
        <p>ior majwing in Engliah Ittera- stopped them with only one nin.1* outings and the status of li-yard fancfadown pass to half- . </p>
        <p>Pet- G.B. |f5;^_He teaded to school ate WiJiie Mays and WUlie McCo.i2!f^&amp;gt;^_  *!!!  on  the  line  of  sdtanuge,  id</p>
        <p>successful goal-line</p>
        <p>and a</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>pitching his best game of the vey gave Houston tiree un-season - a season which start- earned runs in toe first two in-,  ed out with him as a part-time nings^ but the Astros needed</p>
        <p>^  . singtes by Aaron Pointer, Bill</p>
        <p>14 While attending classes in the Heath and Bob Asproroonte for 12  he  pitched  for  the  Cubs,the winning run in the sixth</p>
        <p>Ig^ on weekends. Still his 11 victo- That run broke a tie gained for 23^ ries, against 15 defeats, are the the Giants by McCbveys two-27^ most for a Chicago pitcher this run homer.</p>
        <p>34 year. His latest was too much Phiiadelphias Rkh ADen hit</p>
        <p>. .  his 40th home rin the fourth in-</p>
        <p>I Until the ninth mnmg, the, ning, singled home the tying run ordy Dodger baserunner was in the ninth and sin^ across</p>
        <p>San Frandsco 9 IfaustofL 5  *  the winning run in the 13th</p>
        <p>13^ngs^^ ttton, 5,  nming  00  a  3-2  pi^.  against St. Louis.</p>
        <p>Philadelphia 5, St. Louis 4 Cincinnati 4, New York 3</p>
        <p>.587</p>
        <p>.577</p>
        <p>.561</p>
        <p>.538</p>
        <p>.532</p>
        <p>.510</p>
        <p>.481</p>
        <p>.436</p>
        <p>.410</p>
        <p>.30</p>
        <p>certain. Fair sufferl a bruised tbe Tar Heels a 10-7 victory  </p>
        <p>ban converted Alan Pastrana ! from defense to quarterback  and the 5Joot-ll jimior threw three touchdown</p>
        <p>Kansas City Rolls To Win Over Boston</p>
        <p>passes 'lend scored once himself as tbe Terps bombed Wake Forest,</p>
        <p>34-7.</p>
        <p>Duke Coach Tom Harp plans to replace Woodall, a 6-foot-5</p>
        <p>Gemson Coach Frank Howard was confident before the game the Virginia Cavaliers would have trouble scoring at an in f- Tigers season opener. But tbe Tigers were down 35-18 with less than 16 minutes left in the game.</p>
        <p>I knew the only way we</p>
        <p>sophomore, with Todd Orvald, could catch up was to gamble, a 6-foot-l jomar. Orvald started Howard said. So he told his Dukes opening game against quarterback to open up, throw</p>
        <p>ul gOj</p>
        <p>come-from-oehind toudidoim.</p>
        <p>We did have a lot of trouble stopping State, but we stopped them at the right tiroes, &amp;amp;k-ey said.</p>
        <p>Wake Forest Coadi Bill Tate most likely will be considering a quarterback change in the Deacon lineup this week. Sophomore Ken Erickson directed the Deacons to their only touchdown in the Maryland game.</p>
        <p>This Saturdays schedule has Gemson at Georgia Tech, Virginia at Duke, Maryland at Syracuse, North Carolina at</p>
        <p>minimum 24 batters when Scho- runs field led off the mnth with a sin- Greg</p>
        <p>gle.</p>
        <p>Sndays Reswtts</p>
        <p>Chicago 2, Los Angeles 1 Atlanta 6, Pittsburgh 2 Hottfton 5, San Frandsco 4  In other NL games, Philadel-Philadelpltia 4, St Louis 3, 13 pbia edged St. Louis 4-3 in 13 innings  innii^ and New York downed</p>
        <p>New York, 8, Cindimati 4, 2nd Cincinnati 84 in the first game game, rain  of a doubleheader. Rain wa^ied</p>
        <p>Todays Games  ^</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh at Philadelphia,' N ,</p>
        <p>Los Angeles at St uiis. .N San Franciaco at Atlanta .V ^</p>
        <p>New York at Cincinnati</p>
        <p>Hnlv  ^tKl 2-1  10  11,  NOW  YOrR</p>
        <p>Only gam scb^ed  Boston  j-1  and  Qeve-</p>
        <p>Taesday s Games  jajj^ topped Kansas City 4-2,</p>
        <p>^icago at New York, N  Koufax, now  25-9, gave  up just</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, N four  hits and  only  one  in the</p>
        <p>San Francisco at Atlanta, N  first inning  when  the  Cubs</p>
        <p>-jainst St Louis  By  HAL  BOCK  uHcmug  game againsi</p>
        <p>Holtanan erased him on a'doo- The Mets clinched ninth place Associated Press Sports Writer  "A?'  **" *'</p>
        <p>ble play so tbe 20-year-old by beating Cincinnati. Geon -  -  Woodall  Saturday  at Pitt.  Addisoa  followed  ]</p>
        <p>southpaw had faced only the, Jones drove in three New York</p>
        <p>Lew Dawson, who wasn't even</p>
        <p>Michigan, N. C. State it Wake Forest and South Carolina at home to Georgia for a night Howards in- game.</p>
        <p>Ron Swoboda and  among  the  American</p>
        <p>eHnSS^  leaders  last</p>
        <p>each.</p>
        <p>St. Louis Downs Cleveland To Hold East Lead</p>
        <p>Houston at Cincinnati, N Los Angeles at St. Louis, N</p>
        <p>scored both of their runs. Don Kessinger walked and scored on</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>SUPER</p>
        <p>MARKETS</p>
        <p>COLONIAL HEIGHTS GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p>CONTINUES THEIR GRAND OPENING</p>
        <p>I NO</p>
        <p>while</p>
        <p>Goossen knocked in two . .  -</p>
        <p>week, IS batting a cool .600 to</p>
        <p>day, a pretty good average for</p>
        <p>any jutdier.</p>
        <p>Dawson gunned five touch-1</p>
        <p>down passes, three of them to</p>
        <p>Chris Burford, as Kansas Gtyj</p>
        <p>|routed Bostixi 43-24 for its toirdj</p>
        <p>straight victory Sunday.</p>
        <p>The Chiefs attack moved I</p>
        <p>mostly along tbe ground in Kan-1</p>
        <p>sas Gtys first two triumphs</p>
        <p>with Dawson attempting only 281</p>
        <p>passes and completing 16. Quar-</p>
        <p>By RON RAPOPORT  Jerbacks with leffl than  at-j</p>
        <p>Associated Press Sports Writer  included  in  the;</p>
        <p>AFL list  of  top passers  last j</p>
        <p>Prentice Gautt couldnt be- so Dawson missed the cu-1| lieve it, but the Geveland ^ff.</p>
        <p>Browns found it real enough.  Hes not likely to miss it this</p>
        <p>With St. Louis and Geveland wee^^-tied 28-28 in the final quarter j Against the Patriots Dawson Sunday, Cardinal back Gautt completed 20 of the 32 passes he burst through the Browns line  attempted  for  220 yards,</p>
        <p>and ran 23 yards for the score  Dawson,  a  10-year pro,  now</p>
        <p>that gave St. Louis its 34-28  completed 36 for 60 ... a</p>
        <p>margin and raised its Eastern  percentage ... and thrown |</p>
        <p>Division-leading NFL record to  10 touchdown  passes. He  has(</p>
        <p>3-0.  I gained 511 yards through the</p>
        <p>It was a draw play and tiie^^-blocking was beautiful, Gauttt  Elsewhere in  the AFL Sun-</p>
        <p>said later in a jubilant St. Louis  New York  and San Diego</p>
        <p>locker room. No one touched Preserved their unbeaten me. I couldnt believe it. records while Buffalo stepped After the touchdown, Cardinal   Ibe  Eastern  Division</p>
        <p>extra-point kicker Jim Bakkenl^ace.</p>
        <p>missed his first point-after in   7-0  at the half,</p>
        <p>125 attempts and for a while it | rallied to beat Denver 16-7. San seemed as if it might cost St.  three  interceptions</p>
        <p>Louis the ball game.  :  from  Speedy  Duncan  and  de-</p>
        <p>The Browns, who bad blown a Seated Oakland 25-20. Buffalo</p>
        <p>I I I</p>
        <p>I FREE</p>
        <p>CaEBMTION!</p>
        <p>OPEN EACH NIGHT TIL 9:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>MONDAY NIGHT</p>
        <p> CHILDREN'S NIGHT - 7 TO 9 PM </p>
        <p>28-14 lead, came roaring back to a first down on the St. Louis 11. Two of Geveland quarterback Frank Ryans passes were incomplete and Ernie Green picked up a yard on a run. On the fourth-down play, Ryan</p>
        <p>beat Houston 27-20 when Hagood Clarke intercepted a George Blanda pass with 27 seconds to' play and returned it 66 yards for! a TD.  I</p>
        <p>Denver threw a scare into the i Jets but two third period field</p>
        <p>threw at rookie Milt Morin in the  ^im  Turner  kept New</p>
        <p>end zone, but Cardinal defender i within striking distance</p>
        <p>^ ICE CREAM, BALLOONS, SUCKERS FOR THE KIDS</p>
        <p> COUNTRY HAM TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT 9 P.M.</p>
        <p>CHILDREN UNDER 16 ONLYI</p>
        <p>TUESDAY NIGHT</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY NIGHT</p>
        <p>MOTHER'S NIGHT</p>
        <p>FATHER'S NIGHT</p>
        <p>REGISTER FOR FREE COUNTRY HAM TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT 9 PM</p>
        <p>REGISTER FOR FREE COUNTRY HAM TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT 9 PM</p>
        <p>MOTHERS ONLY</p>
        <p>FATHERS ONLY</p>
        <p>THURSDAY NIGHT</p>
        <p>FRIDAY NIGHT</p>
        <p>ECC NIGHT</p>
        <p>FAMILY NIGHT</p>
        <p>REGISTER FOR FREE COUNTRY HAM TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT 9 PM</p>
        <p>REGISTER FOR FREE COUNTRY HAM TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT 9 PM</p>
        <p>ECC STUDENTS ONLY</p>
        <p>ANYONE CAN WIN</p>
        <p>1^-   WAAFM  TTin</p>
        <p> PLUS 1,000 GREENBAX STAMPS </p>
        <p>TO BE GIVEN AWAY EACH NIGHT TO 10 LUCKY WINNERS.</p>
        <p>100 STAMPS TO EACH WINNER</p>
        <p>DON'T FORGET TO REGISTER AT ALL 5 STORES-</p>
        <p>FREE V.S MUSTANG</p>
        <p>TO BE GIVEN AWAY NOV. 16</p>
        <p>Jerry Stovall reached in front of him and knocked it down.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere in the league, Green Bay beat Los Angele 24-13, Dallas took Minnesota 28-17, Baltimore bombed San Frandsco 36-14, Detroit bounced Atlanta 28-10, Philadelphia smothered ;New York 35-17 and Washington got past Pittsburgh 33-27.</p>
        <p>Green Bay, now the only unbeaten team in the Western Division, had its troubles with the iRams before an 80-yard pass play from Bart Starr to Elijah Pitts iced the game. The Packers lost five fumbles in blowing a 17-0 lead.</p>
        <p>Dallas remained unbeaten in the Eastern Division with three 80-yard scoring marches in each of the last three quarters. Cowboy quarterback Don Meredith completed just eight passes but two were good for touchdowns to Bob Hayes and Buddy Dial.</p>
        <p>Lou Michaels tied an NFL record with five field goals and Alvin Haymond was tough on defense in the Baltimore victory. Michaels kicks ranged from 23 to 41 yards and Haymond set ,up scores with two kick returns and a pass interception.</p>
        <p>Milt Plum completed 13 of his .first 16 passes and threw two scoring strikes as Detroit dealt Atlanta its third straight loss.</p>
        <p>Norm Snead pitched three scoring passes and Philadelphia easily beat New York. Snead was 10 for 18 and 179 yards and Pete Retzlaff caught five passes for 120 yards and a touchdown.</p>
        <p>Charley Gogolak kicked four field goals and Washington scored 24 points in the second half as the Redskins came from behind to beat Pittsburgh. Sonny Jurgensen passed for two touchdowns.</p>
        <p>and Joe Namath finally hit Matt Snell with a five-yarder in the final period for the winning score. Turner added another field goal after the 'TD.</p>
        <p>Duncans interceptions and John Hadls sdid quarterbacking led the Giargers to their third straight victory. HadI ran for one TD, passed 19 yards to Jacques McKinnon for another and set up a third with a 44-yard aerial to Lance Alworth.</p>
        <p>Garke stole Blandas 52nd pass of the game and raced into the Oiler end zone for Buffalos winning TD against Houston. The interception came with 27 seconds to play and then Garke grabbed another Blanda pass with three seconds remaining, ending Houstons last hope.</p>
        <p>The victory left Buffalo and Houston tied with 2-2 records in the East behind New Yorks 3-0. Kansas Gty and San Diego share the Western lead with 3-0 marks.</p>
        <p>YOU GET DOUBLE GREENBAX STAMPS EVERY TUESDAY AT ALL 5 HARRIS SUPER MARKKS</p>
        <p>MOSS CONSULTANT</p>
        <p>RACINE, Wis. (UPI)  Stirling Moss, famed international racing driver, has joined I the growing coterie of sports personalities who have joined lithe business world in careers I base J on their sports reputations.</p>
        <p>Moss is racing consultant to the Johnson Wax Co., which</p>
        <p>Crew Simulator Is In Boathouse</p>
        <p>CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) Students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have -new device to fool around with  but this one is for the crew.</p>
        <p>A crew simulator has been installed in the institute Charles River boathouse. It contains a practice crew shell set in water which can be pumped past the boat house at various speeds.</p>
        <p>Instruments on each oarlock allow coaches to determine how much effort each man is exerting.</p>
        <p>ship of the Canadian-American pallenge Cup series of six international road races to be held in North America this fall. Moss has been named commissioner of the Challenge Cup series by the Sports Car Club of America, which sanctions the races.</p>
        <p>After checking 10,600 ABC-approved 300 games, statistics showed that the average age of</p>
        <p>RCAVictor WEEK</p>
        <p>SEPT. 25th THRU OCT. 4th</p>
        <p>1967 Models Now On Display</p>
        <p>AT</p>
        <p>MURRAY'S APPLIANCE CENTER</p>
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        <pb facs="00088225_0009" />
        <p>The Farm Scene</p>
        <p>By S. C. WINCHESTER Connty Extension Chairman</p>
        <p>Cattle Feeding Rack</p>
        <p>CATTLE FEEDIM lACI Ftr</p>
        <p>WLAN NO 52f</p>
        <p>Do you raise cattle? Want to weight materials.</p>
        <p>cut your feed costs? If so, this</p>
        <p>plan for a cattle feeding rack may be for you.</p>
        <p>You can feed 25 head of cat</p>
        <p>tle in  one  rack if you feed</p>
        <p>them  free choice  and  twelve</p>
        <p>This  plan  is  designed so that  head  if  fed  all at the  same</p>
        <p>111  PAI1  hiiilH  o  r:4rU  fimo</p>
        <p>you can build a rack with slanting bars rather than vertical bars. It was developed for dairymen who feed their cattle roughage in pastures or open lots. Dairymen say that a rack -avUh slanting bars performs bet-!3er than one with vertical bar rin three ways: 1) Cows wasti -less feed; 2) slanting bart brace the rack and strengthen it on all four sides, and 3) slant-*</p>
        <p>.Ing bars cost less to build.</p>
        <p>-p* 'Hiis t3T)e of rack is easy to</p>
        <p>^ build. You can move it when- A group of businessmen and ever necessary because it is scholars plan to rebuild much of ' portable and built with 11 g h t-lthe city of Port Royal, Jamacia.</p>
        <p>time.</p>
        <p>The klant in the bars makes it hard for cattle to pull their h^ds out when they have a i^uthful of hay. Excess hay ps back into the feed igh instead of dropping in-the mud underfoot, obtain working drawings Of this cattle feeding rack, contact yir county agricultur a 1 extension office and ask for Plan No. 5925.</p>
        <p>Ask $750,11110 To Repair 'Blight'</p>
        <p>RYE, N.Y. (AP)  A group of do-it-yourselfers who live on this city fatheri!^reqi|esifor renewal have asked Washington to keep $750,000 in urban renewal funds. They promised to spruce up the place themselves.</p>
        <p>Banding together as the Rye United Improvement Committee, the group appealed to Robert C. Weaver, secretary of the Department of Housing and Ur-ban Development to reject the city fathes request for renewal funds.</p>
        <p>The Rye Planning Commission calls the block containing 52 cottage-like houses the most blighted area in the city and contends it is a bad inuence on the surrounding areas.</p>
        <p>TTie houses date from the early part of the century, when they were built as summer beach cottages. Most of th cottages have since been converted to year-round use.</p>
        <p>Residents of the block say theyve started their own clean, up campaign, and point to eight uninhabited cottages which they</p>
        <p>Tobacco</p>
        <p>Tips</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>By 8. J. WKS Pitt County Tobacco gtm ^</p>
        <p>tore down at their own expense.</p>
        <p>The basic issue, the residents say, is that they would not be able to afford to live in their neighborhood any longer if the renewal plan went through.</p>
        <p>RAISES QUESTION</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)-A segregation groups march to a downtown Negro district last night touched off rock-throwing and raised some question whether a similar march scheduled tonight would be permitted.</p>
        <p>Tobacco stalks have been cut and the stubbles have been plowed out in approximately 60 percent of the tobacco fields in Pitt County. It is not too late to perform this important cultural practice in the other forty percent of the tobacco fields.</p>
        <p>Nematodes will continue feeding on tobacco roots and multiplying until December in those fields where the tobacco stubbles have not been plowed out.</p>
        <p>If the roots are plowed out and exposed to the drying action of the sun and wind the nematode build-up wUl be greatly reduced.</p>
        <p>Qeaning up old tobacco fields will also cut disease losses from te'own spot and mosaic as well as causing a reduct i o n in next years tobacco insect population.</p>
        <p>Budworm pupae over-winter in the top two or three inches of the soil. Turning the stubbles for nematode control also reduces the number of moths which will emerge next spring to lay eggs from which the larvae that destroys tobacco will develop.</p>
        <p>Homworm population can also be reduced substantially by destroying the tobacco stalks and plowing out the subbles. .</p>
        <p>About two weeks after the office.</p>
        <p>Waiver Granted Willing Recruit</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)  Nineteen-year-old William Samuel Davis wanted to join the Army OTd wasnt about to let a half inch stand in his way.</p>
        <p>Davis stands 6-feet-6% inches  one half inch above the Armys maximum height requirement. But he didnt let that worry him.</p>
        <p>He wrote President Johnson. Davis told toe President of his desire to join the Army in spite of his tallness. He said he had a 10th grade education and was working in a funeral home in his native Gaffney, S.C.</p>
        <p>His letter went via toe Presidents military liaison to toe Department of toe Army ... to Headquarters, Third U.S. Army at Fort McPherson, Ga., . . . to toe Army recruiting officer at Charlotte.</p>
        <p>A physical requirement waiver must be sought.</p>
        <p>The waiver request went the return route of government channels and Davis waited.</p>
        <p>But Davis wanted things to move faster and put in a call to toe White House. He told his story to a presidential aide.</p>
        <p>A check showed that Davis had been approved for Army duty but the letter with toe good news went to his mothers home and he hatoit received it. There was nwre waiting.</p>
        <p>Davis telephoned toe White House again.</p>
        <p>Wham! Bam! Get that man in toe Army was toe order Sgt. E. L. McSwain said he received in the Charlotte recruit-</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, C.-Monday, Septeinber 26, 1966-9</p>
        <p>Now-for the young fomHy with a lot of living to do...</p>
        <p>New MAYTAG</p>
        <p>youngfanufy</p>
        <p>automatics</p>
        <p>stubbles have been plowed out, the field should be harrowed and disced so that toe crop residue will be completely buried where it will decay before spring.</p>
        <p>Every day of delay will mean more nematodes, more mosaic, more brown spot, more insects and more dollars down the drani in 1967.</p>
        <p>Lets make Pitt County a 100 percent REDUCE 6 PESTS County by cutting tobacco stalks and plowing out the stubbles</p>
        <p>ri^t DOW.</p>
        <p>S^. McSwain complied and William Samuel Davis was sworn into the Army last week. He now is in basic training at Ft. Bragg, in southeastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Didn't Sign In, Missed A Prize</p>
        <p>Dependable new washers and dryers with a lot of life in them... designed and priced for today's young families.</p>
        <p>POTTSTOWN Pa. (AP) ^ Pottstown merc)iants give away cash prizes, from $300 to $1,000,1 from a lucky barrell in a different downtown store each week.</p>
        <p>There are 100,000 names \n the barrel. The only requirement for winning is that toe winner must have signed in at the store during toe week. PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)  The name of toe Rev. Wilfred Twenty-five Rhode Island high Penny, an Episcopal minister school pupils will swap places was drawn recently. He didnt</p>
        <p>Plan Overseas Pupil-Exchange</p>
        <p>with a like number of Scottish pupils next year.</p>
        <p>The three-week exchange next May will be sponsored by the Providence branch of toe English-Speaking Union.</p>
        <p>LBJ  Lady Bemus Jones isnt really worried about Viet Nam, or InflaUon. even though she toares initials with some&amp;lt;me who does. The Basset Hound is merely wondering how the University of South Carolina manages to cope with the out-sized crop of student* ra the campus where she permits SC Pres. Thomas Jones and family to live with her.</p>
        <p>(AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Thieves Get 39 Miles Of Wire</p>
        <p>PHOENK, Ariz. (AP) -Thieves stripped 39 miles of copper wire worth $3,405 from teleph(Mie lines stretching from Gila Bend to Maricopa, Authorities said the teleitoone line has been dead since a fire earlier this year.</p>
        <p>win his $400 prize, however, because he didnt sign in. The barrel was located at the Catholic Shop.</p>
        <p>TERMITES?</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>Ivey Coward</p>
        <p>CO., INC.</p>
        <p>YOUR COWAR-DEX MAN</p>
        <p>Tel. 752-5175</p>
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        <p>AAeytag dealer within flrsf yearj thereafter installatiofi is extra.</p>
        <p>Trim New Maytag Hafo-of-Heat* Dryers</p>
        <p>S inches slimmer than previous models! Yet theyH fake &amp;lt;rrr any load a New-Generation Ma:^g Washer can handle. Maytags famous circle of heat dryingl Porcelain enameled drum and dryer top! A fine mesh Dacron lint filter .that trails mmo lint! A fresh air system that chancea and filters the air in the drying</p>
        <p>chambw every 2 seconds! A special damp-dry setting! Sfete door with magnetic latch jwsmstpriceleis feature of all-soUd Maytag</p>
        <p>ipsS'Sttl'" 169"</p>
        <p>S years on</p>
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        <p>FROM THE NEW GENERATION OF DEPENDABLE MAYTAGS</p>
        <p>Greenville TV &amp;amp; Appliance</p>
        <p>921 DICKINSON AVE.</p>
        <p>AflAlCOLM C. WIUIAMS, OWNERNotice To Home Heating Oil Consumers</p>
        <p>Members of this Association are eager to serve you with your fuel oil r needs and with prompt and reliable service. We urge that you keep Your Bills paid in accordance with agreed credit terms with your supplier so that we may maintain our high standard of service.</p>
        <p>Last Season's Heating Oil Accounts Must Be Paid Not Later Than</p>
        <p>October 1st Unless Otherwise Agreed Upon- Or We Will Be</p>
        <p>Forced To Sell For (ash Only It Unable To Pay Your Account Now Please Call Your Supplier.</p>
        <p>CREDIT INFORMATION IS USTED IN OUR FILES AND AVAIUBIE AT All TIMES FOR THE LOCAL CREDIT BUREAUGreenville Oil Distributors Association Inc. 'r.</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0010" />
        <p>13-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.-&amp;gt;Monday, September 26, 1966</p>
        <p>NX. Industry Attains Billion Dollar Payroll</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)The textile industry has produced North Carolina's first annual billion dollar payroll.</p>
        <p>Fi?u;es of the State Employment Security Commission, issued Saturday, set the textile payroll for 1965 at $1,032,344,150.</p>
        <p>That was an increase of more then $114 million over the $918 million North Carolina textile workers received in 1964.</p>
        <p>The 1965 employment and wage data of workers insured under the state employment security law, covering about 75 per cent of the states non-agri-cultural employes, were sum</p>
        <p>marized in the ESC report.</p>
        <p>The report said there were 1,-093,039 persons employed in 1965, this being up 6.5 per cent over the 1,026,708 employed in 1964. Their 1965 earnings were set at $4,733,732,131, an 11.5 per cent increase over the year before.</p>
        <p>Furniture and funiture fixtures manufacturers provided the states second largest payroll. They paid their 56,730 workers $174,396,549. Those employes made up 9.8 per cent of the industrial workers.</p>
        <p>Gross wage payments of the apparel industry were $174,396,-</p>
        <p>549 to 56,730 workers, who rep- riod. resented 9.5 per cent of the in- The reports breakdown of the dustrial work force.  sUtes 10 largest industrial</p>
        <p>Other manufacturer leaders counties showed Mecklenburg were tobacco with 31,806 em- with 114,246 workers earning ployes making $157,883,717; food $600,220,477 a year; Guilford and kindred products with 36,-with 100,055 jobholders who re-396 workers receiving $154,055.- ceived $485,517,898; Forsyth 601; and electric machinery and with 68,334 workers getting equipment makers who paid $351,658,308; Gaston where 45,-$156,093,013 to their 28,860 em- 097 received $197,463,145; and ployes.    Wake  with 43,920 receiving $203,-</p>
        <p>The ESC said the states non-611,280. farming work force increased  Other counties, in order, from 661,441 in 1950 to 1,093,089{were: Buncombe, 37,190 and in 1965 while gross wage pay-,$106,065,489; Catawba, 36,733 ments rose from $1,608,614,392 and $151,949,149; Durham, 30,-to $4,773,732,131 in the same pe- 839 and $139,444,830; Cabarrus,</p>
        <p>30,457 and $123,961,951; and Alamance, 29,440 and $129,622,996.</p>
        <p>Winter's Crowd Gone In Summer</p>
        <p>The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Are You Looking For An Intangible Heaven?</p>
        <p>appllcitS^' I voll-ble</p>
        <p>for public Inspection #t the m^n studie of WNCT-AM, Evens Street Extension, Greenville, North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Sept. 26, 27, and Oct. 3, 4, 1966</p>
        <p> WNCT-FM Pursuant to Rule 1.580 of he Federal Communications Commission, notice is hereby given that Roy H. ParK imadcastiri. Inc. has tendered tor til-?ng with said commission an apptic^ !n fnr renewal of cense of FAA Sta-WNCT-FM, 107.7 mcs., Greenville,</p>
        <p>SOVOt/ftHOE 6URNED DOUlN! 90 (JHAT?</p>
        <p>A UTTLE TRAeeOV NOW AND TMEN kXa MAkE HW ABemft PER50NMAN A5 0ORN1O SUFFER.'</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>HE'-^NOTA A DOSm</p>
        <p>IHETHEaOSV i6 Die SAME</p>
        <p>I DONteaiEVE IT-.D06 Uia^eORN TO BTTH PEOPLE 0NT&amp;gt;1E lC,ANDTDSLKP IN THE 5N</p>
        <p>irMktmjhmKt</p>
        <p>rwAT'd A sooK HW-rii4</p>
        <p>Ptwort MVaNTSD</p>
        <p>NOHyMOtS'</p>
        <p>' THift om'6 A0OUT</p>
        <p>or'CT^ o</p>
        <p>Me AV.*TM gAON</p>
        <p>te AOffC)fj t THay</p>
        <p>A\otza of i.eaa a , AOMMfiMm o&amp;lt;?NAMINt</p>
        <p>Toee takbn Riou#uy HO/f ON u&amp;gt; Tieipa-</p>
        <p>WiuuWiU.! ON oatdfM Mjjhcga 4IGP ON ACCOUNT Oa </p>
        <p>r\\ HAHI  TOAtUB  H</p>
        <p>3FHR</p>
        <p>LETS SE^ WHAT'S 80M6THIHG</p>
        <p>A little " OiaFERfNT O for DINHER 2 TONIGHT?</p>
        <p>HODEIDAH, Yemen (AP) -This Red Sea port city is half empty of people in the summer and overcrowded in winter, because of its weather.</p>
        <p>When the summer heat begins in May, the temperature soars to 113 degrees and the humid-ty rises to between 80 and 100 per cent Paper becomes soggy, clothes stick to the body and hair wilts.</p>
        <p>All those who can afford to move up to the capital city of Sanaa, 10,000 feet up in the inland mountains. Sanaas weather is brisk and refreshing in summer, and the humidity is as low as 12 per cent</p>
        <p>In winter, a reverse migration 'Akes place. Sanaa becomes very cold and rainy, and Hodei-dah receives an influx of people seeking its warmer weather and bright sunshine.</p>
        <p>Dr. Kirkpatrick asks a challenging question. The answer has caused debates for thousands of years. But mull over the views below and then see how they harmonize with your own concept of the Hereafter. Do you expect an intangible Heaven or one where youll recognize your loved ones?</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph. D., M. D.</p>
        <p>CASE A-536; Dr. John Kirkpatrick is a remarkable clergyman.</p>
        <p>After his own 4 children were of high school age or beyond, he and his devoted wife, Alice, did something unique.</p>
        <p>They decided to adopt 4 other children of Oriental, Indian and other racial backgrounds.</p>
        <p>Some of these youngsters had lost one or both arms, too.</p>
        <p>So this large parsonage family probably illustrates the most cosmopolitan and harmonious example of brotherly love to be</p>
        <p>found anywhere in the U.S.A.</p>
        <p>As Dr. Kirkpatrick and 1 were visiting recently we began dis-</p>
        <p>tion</p>
        <p>tlon</p>
        <p>North Carolina. The parties to this</p>
        <p>Skinn; dS o:</p>
        <p>will, William S. Wellons and John B.ib-</p>
        <p>cock.</p>
        <p>VtUUi rcLCUuy wc uegdn  ;^'^'7,'cense  to  operate  the  sta-</p>
        <p>CUSSing what heaven may be';.^,! public interest was tendered like.  flllng  wlth the Federal Cc.mmuni-</p>
        <p>Dr. Crane, he asked, what</p>
        <p>Many Cases Heard In City Recorders Court</p>
        <p>Judge Cliarles H. disposed of the following cases in Municipal Recorders Court Sept. 22:</p>
        <p>Albert Let Crimilty, Rt. 1, Sox *1, Greenville, Improper mufflers, proyer for iudgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Jimmy Lee Hellowey, Negro, 1500 Clerk St., cereless end reckless driving, 30 days |ail end roads, suspended on condition thet he not operete a motor vehicle except to end from work and while on lob for 60 days, pay for Rescue Squad $10, pay $25 cost deducted, sur* render drivers's license to clerk for 60 days;</p>
        <p>Mery Hurst Seymour, 649 Feirlene Rd., speeding, verdict net gulty</p>
        <p>Wllliem McKinley Harper, Negro, Rt. 2, Farmvllle, drunk, 30 days |eil end roads, suspended on payment of $30 cost deducted;</p>
        <p>Bertha Lowe Haithcote, 109 Alexander Circle, speeding, verdict guilty of exceeding stated speed limit, prayer for Iudgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>David Barnet, Negro, 432 Bonner Lane, assault, 30 days lell and roads, suspended on payment of $25 cost deducted;</p>
        <p>William Earl Phillips, Negro, Rt. 2, Box 659, Ayden, disorderly conduct, prayer for Iudgment continued to;</p>
        <p>Larry B. Hinson, 410 Green St., drunk.</p>
        <p>WhoHhrr 30 days jail and roads, suspended on TTiieuucc condition that he pay $20 cost deducted,</p>
        <p>Fellowship Meet Slated Friday</p>
        <p>Coastal Plains Chapter of the Full Gospels Businessmens Fellowship International will meet Friday, Sept. 30 at 7 p.m. at the Barbecue Lodge in Kinston.</p>
        <p>Rev. Johnnie Lewis of the Spring Lake Methodist Church will be the speaker.</p>
        <p>Supper tickets will be sold at the door for $1.50 each. The Lodge is on highway 70 west.</p>
        <p>placed on probation for 3 years under the supervision of the Alcoholic Probation Officer, thet he cooperate with him fully and abide by his instructions;</p>
        <p>James Hinton, Negro, 1620 S. Pitt St., drunk, 30 days fall and roads, suspended on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Ourwood Emett Stroud, Greonvllle, drunk, called and felled to appear, capias Issued,</p>
        <p>Curt Martin, 002 Howell ST., assault, nol protsed;</p>
        <p>Georgiana Lawson Patrick. Negro, Box 262, WInterville, passing the right, verdict not guilty;</p>
        <p>Clifton Wooten Jr., Negro, 1507-B Fleming St., Improper exhaust, pay cost;</p>
        <p>Charles Tyson, Negro, Rt. 1. Box 191-A, Greenville, drunk, verdict not guilty;</p>
        <p>Robert Joseph Carney. Negro, 208-A Cadillac St., non support, nol pros with leave;  ,</p>
        <p>Charles Osborn Whitehurst, Wmter-haven. Fie., Indecent exposure, 30 days iail and roads, suspended on payment of $30 cost deducted and remain of good behavior end not violate any law for 2 years;</p>
        <p>Curtis E. Gatlin, Negro, 10S N. Ford St., drunk, 30 days lall and roads, sus-pendel on payment of $20 cost deducted;</p>
        <p>Frederick Behren Haar, 608 E. Ninth St., fall to stop for stop sign, plead guilty to fall to see Intended movement could be made in safety, prayer for Iudgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Lillie Pearl Hardy, Negro, Rt. 4, Box 37, Greenville, fail to yield, verdict not</p>
        <p>guilty;</p>
        <p>Easter W. Williams, Negro, Rocky Mt., hit and run driving, verdict not guilty;</p>
        <p>Lois Bullock Narron, Churchill Dr., speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Nathaniel Latham Boxt, Wilmington, speeding, prayer for Iudgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>is your own concept of the Hereafter?</p>
        <p>Many glib thinkers of the past have stoutly maintained that you are low-brow if you dont admit that (Jod is merely a diffuse, intangible Spirit.</p>
        <p>Instead, if you imagine God as having human features, they charge that you are reading your own wishful thinking into religion.</p>
        <p>Heaven is just a spiritual concept, they insist.</p>
        <p>But I disagree heartily!</p>
        <p>Although I exist merely in in the minds of my four living children while they are away from my home, there is still a solid, 190 pounds of me right here at the typewriter as I write this daily Case Record!</p>
        <p>True enough, (]k)d can also be everywhere as a Spirit, but that doesnt mean there is no fle$h-and-blood God at the source.</p>
        <p>When Jesus thus made his Apostles farewell at the Last Supper, remember what he said?</p>
        <p>I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine, until that day when I drink it new with you in my Fathers kingdom. (M rrhew 26:29).</p>
        <p>Doesnt that suggest that Christ expects to eat and drink in the next world which we call Heaven? But could spirits eat and drink solid food?</p>
        <p>Jesus was so very fond of banquets and dinner parties down here on earth that I feel sure there will be similar tangible feasting in Heaven.</p>
        <p>As regards the sterile idea that Heaven is just a group of spirits that float around like wisps of fog, can you imagine what fun it would be for</p>
        <p>SUT'?om"rs..o!%n7.7tem^^</p>
        <p>Members of the public who deslrfi o bring to the Commission's  *</p>
        <p>cencernino the operation of the station should write to the Federal Commum-cations commission. W^ingtan, C. 20SS4 not later than October t, lv66. S-s^houW set forth In detail iha sptclfic facts which the writer wishes the Commission to consider m passing</p>
        <p>for public inspection at the main studio of WNCT-FM, Evans Street Extension Greenville, North Carolina,</p>
        <p>Sept. 26, 27, and Oct. 3, 4, 1966__</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SUMMONS In Tha Suparior Court North Carolina Fitt County Rosalte Norris V.</p>
        <p>Claranct Norris</p>
        <p>To Clarence Norris;  j</p>
        <p>Taka notlct that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed In tha above-entitled action. The natura of tha relief being sought Is absolute divorc# on the grounds of one year's separation.</p>
        <p>You are required to make defense ta uch pleading not later than October 18, 1966, or within twenty days thereafter, arxl upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will ply to tha court for the relief soughti This the 15th day of Septembar, 1964.</p>
        <p>Clark Superior Court Harrell l&amp;lt; Mattox, Attorneys Sept. 19, 26; Oct. X 10, 1964</p>
        <p>Cu</p>
        <p>bbesm</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVI</p>
        <p>AutM Hr Sal</p>
        <p>BUICK  1964 Special 4 dr. se-the dan. automatic trans., power Law of Gravity to be dancing steering, locally owned. Call VI</p>
        <p>with the M u 11 i p lication PezuUa, 758-1123._</p>
        <p>Table </p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1954 2 door. Excellent condition. Upholstery ii headliner like new. Motor and transmiBsion Just rebuilt. Good whitewall tires with full wheel covers. Call 752-2060 alter 7 p.n3u</p>
        <p>Laws, truths and spirits may be everywhere, but they are but they are codified, derived or crystallized from definite and tangible starting points.</p>
        <p>Thus, the lines of magnetic force from which we derive our electriciyt via dynamos all</p>
        <p>Ue from the North and South Chevrolet - iMt MiUlbu su-</p>
        <p>L   j  V * PT Sport, exceptionally clean.</p>
        <p>They emanate from a definite. burgundy with black bucket seats</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1958 ImpaU 4-dr. sedan, white and green. V-8, automatic, r/h. extra clean-Only $495. Stafford Olds.</p>
        <p>LUTHERAN TALLY</p>
        <p>GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) The Lutheran World Federa-ion reports that baptized Lutheran church members throughout the world not total nearly 74.5 million.</p>
        <p>LEGION AUXBLURY</p>
        <p>The American Legion Auxiliary will meet in the American Legion Home Wednesday evening, at 7:45 p.m.</p>
        <p>The program will be given by the Greenville Units Girls State representative for 1966.</p>
        <p>The meeting is being held on the fourth Wednesday instead of on Thursday evening.</p>
        <p>geographical spot.</p>
        <p>We human beings are the children of the Almighty, as per the Bible, and are figuratively chained to ahman chassis that has a walking speed of about 3 mph.</p>
        <p>But the real you is not the same as your bodily machine, any more than you are the same as the automobile that transports you while you are at the wheel.</p>
        <p>That auto may be</p>
        <p>Call Vic Pezulla, 758-1123.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1065 Impala. 2 dr. hdtp., 327 motor, radio, heater, straight drive, extra clean, $2195. Phelps Chevrolet. PL 6-2160.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET - 1964 ImpaU statlonwagon. V-8. auto, trans-, r/h, air cond., power ateernlg. many extras, 1 owner. Call 756-0857.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1964 Impala 4-dr. sedan. R/H, automac trans., wrecked'^' &amp;lt;mly $1595, extra clean. Set yet you, the driver, may step !  TuU  Chauncey.</p>
        <p>Summer in Mobile is a time out and chauffeur a new car</p>
        <p>when the fishing is easy. Fish jump out of Mobile Bayby the thousands.</p>
        <p>shortly thereafter.</p>
        <p>Our human bodies thus are simply convenient animate machines here on earth to which we are chained, even as Jesus was for 33 years.</p>
        <p>The Holy Bhost is the unchained, freely roving spirit of the Almighty.</p>
        <p>But it emanates, from a focal personality, housed is a body that must certainly resemble ours, since the Bible specifically says we were made in Gods own image!</p>
        <p>Send for my booklet The Logical Proof of God, enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents, for further ideas.</p>
        <p>8&amp;amp;E Motor Service, Ayden.</p>
        <p>CHRYSLER  1963 Sports 300, 4 do(M* hardtop, radio, heater, power brakes and steering, one owner car. Call 768-2773.</p>
        <p>FORD  1965 Galaxie 500, Automatic trans-, air cond.. real nice car. F&amp;amp;D Motors, Bethel, PL 8-4408.</p>
        <p>(Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper^ enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.)</p>
        <p>ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having this day qualified as  Administrator  of the estate</p>
        <p>of Sarah  Cobb Deans,  deceased, late</p>
        <p>of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify  all persons  having claims</p>
        <p>against tha estate of the aald dacaasad to axhibit the same, ihily itemized end verified, to the undersigned Adminl-trators. Otis Deans and James Otis Deans, on or befora the 26th day of March, 1967, or this notlca will ba plaad ed in bar of their recovery. All per sons Indebted to said estate will make payment to said Administrators.</p>
        <p>This the 22nd day of September, 1966. Otis Deans and James Otis Deans, Rt. 1, Macclesfield,</p>
        <p>Admrs. of Estate of Sarah Cobb Deans</p>
        <p>Sept. 26, and Oct. 3, 10, 17, 1966</p>
        <p>THUNDERBIRD - 1959. p.s., p.b., air cond., power windows, St seats, excellent condition. Low mUeage. PL 8-1271 day; PL 2-6529 night.</p>
        <p>VALIANT  1960 running condition, evenings.</p>
        <p>4 door, good $300. 758-2944</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN  1964 bus, 26,-000 miles. Call 758-4087; after I call 758-1730.</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGfN  1964, all extras, low mileage, extra clean. $1195. CaU 746-9680, after 9:00, 746-6785.</p>
        <p>TODAY! PICK THE CAR TO fit your purse, new or used. Big selection. Wagner-Waldrop Motors, W. End Circle, PL 2-4525,</p>
        <p>Cycles For Safo</p>
        <p>OFFICIAL MOTORCYCLE IN-sjiectlon Center  R. F. Mo-Lawhon ft Son, 1408 N. Oreen.</p>
        <p>Motorcycle Accessories.</p>
        <p>HONDA  1966 150 dream, excellent condition, many extras, only 1000 actual miles, Stans Cycle Center. 758-3613.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Salo</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1955, long body good tires. In excellent running condition. Call Ayden Mobile MiUlng, 756-2016.</p>
        <p>QUERIED BY THE CORPS  A 12-year-old South Vietnamese boy is interrogated by a U. S. Marine in village near the demilitarized zone. Snipers had fired at the Marines from the village but tied upon their entry. Asked about his father and other Viet Cong suspects, the boy replied They have gone to Saigon. The Marines later released the boy.</p>
        <p>(AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>WNCT*AM</p>
        <p>Pursuant to Rula 1.S80 of tha Fadar-al Communications Commlaalon, notlca is hereby given that Roy H. Park Radio, Inc. has tendered for filing with aald Commission an application for ranawal of license of Radio Station WNCT, 1390 kc, Greenviila, North Carolina. Tha applicant corporation Is a wholly ewnod subsidiary of Roy H. Park Broadeaat-Ing, Inc. Tha applicants, off letra and directors are: Roy H. Park, Dorothy 0. Park, John T. Caldwell, T. B. Maxfiald, William S. Wellons, J. T. Snowden, jr., Kenneth B. Skinner and John Babcack.</p>
        <p>The application of this station for ranawal of its llcensa to operata tha station in fha public inftrest was ten-derad for filing with Iha Federal Communications Commission on Septembar 1, 1966. Members of the public who desire to bring to the Commission's attention facts concerning the operation of the station should write to tha Fadaral Communications Commission, Washington. D. C. 20554, not later than October 1, 1966. Letters should set forth in de-</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL  1963 pickup truck, V-8, low mileage. Telephone day 752-4495; night 756-1027.</p>
        <p>BOATS B EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>1966 16 FT. LARSON BOAT St trailer with 60 horsepower motor. Can be aeen at Kenland Motel.</p>
        <p>DOOS &amp;amp; PETS</p>
        <p>POINTER PUPS. 4 MO. OLD With shot Can 7584328 after 5.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>FmU Hlp Wantd</p>
        <p>CASHIERS WANTED WITH Experience for East Carolina cafeteria. Apply to Mr. Paul Julian, Manager.</p>
        <p>PART TIME SECRETARY FOR Claims office. Must type and able to transcribe. CaU 758-3161, Hartford Ins- Group.</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0011" />
        <p>i Daily Refractor, Greenville, N. C.~Monday, September 26, 1966-11ggtsa) cussiHa flbs get rbiiis</p>
        <p>EMFLbYMENT</p>
        <p>Ninate H^lp Want#4</p>
        <p>V/AITRESS. APPLY IN PER-to Sumrells Tasty Freese 2713 E. loth Street. ^</p>
        <p>*T WANT YOU  *</p>
        <p>To choose a llve-in maid's Job guaranteed In New Jersey, New ork, D. C., or Balto. 6-day week \/rlte Mlsa Hilda, 1130 Druid ill Ave., Dept. 18, Balto., Md.</p>
        <p>emkoyment</p>
        <p> BUY* SELL RENT SWAP  HIRE  BUY * SELL* RENT*</p>
        <p>Work Wantosi</p>
        <p>BCC STUDENTS: NEED SOME* to type those reports anc tern papers for you? Call Judy Wilcox at 762-6166.</p>
        <p>CXPERT SiRVId</p>
        <p>HOME HEATING. COMPLETE ^ installations. Sales and Service iiaoi. Give age. cUp ad andaave '  available. General</p>
        <p>~   - .-  .V  "bating. Inc., telephone 752-41&amp;amp;r</p>
        <p>WANTED:  REISTERED  1100 Evans St</p>
        <p>Nurse, Bethel Clinic, Bethel. N.---</p>
        <p>C. Call 826*6301.</p>
        <p>MAlbs FOR N.V., NJ.</p>
        <p>FOR SAU</p>
        <p>Milcallanaous For Sala</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>GOOD PEANUT HAY, 2 TO 3</p>
        <p>hundred bales, contact Charlie Evans, Robersonville, phone 795-7011 at nights</p>
        <p>UP TO $7S WilK</p>
        <p>TOP JOBS, BEST HOMES IN N. Y, City, New Jersey. Fare aent rush references. Free Gift. Miss Dixie Agcy. 300 W. 40 St N.Y 0 Dept. 10.</p>
        <p>Mala-Famala Help Waiftad</p>
        <p>TWO EXPERIENCED onoirft Age 30 up. Good pay, 762-6606 between 16 a. m. and 3pm</p>
        <p>PROTECT YOUR HOME PROM Winter Winds or loss of Air Conditioning with Storm Doors fld Windows. Flnar.cujg. Ihomu ion's Discount Furniture, PL 1-3187.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED</p>
        <p>Cook, waitress and curb boys and firla. CaU 75^6666.</p>
        <p>BE SMART . , . WINTERIZE your car now. Pre-wlnter checkup time at Carr Allen Texaco 213 Evans St., PL 2-4838.</p>
        <p>TV ON THE BLINK? DON'T</p>
        <p>WESTINGHOUSE HEAVY DU-ty tumbler action washer built for load after load, day after day. Smith Electric Co., 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>SEE OUR USED TRAILERS, repossessed. Just take up pay-,nents. Check our camping trai' lers tool B &amp;amp; W MobUe Homea, Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>REAL MITATE</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, LOT SPACES for rent. Call PL 2-3286.</p>
        <p>l^LAROID CAMERA, WINK-light, flash gun, gadget bag and</p>
        <p>all accessories. Like new, $160    -----</p>
        <p>Phone 746-3623.  'i  *^0  SALE  OR  FOB  BENT</p>
        <p>^nrrTTw* bedroom SHOTGUN POX STERLING- mobile homes for $3,295  $295</p>
        <p>worth, 12 gauge, rifle 308 Win- down andr $54 per month</p>
        <p>3 deer dogs 758-2948 AZALEA MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>1 NICE 5 ROOM HOUSE. 2 blocks from 5 points. Greenville, N. C. Ready to move in $9,000 A. ....  ..  758-2773.</p>
        <p>Mobile Hemes For Rent  -------</p>
        <p>---UNBELIEVABLE: 1700 sq. ft.</p>
        <p>TRAILER WITH BUILT ON brick veneer residence featuring living area. Will sleep 5. Lo- 3 BR., LR. with cwpet &amp;amp; fire-cated in Wintcrville. Call 756- place, kitchen with BR area, din-1303. O. W. Dale.  ing room, large den. Located</p>
        <p>near ECC in nice neighborhood.</p>
        <p>RfAL lETATI</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>1907 EAST 5th ST. NEAR THE college. 3 BR., 2 baths, Lr.. Dining room. 2 car garage, central air-condiUoning. B1 W-bams Real Estate. PL 2-2615.</p>
        <p>RENTALf</p>
        <p>Loan may be assumed with small equity. All for only $15,500. Call 752-4640.</p>
        <p>or 746-3446.</p>
        <p>Fnone PL 2-3109, PL 2-6822 3012 East 10th Street</p>
        <p>GROC^Y store STOCK POR - -------</p>
        <p>ington X Roads, Phone PL 6-3838.</p>
        <p>tinker it can be costly dang- ^ j   j ^   .</p>
        <p>erousi Call H &amp;amp; M Radio-TY  U$ed  CombmeS</p>
        <p>for satisfactory service. PL 8-24-36.</p>
        <p>RAWLBIGH BUSINESS OPEN in ps:t Pitt County. Products sold there for past 80 ytars</p>
        <p> Write Rawlelgh, Dept. NCI-740-898, Rlchir jnd, Va.</p>
        <p> See or call W. H. Smith, 113 Woodlawn Ave., Greenville, PL 2-4985.</p>
        <p>WASH, WAX YOUR CAR IN Just 10 minutes at Phillips 66 Qwik Oar Wash, Evans St. off Tenth.</p>
        <p>YOU CANT LOSE</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>WILSON</p>
        <p>on 264 By-Pass. Air Cond.. Swim-ming pool, laundrette. Ca^</p>
        <p>756-3516.</p>
        <p>Mobila Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>(2) Model A Gleaner, (1) MF 300, (1) International 91. All with 2 low corn heads.</p>
        <p>HENDRIX-BARNHILL</p>
        <p>REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE, 1965 10x50 Ritz-Craft. PL 6-3518 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: BLACK BUCKET Seats with console from Chevrolet Super Sport. Call 758-1271.</p>
        <p>1964 TRAILER, 10x51. 2 BED-_ rooms &amp;amp; Washing Machine. Wall-- to-wall carpeting, central heating, air conditioning. Phone PL 8-2318 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Penn. Ave.</p>
        <p>RHODES</p>
        <p>Iscfrfcsf CsntrscMr 752-4365</p>
        <p>AVOID DOCTOR BILLS WITH have what you want; a good ^  Warner, York entire house</p>
        <p>tying permanent position. Do' VFinancing. Coastal Rs.</p>
        <p>FLORISTS</p>
        <p>paying permanent position. Do ' #  Financing.  Co</p>
        <p>you have what I want?  frigeration, PL 6-2104.</p>
        <p>1. Neat appearance</p>
        <p>2. Meet people well</p>
        <p>3. Perserverance</p>
        <p>4. Sincere desire to advance</p>
        <p>5. Age 21-60</p>
        <p>6. Automobile</p>
        <p>WHEN WORDS TAIL, SAY IT with flowers from Greenville Floral. For happy occasions or sad ones, call 752-2827.</p>
        <p>ONE 20 VOLUMN SET OP COL-liers Encyclopedias and one complete set of Harvard Classics, hardly used. Call 752-7637.</p>
        <p>Trtllur Space For Renf</p>
        <p>CUSTOM BUILT ANL IN-stalled porch railings, coiumns, interior rails, screens &amp;amp; dividers Metal Specialties. 758-4591</p>
        <p>Spoiling Goods</p>
        <p>Fumifuro - Appllaneo</p>
        <p>If you have these qualifications,'  FOR SALE</p>
        <p>apply Towne House Motor Lodge, i</p>
        <p>Friday, Sept. 23. between 6-8 p.m.' _</p>
        <p>only. Ask for Mr. Edwards. PINEVIEW MOBILE HOMES MAID PULL~-tTm E FOR*  selection of used fur-</p>
        <p>general housework and caring I  appliances. Come see</p>
        <p>for 3 small children. References.' *    location.</p>
        <p>Call 756-1660.</p>
        <p>ALL CAMPERS MUST GO</p>
        <p>SHADY LOTS! AVAILA]g]i now at Pinevlew Court 5 min East from downtown, left on Port Terminal Rd. See our luxury equipped homes for rent firstl 758-3644.</p>
        <p>MONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>FHA &amp;amp; VA</p>
        <p>HOME LOANS</p>
        <p>SASSER'S CAMPING CENTER i</p>
        <p>*012 N. William Sc  Mortgage Loan Departmanf</p>
        <p>Goldsboro, 734-4616  ------------ ------</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD GOOD-''</p>
        <p>WACHOVIA BANK</p>
        <p>and TEST CO. PLAZA 8-2161</p>
        <p>HOMES FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Located 5 miles on New Bern Highway, large living room, dining room. 3 bedrooms, 114 baths, den, built in kitchen and break, fast area, large screened in back porch, on approximately 2 acre lot. REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE.</p>
        <p>211 Harmony St. Belvedere, living room, 3 bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile bathfs, den, bnilt In kitchen and breakfast area, carport, 2 outside storage areas, large lot,</p>
        <p>' small initial investment and assume financing. PRICED TO MOVE, $18,000.00.</p>
        <p>1407 Evergreen Dr. Englewood, living room, kitchen-dining area, den, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, screened In porch, on large lot. Includes wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, fully air conditioned Priced $2(3,000.00.</p>
        <p>Lord Ashley Rd. Lyndale, beautiful home, corner lot, consisting of living room, formal dining room, built in kitchen, breakfast area. Urge den with fireplace, 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths and 2 half baths, 2 car garage, lots of</p>
        <p>REASONABLE RENT AND satisfied customers keep us in business. Grier Rental Agency (closed all day Wed.) 752-5700.</p>
        <p>RENTAU</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>REASONABLE RATES AND nice rooms are available for coI-| lege students the Bachelor! House on Evans Street. Call 752-4572.</p>
        <p>Mmj STUDENTS, TF TO need a room or apt. for the next school year, call 756-3516.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>1000 Sq. Ft. OPEN FLOOR SPACE</p>
        <p>Rest Room Available</p>
        <p>CALL 752-9962</p>
        <p>Mportmenrs For Ront</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APTS. TO COU-ples or groups. Air cond., Uu-drette swimming pool uaU ?L 6-3516</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM FURNISHED apt., 804 E. 3rd St.; 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment, 2505 E, Fifth St. Call day 752-6137; night 758-2386.</p>
        <p>COMFORTABLE B E D R O O M |  ,</p>
        <p>tor Me college boy. Dial 752-5507; betweei. 7 p.m. - 18</p>
        <p>Wanted To Rent</p>
        <p>2 OR 3 BEDR06m~H0USE near college by professor and wife. Contact Dr. Hill, ECC, Ext. 279 or PL 8-4614.</p>
        <p>CLASSIED DISPLAT '</p>
        <p>NICEL\ FURNISHED ROOM, r-easonable, close in. Desires a lady, 207 East 8th St. Call 762-2763.</p>
        <p>SHARE BEDROOM WITH COL-lege boy. Centrally heated. Linens furnished and laundered. Phone 752-5507.</p>
        <p>SCHOOLS-INSTRUCTIONS</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA  1 BR PUR-nished apt., water, heat, air-conditioning also furnished, available Oct. l, PL 2-3376</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APART-ments1900 S. Charles St., Greenvilles Luxury Address, Phone 758-3572.</p>
        <p>LETS GO RIDING: FUN ON horseback. Lessons on the care and riding of three gaited, five gaited and walking horses. Classes start Oct. 1. Gentle horses to learn on. Sue Lassitter Taft, phone 756-2724 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOTICES</p>
        <p>Heusws For Ront</p>
        <p>SORRY SAL IS NOW A MERRY gal. She used Blue Lustre rug and upholstery cleaner. Rent electric</p>
        <p> -  uHuuustc-iy  t;iciuier. rvem cr</p>
        <p>TWO STORY HOUSE IN NICE|hampooer $1. Belk-Tylers neighborhood. Telephone 752-2440 ---</p>
        <p>Land For Lease</p>
        <p>POR LEASE IN CHOCOWINITY on U.S. 17, a comer lot, 12.300 sq. ft. Good location and site for service station or distributor Paint. Josephine Hadley, Rt. 2, Williamston. N.C. Phone 792-3854.</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>SMALL OFFICE IN BOWEN Bldg., 212 W. Fifth St.. $40.00</p>
        <p>uaii ui.ns,  car garage, lots of "6   oc.</p>
        <p>storage space, includes wall-to^i P*" ^onth. Call 752-2489.</p>
        <p>Male Help Wanted</p>
        <p>Mitcellaneeua For Sele</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS storm windows and doors,awm-higs, Venetian blinds, porch enclosures, paint and hardware^ No down payment. Three years</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED COLLATORS experienced roU-to-roD web fed offset pressmen and experienced roll-to-sheet web fed offset press-men for business forms. Greens-! cl irTPrniu boro firm, offering excellent  .  ..</p>
        <p>fringe benefits and working con-! Comfort I* Onr Bnsinesa*</p>
        <p>dltions. Equal opportunity em-ployer. Write "Collators'. P.O.</p>
        <p>Box 408, City, giving all personal information regarding quiica-tlons, education, and experience.</p>
        <p>BLUE LUSTRE NOT ONLY  _</p>
        <p>rids carpets of soil but leaves  HUNTING?  TURN</p>
        <p>piie soft and lofty. Rent electric  he  Classified  Ads to</p>
        <p>shampooer $1. Mary Carters  he  home  to  suit  your  needs.</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>ETNA SERVICE STATION AS-sistant Manager. Day Shift, good wages and woridng conditions. Contact Elwood Pittman, corner 14th St Charles St.</p>
        <p>OPENING IN OAR SALES. Good working conditions. Harrington it WhlU Motora, PL 6-</p>
        <p>3123.</p>
        <p>DISTRICT SALES REFRiSENTATIVE</p>
        <p>Desired by natkmal financial cor-, poratton. $5.000 per year starting i alary with excellent Incentive! incraaies. Company car and ex-! penaea. Excellent advancement opportunity. Age 21 to 30. High School graduate. Call 377-1215 or wrltf Box 6228, Jacksonville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Wrlt WanieB</p>
        <p>TWO AIR CONDITIONERS ! like new, student desk, $10 Cali' PL 2-4903.  I</p>
        <p>AUTOMOBILE</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>We Turn No One Down EASY TERMS</p>
        <p>Ed Tipton Agency</p>
        <p>203 Boyd Avenuo</p>
        <p>Phone 758-2608</p>
        <p>LOST 4 FOUND</p>
        <p>in west eSSIe</p>
        <p>Extra nice. Makes ZIO-ZAQ AND FANCY STITCHES BUTTONHOLES, ECT. Local party with good credit can take over payments at $9.75 monthly or pay complete balance $49.73. Can be tried out locally. Will transfer GUARANTEE. WRITE-HOME OFFICE NATIONAL S E WIN O", REPOSSESSION DEPT. DRAWER 280. ASHE-BORO, N C.</p>
        <p>McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS New A Used Modeb Bar Chain A Accessories</p>
        <p>CURK &amp;amp; CO.</p>
        <p>PL 6-2557 Memorial Drive</p>
        <p>Black dog favors Eskimo Spits, white neck and chin. Female, answers to name of "Blackie". Re-wd offered. Child* pet. PL 6-0357.</p>
        <p>iHAL ISTaTS</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS IN REAL Estate sec or call E. H. Williford Realtor 105 E. 2nd St PL 8-3911 hist your property with us.</p>
        <p>Businoss For Silo</p>
        <p>for sale AT A REAL Bargain"  Paint and  Interior</p>
        <p>Decorating business including all fixtures. Sherwin-Wirnams Paints. Drapery and Upholstery fabrics and wallpaper ampies. Reason for selling* owner physically unable- to continue operation. Cannon's Paints &amp;amp; Wallpaper Co., 224 S. Lee St. Ayden.</p>
        <p>wall carpet, drapes, inter.com system, fully air conditioned, central vacuum system, many other extras.</p>
        <p>Listings Needed For HOMES FARMS BUSINESS PROPERTY Contact</p>
        <p>D. G. NICHOLS. Realtor 105 E. 5th St. Greenville, N C. Day 752-4012 Night 752-3612</p>
        <p>REAL bargains are waitlDg or you in the Claaslfied Ada</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DIfFLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>REMODELING</p>
        <p>MODERNIZING</p>
        <p>Enjo.v the comfort and convenience of a modern heating or plumbing system. W* can handle your need# promptly. Free estimate. Fi-nance plan available.</p>
        <p>POLLARD'S</p>
        <p>Plumbing, Heating C*.</p>
        <p>209 E. 'Third St.</p>
        <p>Phone PL 2-723* *r PL 2-4633</p>
        <p>15,000 GALLON SERVICE STATION LOCATION AVAILABLE NOW</p>
        <p> Small Capital Investment</p>
        <p> Immediate Financial Assistance</p>
        <p> $100 Per Week Pay While Training</p>
        <p> Excellent Fringe Benefits</p>
        <p>INOCO&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>ACT NOWI</p>
        <p>On This Excellent Opportunity Call Mr. Pearce 752-7589 or Write Sun OU Co., P.O. Box 28t7, Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>C L. LUPTON CO. 752-6116</p>
        <p>World Famous Ford 1 Row Com Harvesters</p>
        <p>.A</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>^  EQUIPMENT  CO.  ^</p>
        <p>4  4</p>
        <p>Si  2M  by  pass  2</p>
        <p>R  PL &amp;lt;.]7M  IS</p>
        <p>J  PL  Vim  g</p>
        <p>Greenville Beauty School</p>
        <p>220 East Fifth Street</p>
        <p>WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY and TUESDAY</p>
        <p>September 26th and 27th</p>
        <p>Mrs. Julia Harris and Mrs. Lois Johnson will attend the Cosmetology Leadership Institute in Columbia, South Carolina.</p>
        <p>Houses For Salo</p>
        <p>STRAYED FROM FARM; ONE black Angus BuU, weight 900 lbs. Contact Jamie Nobles, Rt 2 Winterville. N. C. or call 756-2634*</p>
        <p>WELL APPOINTED RESI-dence, 3 BR, 2 baths. College rea, Fallowfield Realty. PL 6-</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME5</p>
        <p>OLD BRICK FOR SALE. CALL nights at SK 3-3503, ParmviUc, H, C,</p>
        <p>J. J. MOBILE HOMES. INC.</p>
        <p>MEMORIAL DR.</p>
        <p>Is Now Under New Management</p>
        <p>George &amp;amp; Myrtle Gardner</p>
        <p>Franchised Dealer For New Moon, Commodore. Asalea Many Others. 752-4223.</p>
        <p>CUSSIRED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Exparicnced WAITRESS</p>
        <p>Wanted. Apply In person.</p>
        <p>Carolina Grill</p>
        <p>S,  needle  sinoeh.nic</p>
        <p>yjg eip.rie. Dl,i tsmwo. I^c',</p>
        <p>ing 6 payment* of $9.34 per month or pay balance of $56.04. Guarantee la atm good. Can be seen</p>
        <p>expert help is easy to find . . . Just check "Business Services' In Classified for the profeaslonal you need.</p>
        <p>SAVINGS</p>
        <p>JUST A FINGERTIP AWAY</p>
        <p>and tried out locally. Write Mr Routh, Service Credit Dept., P* O. Box 241, Asheboro, N. C</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>KITCHIN FORMICA TABLE with 4 chairs, $30. Call 762-4497 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT, EFFICIENT AND economical, that'* Blue Lustre Carpet and upholatery cleaner. Rent electric shampooer $i. Glidden'a.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>Dial PL 2.6166</p>
        <p>To Placo Your Dally Rg. floctor ClaulHod Ad. Iiiaort for 7 Dayi, Tho Coal la Lata.</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>S LINI mNZMUll 1 DayS#e Per LIm Per Doy</p>
        <p>4 Days27e Per Liae Per Doy 7 Days25e Per Line Per Day Contract Rates AvallaUa 12:6# p.mL tfeadUo*</p>
        <p>CUSSINED DISPUY |l.ia Per Cehuna Iseh Centraet Bates Avallakls</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>N* new ads, kills ar eerra*. Ilona aeeepted after 12:66 pjo. the day befara ynblieetlaiL</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>grran no$t be rgoertfd Bo-mediately, the DaUy Bo fleeter can net make aUow* aaeee for errors after 1st nay</p>
        <p>IT IS TRUE</p>
        <p>Mr. Father: Could you rmlie and educate your children on the Income your widow will receive from your present Life Insurance.</p>
        <p>If Not, See Me.</p>
        <p>JAKE HADLEY, G.A.</p>
        <p>Security Life A Trust Co. 905 GreenvUle Blvct</p>
        <p>PL 2-6139</p>
        <p>"^NEW CARS THAT COST</p>
        <p>1/ as much to own!</p>
        <p>Mle speciaJin ifl economy cars liist cost half as much to own and even less to run. Let us show you the sew FIAT 1100-R today! It has more tiaras* at so extra cost than aey other car. Sec it today drive it awey! Md saw hundreds of dollars.</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD</p>
        <p>Valuable Farm</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>THE WILLIAM JESSE MAYO FARM IN BELVOIR TOWNSHIP, PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>INDIVIDUALLY DECORATED</p>
        <p>Jown</p>
        <p>d(ouMA</p>
        <p>NOW LEASING $110 MONTHLY</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS IVi BATHS WALL-TO-WALL CARPETING ENCLOSED PATIOS SWIAAMING POOLS HOTPOINT KITCHENS With Disposals And Dishwasher</p>
        <p>BCiNasssimv</p>
        <p>bMwndC</p>
        <p>NOIblBS</p>
        <p>J/lB</p>
        <p>CiVudaqsi diouM</p>
        <p>10 A. M.  6 P. M. 756-3480</p>
        <p>New Bern Rwy.Charles Sk Ext. Contact Resident Manager</p>
        <p>Friday,</p>
        <p>Public Sale At September</p>
        <p>12 NOON</p>
        <p>Farm</p>
        <p>30, 1966</p>
        <p>Nobody Needs Money!</p>
        <p>Until Th*y Roally Need H.</p>
        <p>CARL WOXMAN</p>
        <p>If yeu really need money. Cell Cesh Cerl At</p>
        <p>Great Southern Finance Co.</p>
        <p>666 Evans Ik</p>
        <p>Phone 752-711T</p>
        <p>TO BE SOLD TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH.</p>
        <p>The Land Is Classified Approximately As Follows:</p>
        <p> 11.96 Acres Tobacco   4 Acres Cotton</p>
        <p> 27.1 Acres Peanuts   65 Acres Corn</p>
        <p> 151.94 Acres Pasture &amp;amp; Woodland</p>
        <p>REFERENCES IS MADE TO THE LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT OF SEPT. J, 14, 21, 28 OF THIS PAPER</p>
        <p>William Lyman Mayo, Executor of the Estate of William Jesse Mayo, Plymouth, North Carolina</p>
        <pb facs="00088225_0012" />
        <p>12-Th. Daily RaflMier, Cii.vill., N. C.-MoncUy, Saplambar 26, riSS</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>FPC Approves Duke Power Complex Plan</p>
        <p>Slarf Railroad</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)- (NCDA) -The North Carolina poultry market steady today. Prices of broilers and fryers at farms cents a pound.</p>
        <p>Douglas Aire Dow Chem Duke Pow DuPontdN East Airl Eastman Kod (NCDA) Firestone Rub Ford Motor Gen Elec Gen Foods Gen Mot Gen Tel &amp;amp; Tel Gerb Prod</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-the North Carolina hog market was steady today with instances of 25 cents higher. Tops of 23.00-24.00 Wilson; 22.50-23.50 Rocky Mount, Murfreesboro. Rober-sonville, Statesville, Salisbury;</p>
        <p>22.25-23.00 Tarboro; 22.25-22.75Goodrich D F Bethel, Hickory; 23.00 Greens-1 Goodyear T&amp;amp;R boro; 22.75 Selma, Siler City,Greyhound Denton,  Goldsboro,  Rich  1 Gulf Oil Corp</p>
        <p>Square.  IBM</p>
        <p> ___I Int Paper</p>
        <p>NEW  YORK  (AP)-The  stock I ^el &amp;amp; Tel</p>
        <p>market edged irregularly lower' early this afternoon although se- '^^SS^^ &amp;amp;Myers lected issues showed strength,</p>
        <p>Losses of fractions to a point i if among key stocks outnumbered?; gainers.  '  McLean Truck</p>
        <p>The trend was lower among!  .</p>
        <p>autos, chemicals, drugs, tobac-1 ?!f  , cos, rails nonferrous metals, oilsj and utilities.</p>
        <p>Some</p>
        <p>49% 49% 58% 57% 37  37%</p>
        <p>168% 165 72% 72% llSVz 116 46  45%</p>
        <p>42*/'s 42</p>
        <p>A House committee,</p>
        <p>gin consideration this week of a ..  , </p>
        <p>$90 million federal project at  Railway.</p>
        <p>Public Works he added, will</p>
        <p>sub-</p>
        <p>be-</p>
        <p>Natl Biscuit Natl Dairy Pd</p>
        <p>ofthe color television,!  nS.-.</p>
        <p>other electronic and Photo-;^f graphic issues were sti-ong. i!L * Ivti, The Associated Press average 1^^ of 60 stocks at noon was off I.O Norlhrun at 284.5 with industrials off 1.3,ipara, pf.. rails off .8 and utilities off .3.|peJ^ rr Tlie Dow Jones industrial av-,  &amp;gt;ola</p>
        <p>erage at noon was off 3.00 at'</p>
        <p>787.97.</p>
        <p>Averages were depressed by Du Ponts decline exceeding 3 points and by losses of more than a point by General Motors and General Electric.</p>
        <p>Phillip Morris Phillios Petr Pitt Plate Gls Radio Corp Rep Stl Rex Chain</p>
        <p>4u u   Reynolds  Tob</p>
        <p>On the brighter side. Polaroid  Seaboard Airl ran up 4 points on word from Sears Roebuck the company that demand for Sou Railway Its cameras is so great that'Sptrrv Corp cameras must be allocated tolStd Brands</p>
        <p>Std Oil Calif</p>
        <p>dealers.</p>
        <p>Zenith, up more than a point, Std Oil NJ also put on a strong showing as Stevens J P It reported record sales and I Texaco Inc earnings. Fractional gains were i Tex Gulf Sul posted by United, Eastern and Textron Inc Pan American  airlines.  jUn Carbide</p>
        <p>Most of the  stock list,  how-1 Union Comp</p>
        <p>ever, showed little ambition,  j Union Pac</p>
        <p>Prices rose in moderate trad-'United Airlines Ing on the American Stock Ex-'United Aire change.  United Fruit</p>
        <p>----- US Rubber</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-</p>
        <p>88 V4</p>
        <p>66%</p>
        <p>76V4</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>57%</p>
        <p>48%</p>
        <p>16%</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>319</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>63%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>69%</p>
        <p>57%</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>136</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>100</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>22%</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>61 Vi</p>
        <p>25 46% 55%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>26 35</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>27%</p>
        <p>31%</p>
        <p>60 62% 46% 69% 80^8 48% 50%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>36*28 51</p>
        <p>87%</p>
        <p>GREENWOOD, S.C. (AP) -The Federal Power Commission has approved a permit for Duke Power Co. to build a mul- ,</p>
        <p>ti-million dollar power complex TYotters Shoals on the South in South Carolina and North Carolina-Georgia State line and Carolina, Rep. William Jen- on Dukes $225 million steam mngs Bryan Dom, D-S.C., said plant and dam in Anderson</p>
        <p>County, S.C.</p>
        <p>PentagoflWantsjAir Force Gunships And</p>
        <p>Puff Back Up Marines</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The tracks are often mined and the trackside is infested with snipers. But the Pentagon wants to open up the throttle on its use of the battered Vietnamese Na-</p>
        <p>It has sent a team of railroad I Rick Merron</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTE - U.S. Air Force gunships went to the aid of embattled U.S. Marines south of the demilitarized zone in South Viet Nam Sunday night. Associated Press photographer</p>
        <p>Here is</p>
        <p>study how the l,2(X)-mile narrow</p>
        <p>He  said the commission would | The congressman, who made</p>
        <p>67  ^ license today for Dukes | the announcement from  his</p>
        <p>74%i  plant  I  home in Greenwood, said  he</p>
        <p>40  I"Savannah River Basin in I was highly pleased that  the</p>
        <p>South Carolina counties of Oco- $700 million private power com-neea nd Pickens and North Car- plex had been okayed substan-</p>
        <p>VNlinoo   A__  .</p>
        <p>'tially as requested.</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>j olinas Transylvania County.</p>
        <p>16%</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>319%</p>
        <p>25 63%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>69^2 58 I</p>
        <p>46%: HAYNEVILLE, Ala. (AP) -19 ! A judge of state court threw out nVs ian assault charge today against 49 ia former special deputy sheriff 25% accused of wounding a civil 134% I rights worker during an out-42% I break of racial violence in 33 Lowndes County last year.</p>
        <p>32%  -</p>
        <p>Thagard means that the for a later grand jury to return U. Coleman' another and perhaps more se-43 4.cannot be indicted again and rious indictment.</p>
        <p>23 jcannot be tried for the shotgun | After a conference in an ad-!i  Richard  Mor-  joining room, Thagard dis-</p>
        <p>448 insr a white Catholic priest  missed the assault and battery</p>
        <p>charge with prejudice which afterward, the means no other indictment can</p>
        <p>gauge line should be improved.</p>
        <p>Only 400 miles is now considered safe for regular hauling. But even bolstering that much would ease mounting supply dis-</p>
        <p>By RICK MERRON</p>
        <p>NEAR THE DEMILITARIZED ZONE, South Viet Nam (AP)  The medical corpsman sprawled beside two badly</p>
        <p>tributipn pressures,'say U. S. rKuW</p>
        <p>Judge Throws Out Case Over Deputy</p>
        <p>volunteer.</p>
        <p>The dismissal of the assault and battery indictment against Coleman came when State Atty. Gen. Richmond Flowers asked the judge to nol-pros the charge, which would have meant sim-_  . . .  ply to drop it for want of prose-</p>
        <p>The decision by Circuit Judge jcution, but leave the way open</p>
        <p>officials.</p>
        <p>The Viet Cong guerrillas hit the railroad almost daily.</p>
        <p>The Pentagon says it would require too many troops to keep the full length of the line open. The track runs from Saigon to the coast, then northward along the sea to North Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>Rail service has not received priority attention because of the ready availability of sea shipping.</p>
        <p>The United States provides locomotives and freight cars,^ but pays the government of</p>
        <p>needed help.</p>
        <p>had battled a well dug-in enemy force.</p>
        <p>The Navy corpsmen on the ground, Donald Birdwell of Midland, Tex., spoke into a radiophone at the incoming aircraft.</p>
        <p>Ive got two seriously wounded men down here, he said. One cant last more than 20 minutes unless we get him out. And Ive got a lot more on my hands.</p>
        <p>His voice came through faintly in the planes. But his meaning was clear.</p>
        <p>Oh God! one pilot said, I</p>
        <p>It was inky dark. North Viet- wish I could find a landing strip .namese troops that had ripped      . . . </p>
        <p>into the Marines at dusk with mortars</p>
        <p>' I</p>
        <p>ward McKee, 28, of Mount Vernon, Wash., gritted his teei andj cursed.  ,</p>
        <p>Another helicopter and then 4 third tried to drive through the bullets to bring out the' wounded.</p>
        <p>But the enemy fire was too fierce. The pilots were ordered not to try to land.</p>
        <p>But for the Marine beside Birdwell, it was too late. He had^ died  almost 20 minutes exactly from the time Birdwell issued his urgent plea.</p>
        <p>In the aircraft, Birdwells voice crackled again over the</p>
        <p>I risroe,</p>
        <p>59% I from Chicago.</p>
        <p>25 ; Immediately _________,</p>
        <p>46% court got ready for the trial of' 5 Ku Klux Klansman</p>
        <p>  ------------ Eugene</p>
        <p>Thomas on a murder charge in the killing of Viola Gregg Liuz-;zo, another white civil rights</p>
        <p>Textile Workers Union</p>
        <p>be returned in that case. Coleman, 56, a one-time special office and a highway engineer by profession, sat among the spectators in the courtroom.</p>
        <p>South Viet Nam a tariff for hauling U.S. supplies aboard them.</p>
        <p>The Agency for International Development says the United States has turned over to the South Vietnamese 48 diesel electric locamotives, 225 freight and tank cars, and shop equipment worth $7.8 million.</p>
        <p>now were pouring in automatic rifle fire.</p>
        <p>American artillery blasted back at the enemy positions.</p>
        <p>Through tlie crackle and roar of the fighting could be heard the whirling blades of helicopters.</p>
        <p>Gunships, medical evacuation choppers and a twin-engine C47 Puff, the Magic Dragon  bristling with armament  were churning through the darkness to the embattled Marines.</p>
        <p>Two companies of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines, were just south of the demilitarized zone between North and South Viet Nam. For two days they</p>
        <p>to get in there and help them 1 radios;</p>
        <p>out.  !  Ive fixed the rest of these'</p>
        <p>The gunship helicopters goys now. We can hold out til swirled in, blazing machine-gun'dawn. fire. Puff splattered bullets' The aircraft flew back to from its three guns  6,000 Marine headquarters at Dong rounds a minute.  :  Ha, three miles east.</p>
        <p>Minutes ticked by. Life was At dawn today, the evacuation ebbing from the most critically helicopters returned to the bat-hurt Marine.  tie scene.</p>
        <p>A medical evacuation helicop- Helmets of dead and wounded ter slanted down through the lay beside foxholes. Bodies</p>
        <p>bullets to try and get in. It exploded in a great ball of flame.</p>
        <p>Fiery chunks of metal into the sky.</p>
        <p>It had been hit by an artillery shell fired in support of the surrounded troops. The Marine crewmen and a Navy medical corpsman aboard were killed.</p>
        <p>The pilot of Puff, Capt. Ed-</p>
        <p>wrapped in ponchos lay near the landing zone. Wounded waited shot beside them.</p>
        <p>'The heliocpters whirled away with their cargoes.</p>
        <p>One Marine who had been un-four hurt in the fighting, Lance CpL Jerry Biluey of Denton^ Tex., describd the bitter night:</p>
        <p>I thought the world had come to an end.</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>27%</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>59%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>67%</p>
        <p>81%</p>
        <p>48%</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>40Vs</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>Begins Strike At Elkin</p>
        <p>ELKIN, N.C. (AP)Members Ily employes reported of the AFL-CIO Textile Work- for the third shift at ers Union of America struck the at the big blanket factory.</p>
        <p>Bomb Scare Af Five One-Car Accidents Over</p>
        <p>Mafia Quizzing Pitt; One Followed A Pursuit</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>midnight</p>
        <p>Adams Millis Allie Ch Allis-Chal Am Can Co Am Enka Am Motors Am Tel &amp;amp; Tel Am Tob Atch T&amp;amp;SF Atl Coast Line Atl Rich Avco Cp Bendix Corp Beth Stl Boeing Aire Borden Co Burl Ind Burroughs Corp Caro P&amp;amp;L Celanese Corp Champion Paper Ches &amp;amp; Ohio Chrysler Coca Cola Columbia G&amp;amp;E Coml Credit Corn Prods C. T.S. Corp Curtiss Wrt Dan Riv Mills</p>
        <p>US Stl</p>
        <p>Prev- Va El &amp;amp; Pow Close I p.m. i '^est Union 13% 13 W V P&amp;amp;P 35% 35%Westing El 22% 22 .Winn-Dixie 48% 48% I Woolworth 33% Zenith Rad</p>
        <p>97/8'  -</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>30% Community</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>59*4</p>
        <p>77%</p>
        <p>22%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>29/8</p>
        <p>57</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>63%</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>25^8</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>38Ts</p>
        <p>31%</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>73%</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>30^^8</p>
        <p>20^8</p>
        <p>60%</p>
        <p>Chatham Manufacturing Co. to-! Hugh Chatham, president of day, but union and manage-the firm, said: ment spokesmen disagreed on We began work with a ma-the number of workers remain-jjority of the workers on duty, 515^, ing away.  jand  ran  every  department</p>
        <p>74%' TWUA said only super-scheduled to run.</p>
        <p>Five one-car accidents occurred in Pitt County yesterday, according to the highway patrol.</p>
        <p>A 90 mph chase by city police on Fourteneth Street ended when a car crashed into an embankment on rural road 1725 at 1:50 p.m., the patrol said.</p>
        <p>The driver was identified as James E. Nelson, 23, of Rt. 5. Patrolmen said he was charged with speeding, reckless driving</p>
        <p>32 visory 40%'</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>32 40%</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>30Vs 20Y8 61%</p>
        <p>personnel and 12 hour-</p>
        <p>Teamster Give Romney 'Okay</p>
        <p>Announcements</p>
        <p>DETROIT (AP)  Republi- tor and vice president of the</p>
        <p>can Gov. George Romney got Twua, said only 400 workers en-</p>
        <p>enthusiastic endorsement from tered the gates for first shift</p>
        <p>Mkhigan Teamsters Sunday work out of 950 due to report.</p>
        <p>while a lesser-of-two evils He said union members made</p>
        <p>nod went to Democratic U. S., a head count at the five gates.</p>
        <p>Missioncandidate G. Men-' Swaity said the walkout was  nen Williams.</p>
        <p>new YORK (AP)-A bomb scare delayed a grand jurys plan to question 12 reputed Mafia leaders today.</p>
        <p>The jury, the witnesses, treir lawyers, and everybody else was cleared from the fifth floor work of the Queens Court House while the police bob squad searched the place.</p>
        <p>The jury session was to re-isume after the search.</p>
        <p>Dist. Atty. Nat Hentel said a man had phoned the bomb report to his office.</p>
        <p>The dozen reputed mobsters, arrested last week at what was caled a little Apalachin meeting, were sitting outside the grand jury room with their law-^yers when the order to clear 1 He said some supervisory per-, the floor came, sonnel had helped fill in on the! A 13th witness. Carlo Gambi-  m.  ^  t</p>
        <p>third shift and that picketing at no, did not appear. His lawyerCreGK the gates was quiet.  |said  Gambino was ill  IA#  I  ^  I  x  I</p>
        <p>Paul Swaity, regional direc-l The 13 were charged as ma-'^^"^ Completed</p>
        <p>terial witnesses and released on bail.</p>
        <p>being left of the centerline, the patrol said.</p>
        <p>Marvin L. Hardee, 23, Rt. 4, was charged with careless and reckless driving after his car ran off the road seven miles west of Greenville on the Bel-voir highway at 4:15 a.m., the patrol reported.</p>
        <p>Damage to his car was estimated at $400.</p>
        <p>Frank R. Parrish, 18 ,of 516</p>
        <p>and failure to yield to a siren. I Nelson Dr., Jacksonville,</p>
        <p>Chatham said that between 1,200 and 1,300 of the approximately 1,500 workers scheduled for work on the first shift reported at 8 a.m. and 8:30 a.m.</p>
        <p>said to have run off highway 43, 15 miles south of Greenville at 7:20 p.m., according to the patrol.</p>
        <p>Damage to the Nelson car was estimated at $250.</p>
        <p>Gregory S. Naumann of Kinston lost control of his car on NC 11, % mile north of Grif-ton at 2:30 a.m., according to patrolmen.</p>
        <p>Damage was estimated atiC#^-.</p>
        <p>$500 and he was charged with  O* KoCiei KOlG</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>Dismiss Pastor</p>
        <p>Conetoe Creek</p>
        <p>MACON, Ga. (AP)  Members of a Baptist church on the ! Mercer University campus have voted to dismiss their pastor and (wo other staff workers who had Watersheds.pressed for an open-door policy</p>
        <p>The damage estimate was $600. Parrish was hospitalized for observation, the patrol said.</p>
        <p>Another accident on N.C. U occurred at 9:30 p.m. yesterday, one mile north of Grifton, patrolmen said.</p>
        <p>Robert M. Hawkins, 33, Box 54, Ayden, ran off the road while attempting to dodge a dog, according to the patrol.</p>
        <p>Damage was estimated at $1,000. The patrol said Hawkins was taken to the hospital by the rescue squad.</p>
        <p>The 13 were arrested while   contract  was  complet-|for  Negroes.</p>
        <p>a protest against what he called I chin, N.Y., which state police</p>
        <p>iinfoT Ink...   1___ </p>
        <p>28%!</p>
        <p>59%</p>
        <p>78 ,</p>
        <p>2114 The Womens Home 334|WilI be at the Free Hope FWB</p>
        <p>29:^ Church  Sep.  29-30.  i Teamsters  President called unfair labor practices by the raided.</p>
        <p>57^  -- Romney the  best governor for|conapany. He said the  strike</p>
        <p>32 'TV. D TT  working man since Frank niight last three to five days.</p>
        <p>33%  Gospel  Chorus  Murphy. Democrat Murphy Chatham denied the strike</p>
        <p>77%' n  i  Church  played a key  role in the start was called because of  unfair</p>
        <p>iwill  have  rehearsal Tuesday  at  of the United  Auto Workers in'labor practices. He said  It is</p>
        <p>'7:30 p.m. at the church. ithe 1930s.</p>
        <p>- I While praising</p>
        <p>lunching at a Forest Hills, Queens, restaurant. Hentel and police compared it to the 1957 underworld confab at Apala-</p>
        <p>Friday, according to Roy Beck, local conservation-</p>
        <p>49%! 29%: 63%!</p>
        <p>The Pactolus</p>
        <p>'Strictly economic.</p>
        <p>Romney, Hof- Chatham, asserting the plant Holv Chiirrh  showed  why distaste for Wil- 'will continue to operate, said</p>
        <p>36%the Rock will observe their pas-  *"'8Detroit-new workers wouid be hired</p>
        <p>74% itor s anniversary this week S Teamsters leaders of en-, to replace strikers.</p>
        <p>25 !the following services- Wednes-'"'"!." Michigan Drive,i  -</p>
        <p>24&amp;gt;4'day. Elder James Collins of Mor- j'</p>
        <p>Sin* FriSavtgM E^ufolt'  "eU "?we</p>
        <p>or S.. Rest</p>
        <p>j approve of endorsements by j</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>Winterville.</p>
        <p>Ask alraut bonking finest bargain . .</p>
        <p>Planters</p>
        <p>"jMntlonal</p>
        <p> ^ Bank and T</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>economic organizations 'that he didnt approve of fas tactics.</p>
        <p>I Hoffa made it clear that Teamsters considered the</p>
        <p>and!</p>
        <p>Hof-</p>
        <p>ScantChance Of Recession Seen</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Two the top economic advisers to Presi-</p>
        <p>^^ey felt compelled fe back Wil- Tr!U"Her^a7owfer. ff-</p>
        <p>Hoffa said Romney s oopo-ment, Zolton Ferency might  'I  i*':!*:','!'</p>
        <p>make a good governor 'but that  Iihl?  r a'</p>
        <p>^ he would have to "learn an aw-    ^tdner</p>
        <p> jful lot in a hurry to do as well as Romney.</p>
        <p>Bank and Trust Company _</p>
        <p>Hit-Run Charge Facing Driver</p>
        <p>Richard Shelton Monds, 35.</p>
        <p>chairman of the Presidents Council of Economic Advisers, said Sunday the danger for next year would be on the side of too much demand rather than too little. He said, short of a sudden termination of the defense effort in Viet Nam, I see no prospect of a recession in</p>
        <p>Four Killed In Crash Of Plane</p>
        <p>WILKESBORO, N.C. (AP) -IA private plane crashed and burned Sunday in a field half a mile west of the Wilkes County Airport, killing four men.</p>
        <p>tooner M. W. Greene Jr., said the time of the crash was still to be determined. He said the plane had cooled by the time rescuers reached the site late Sunday afternoon.</p>
        <p>The plane was in high grass and, investigators said, apparently caught fire after impact.</p>
        <p>The dead were identified as; Ernest Almanza, 33, of North Wilkesboro, pilot and owner of the Cessna 170; Hernandez Fredrico, Ray Emerson Pruitt,</p>
        <p>132, and Robert Coy Anderson, Ackley, all of Rt. 4, North Wilkesboro. A Civil Aeronautics Board inspector began an investigation shortly after the wreckage was discovered.</p>
        <p>ed R.</p>
        <p>ist.</p>
        <p>He said 78.4 acres were involved. The work was done by Smith - Douglas Company, Inc., of Grifton.</p>
        <p>Beck said this falls new seeding of 153 acres on the upper</p>
        <p>The dismissals, approved 259 to 189 Sunday, came shortly after members of the Tattnall Square Baptist Church forcibly removed from the church a Negro student from Ghana who attempted to attend the serv-i ices.</p>
        <p>Those dismissed were Dr.</p>
        <p>Assault Charged Bethel Woman</p>
        <p>BETHEL  Bethe! police are holding Maggie Thompson, Ne-^0, on charges of assault with intent to kill after a Saturday night fight between her and her husband, Jesse Thompson.</p>
        <p>According to police officials, Thompson was wounded with a pointed object, probably a knife.</p>
        <p>Thompson is in Pitt Memorial Hospital and is reported to be in serious candition.</p>
        <p>The incident occurred about 11:30 p.m. Saturday.</p>
        <p>confeact-1 Thomas J. Holmes, the pastor; nlv^ w  Com-the Rev. Douglas Johnson, thei</p>
        <p>,  .  !  associate  pastor;  and Jack W.</p>
        <p>Three tractors are mowing, Jones, the music director. ' and we expect to be drilling: The membership voted 286 to</p>
        <p>i 109 last summer to remain seg-</p>
        <p>fertilizer tomorrow.</p>
        <p>famous for good food</p>
        <p>CAROLINA</p>
        <p>GRILL</p>
        <p>unique '"Personalized"</p>
        <p>HON-0-MiTK</p>
        <p>Checking Plan</p>
        <p>of Greenville was charged with 1997</p>
        <p>7!MTmfeam?rns'hi'r"? "  " ABC tele-</p>
        <p>7.50 p.m. traffic mishap Satur- vision-radio program Issues</p>
        <p>and Answers. Ackley appeared on the CBS television-radio program Face the Nation.</p>
        <p>Local Minister At Dallas Session</p>
        <p>The Rev. Thomas Law, minister of Red Oak Christian Church, is attending a meeting of the International Christian Churches in Dallas, Tex.</p>
        <p>Dr. Robert Holt, vice president and dean of East Carolina College, was guest minister at the local church Sunday.</p>
        <p>Plans are underway for a harvest festival at the Red Oak (Community Center on Saturday Nov. 5.</p>
        <p>Dinner will be served followed by entertainment and tion sale.</p>
        <p>an auc-</p>
        <p>mishap</p>
        <p>I day night.</p>
        <p>Investigators reporied the I j Monds auto collided with a parked car owned by Norman Sutton, 2415 East 14th Street I which was parked in front of the  Sutton residence.</p>
        <p>Damage to the Sutton auto was set at $125 while damage to jthe Monds car was placed at I $700.</p>
        <p>Driver Charged In Sunday Wreck</p>
        <p>Jasper Ray Baker, 22-year-old i</p>
        <p>OBITUARY</p>
        <p>Lamb</p>
        <p>Mr. Sidney Lamb, 76, died in Pitt Memorial Hospital Monday morning at 1:45. Graveside services will be conducted Tuesday afternoon at two-oclock in Greenwood Cemetery by the Rev. Edward Wilson, pastor of Meadowbrook Presbyterian Church.</p>
        <p>Mr. Lamb, a resident of 1405 Drum Street, was a native of Roper and had lived in Greenville for the past fifty years. He</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>Thru Thiir.</p>
        <p>NO</p>
        <p>MONTHLY SERVICE CHAROi MONTHLY ACTIVITY tHARGE MINIMUM BALANCE REQUIRED</p>
        <p>um</p>
        <p>UKW</p>
        <p>n HMmmr</p>
        <p>MUSIC BY MA.NCINI SHOWS; 1 . 3 - 5 - 7 -  AdnlU 85c - Children 35e</p>
        <p> -w' *riT0re</p>
        <p>Nc^o of Grifton was charged i survivors with reckless driving following investigation of a 3:30 a.m. mishap Sunday in front of 2509 Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>Police said the Raker auto went out of conh'ol and caused damage to the yard at 2.509 Me-'morial Dr.</p>
        <p>Police set damage to the auto ' at $400 and to the yard at $75. I Baker was taken to Pitt Memorial Hospital for treatment of minor injuries received in the CTAllk  i</p>
        <p>immediate</p>
        <p>House Speaks To Bethel Rotary</p>
        <p>BETHEL  D, T. House III was speaker at the Rotary Club' meeting Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>House spoke on his experiences in the countries of South Asia.</p>
        <p>James A. Manning will be in charge of the program for this week.  I</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
        <p>JOSEPH</p>
        <p>presenis</p>
        <p>imsmmr</p>
        <p>. HUI-NMWn-</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; aua nonnn. I nuniin ncnn &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>wu H3i6 //- ii/e hdue iff</p>
        <p>PHILCO</p>
        <p>PORTABLE TV</p>
        <p>/I//popufat sfzGs an(/s/(//es</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>PAUiiiSiN COlUMSltffIM</p>
        <p>MM M CK kuMI nwMM UlO;  t-mMiil)</p>
        <p>NOW SHOWING</p>
        <p>SEiQ</p>
        <p>DRIVE-IN</p>
        <p>THEATRE</p>
        <p>coiiMsaFfiukfs I</p>
        <p>OERNMmitiN</p>
        <p>mMatt helm</p>
        <p>TheSILENCERS</p>
        <p>MUOA'lFCUUOEproduclion -COLUMBIACI</p>
        <p>pHILCO cool cnass  wk</p>
        <p>that Beats the Hea . model 4334</p>
        <p>PHILCO 19-Inch* TV</p>
        <p>with SOLID STATE Relliliility</p>
        <p>Transistorized in the vital signal receiving circuits; no tubes to burn out</p>
        <p>19'ei#rll diijonii; AS.</p>
        <p>, UZ sq. w. yiiwibfe irN. LOW '</p>
        <p>AS</p>
        <p>f--, PHIICO</p>
        <p>Almost all picture and what I piclurel PHILCO Cool Chassis, too.</p>
        <p>411(0011;</p>
        <p>141 tq. m. yitwtblo &amp;gt;rM.</p>
        <p>Lot; *10?"</p>
        <p>AS</p>
        <p>Mouth</p>
        <p>COME IN! WE RE DEALING BIG ON THE BEST 1</p>
        <p>Taft Furniture Store</p>
        <p>535 DICKINSON AVE.</p>
        <p>PL 2-205f</p>
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