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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0001" />
        <p>WEATHER</p>
        <p>Variable cloudiness with scattered showers through Wednesday. Warmer Wednesday.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>86th Year NO 147  press  internationai.</p>
        <p>icai INW. 1^/  ASSOCIATED  PRESS</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. C --27834 TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 20, 1967</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page 2  Wash. D. C. school! discriminatory Page 5  More TB in Coastal Plains Page 10  Obituaries</p>
        <p>10 Pages Today</p>
        <p>Price 10 Cents</p>
        <p>Elmhurst</p>
        <p>Goldberg Replies To Kosygin Policy Statement</p>
        <p>United Nations Urged To Defuse</p>
        <p>Principal old Hostilities In Middle East</p>
        <p>Resigning</p>
        <p>The Greenville City School Board last night accepted the resignation of Mrs. Helen D. Wolff as principal of Elmhurst School.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Wolff, principal at Elmhurst since the schools opening in 1955, will become Director of the new Model Development Reading School in Greensboro this summer.</p>
        <p>I feel I have had an unusual opportunity in the Greenville School system for persuing and developing new approaches to elementary education, she said, in a letter of resignation to the Board. These experiences have been deeply rewarding to me and I appreciate the administrative leadership and support which has made this possible.</p>
        <p>After coming to Greenville in 1949, Mrs. Wolff taught at the Agnes Fullilove School for three years and at Wahl - Coates for three years.</p>
        <p>"She has done a remarkable job, said Supt. J. H. Rose. She has made the Elmhurst School known throughout the State and tlie Southeast.</p>
        <p>Rose said the school, under Mrs. Wolffs direction, has become an example for educators, with visitors coming to this school for the past six years tind out what was being done under her talented leadership.</p>
        <p>.Mrs. Wolff has been able to inspire her co-workers to try new and better things and to stay on the job from early morning to late at night in order to get the job done. he declared. She has also been able to carry the message to the parents o; the children and has never attempted to initiate new procedures until the parents of the children and the teaching staff knew what it was all about and supported it.</p>
        <p>Supt. Rose also reminded the board that last nights meeting</p>
        <p>was the final one for Mrs. Ellen Carroll, Asst. Superintendent, who has also resigned. Rose commended Mrs. Carroll for her fine work as a teacher and Asst. Superintendent int he Greenville City Schools.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Carroll has done a tremendous job in improving instruction throughout the school I system and in the state, he said. She is regarded as a top I person in elementary educa-jtion.</p>
        <p>I Rose presented to the board 'a financial statement of the</p>
        <p>UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)The United States pleaded with the United Nations today to defuse the bomb of hostility in the Middle East and lay a solid foundation for a durable peace in that explosive area.</p>
        <p>We can unite for peace or we can divide in discord, U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg told the 122-nation General Assembly convened in special session to consider the backlash of Israels lightning victory over the Arabs in five days of war.</p>
        <p>The U.S. representatives address was a reply to the major policy statement Monday of Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, who not only ripped into all aspects of U.S. foreign policy, but demanded that Israel be condemned as an aggressor and punished.</p>
        <p>In his carefully measured response, Golcberg made it clear that President Johnsons policy speech Monday was the basis upon which the United States w'as appealing both to the assembly and to the Soviet Union</p>
        <p>as the other great world power.</p>
        <p>He stressed at the outset the President's assurance that the United States will do its part for peace in eveiy forum, at every level, at every hour.</p>
        <p>Kosygin failed to make an appearance as the assembly reconvened. Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and other members of the Soviet delegation were in their places.</p>
        <p>As the troubles of the Middle East are great, so also must our purposes be great, Goldberg told the assembly. It is</p>
        <p>not enough to defuse the bomb of hostility: we must remove the explosive itself. Our ultimate aim must be nothing less than a stable and curable peace in the Middle East.</p>
        <p>Our task is far from easy. We may all unite for peace'in the abstract; but our real task is, for the sake of peace, to unite upon a course of action. This course must be rooted both in fidelity to the principles and purposes of the Charter and in a clear grasp of the historical events which have led to the present situation.</p>
        <p>The Soviet contention is that Israel mu.st immediately evacuate territories it overran in a blitzkrieg against the Arabs, return captured materal, make restitution for damages to the Arabs and be condemned for aggression.</p>
        <p>The United States contends that Israel and the Arabs, as the antagonists in this crisis, must eventually negotiate a durable settlement. The implication is that the United States will not join in any effort to force Israel out of all the territories it has conquered.</p>
        <p>Kidnap-Killing Of 2 Officers Sparks Manhunt</p>
        <p>MRS. HELEN WOLFF</p>
        <p>schools systems lunchroom operations for the past year.</p>
        <p>! The report showed that all school luncherooms paid all ex- penses during the year and ended the year with a cash balance.</p>
        <p>He pointed out that the total I cash balance for lunchroom ope-I rations last year was $9,812.81. iThis years total cash balance, ^he explained, W'as $26,367.95.</p>
        <p>I In last years totals, Elmhurst School indicated a deficit of (Continued On Page 10)</p>
        <p>S.MN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)-The kidnap killing of two young U.S. border patrolmen apparently taken from a raodblock set off a manhunt today, j Marine helicopters flew over the ravines and foothills of northern San Diego County and southern Riverside County.</p>
        <p>The Federal Bureau of Investigation, other federal agencies and sheriffs offices of both counties put every available man on the tracking job.</p>
        <p>A vast area surrounding the cabin in which Theodore Newton, 26, and George F. Azrak, 21, were slain was sealed off. Their government sedan was found covered with brush, and officers said there was no evidence that another car had left the scene 70 miles north of San Diego.</p>
        <p>The killer or killers may have a 48-hour jump on their pursuers.</p>
        <p>An off-duty Los Angeles fireman are taking part in a Jeep outing discovered the bodies of Newton and Azrak, tied togeth-</p>
        <p>New Draft Rules On School Board</p>
        <p>Way To President</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Draft-age .students and 19-year-old non-students have a vital stake in new draft legislation Congress hopes to have on President Johnson's desk Wednesday.</p>
        <p>If the President signs the measure into law and he requested it-students seeking a deferment to complete their undergraduate studies no longer would be at the mercy of local draft boards, nor would they be requiied to stay in the upper half of their clas.ses.</p>
        <p>The President could go ahead with his announced plan to shift the emphasis in draft priorities to the 19-year-old group.</p>
        <p>The pending bill, a compromise between the Senate and House measure, already has cleared the Senate and was on todays House agenda with passage seen certain.</p>
        <p>The bill would continue, with some changes, most provisions of the present draft law expiring June 30. The extension would be for four years. The current law would expire June 30.</p>
        <p>The major proposed change would affect students. Any student requesting a deferment to pursue college studies would be enlitled to it as a matter of law.</p>
        <p>He could keep it until he completed his undergraduate studies, reached age 24 or left school, whichever came first.</p>
        <p>' The only condition would be that the student meet scholastic and other standards of the school he attends-in short, doesnt flunk out or get kicked out. He wouldn't have to be in the upper half of his class.</p>
        <p>; Once tlie deferment ended, the student would go to the top of the group most vulnerable to induction.</p>
        <p> A student is not legally entitled to a deferment under present law. In practice, most local draft boards grant deferments on request and condition them on .scholastic standing.</p>
        <p>The proposed new law doesn't spell out the emphasis on taking 19-year-olds first to meet monthly draft calls but Congress made clear in written reports that it favors the plan, which the President can put intvO effect by executive action.</p>
        <p>In the past, older men in the 19 to 26 draft pool have been called first although the pool of eligible older men has dwindled to such an extent that younger eligibles now are meeting most of the monthly quotas.</p>
        <p>Bill Shapes Up In House</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (.\P)  After being told that it was a reform that 5 long overdue, the House Education Committee gave its approval today to a bill calling for election of county boards of education in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The measure, already passed by the Senate, does not affect counties which already elect their county school board members. It would eliminate, after July 1, 1969, the omnibus bill under which boards of education have been elected b\_the General Assembly in most counties.</p>
        <p>Only Rep. Roger Kiser, D-Scotland, voted no on the motion by Rep. Ernest Messer, D-Haywood, to give the bill a favorable report.</p>
        <p>The peolpe of this state want elected boards of education, Messer said. I think we ought to submit to the qill of the people to this extent.</p>
        <p>I think the people are better qualified to select tlicse people back^ home than we are here. Messer continued. Experience has been that an elected school board is ordinarily a good school board.</p>
        <p>er by handcuffs around a potbellied stove. Both had been shot in the head.</p>
        <p>Their .44 caiber magnum revolvers and extra ammunition clips were missing. But a handgun belonging to one of the officers was found on the cabin floor.</p>
        <p>Footprints were discovered leading from the cabin.</p>
        <p>The FBI was checking reports that a man wearing an ill-fitting border patrolmans uniform stopped by a trailer camp on the Arizona border north of Blythe early Sunday and asked for gasoline. The last radio report of the missing patrolmen was 24 hours earlier.</p>
        <p>The two officers set up the . routine roadblock on California! 79 near Oak Grove to look for persons entering the country illegally or carrying narcotics.</p>
        <p>They radioed their last word early Saturday that the roadblock had been set up. That was Azraks 34th day int he Border Patrol.</p>
        <p>' Two days later, their bodies! were found in the cabin in the I rugged, snake-infested foothills ; Grove.</p>
        <p>The top man in his Border Patrol graduating class at Port Isabel. Tex., last August, Newton was a native of Concord, N.C. His widow and two cliil-dren live in Fallbrook, Calif. He lived in Greenville, S.C., for about 10 years.</p>
        <p>Azrak, who earned a criminology degree in 1965 at Florida State University, would have been 22 years old June 30. His father is a detention guard for, the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service at Miami. Fla.</p>
        <p>Substitute Bill For Corrections</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Dept. Is Approved</p>
        <p>ARRIVES FOR ASSEMBLY SESSION</p>
        <p>Secretary of</p>
        <p>State Dean Rusk and U. S. Ambassador to Moscow Llewlyn Thompson arrive at U.N. headquarters in New York today to attend the Gener 1 Assembly session on the Middle East. Moments later Rusk and Soviet Forei^ Minister Andrei Gromyko met privately before the session started. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Red China May Hove Lofted Its H-Bomb</p>
        <p>By REESE HART  Associated Press VVriicr</p>
        <p>I RALEIGH (AP) - A House I committee today approved m-; animously a substitute bill call-jing for the creation of a State j Department of Correction to rr-j place the Prison Department : and authorizing an incentive I pay program for prisoners.</p>
        <p>! House Judiciary I Committee I took its action after it met jointly with Senate Judiciary I 'Committee for a public hearing on the administration-backed measure. The Senate committee : agreed to vote Thursday on I the bill.</p>
        <p>i Prisons Director Lee Bounds itold the two committees North Carolina is operating a i-om-imunistic type prison system' since prisoners are not given incentive pay.</p>
        <p>The statement drew a strong objection from Sen. Frank Gril-fin, D-Union. He told Bounds. I violently disagree with you. Our director should not compare it with a Communist state.</p>
        <p>Bounds apologized and said he was withdrawing the statement.</p>
        <p>, The prisons director told the two committees he plans to : propose an incentive wage scale for prisoners ranging from 10 ,cents to $1 per day, depending! on the ability and skill of the workers. He estimated it would ^ cost $128,633 a year, but said it | would be more than offset by increased production from the enterprises.  ;</p>
        <p>The worker has something j ' in the incentive pay plan, I Bounds said. Were in i.he 'small minority of states that do not offer an incentive pay plan. | About 40 states offer it. I</p>
        <p>Clyde Harri.ss of Salislmry, chairman of the N.C, Pri.-vUi Commission, told the uvo om-mittees 4his is my bill, not Lee Bounds.</p>
        <p>He said he wanted to give the prison officials auihorit'' to do something for the prison inmates.</p>
        <p>Under the bill, the Prison Department, the Prison Commi.s-sion and the office of prison director would be abolished. The governing authorities of tne mew Department of correction .would include a commission of correction and a commissioner mf correction.</p>
        <p>I The measure would revise I general statutes relating to prisoner classification, allowance, health services, treatment programs, indeterminate senten'-es 'and records. It would consolidate and revise the laws re-lating to youthful offenders.</p>
        <p>The House committee went into a separate session and quickly approved the measure. Rep. Ilerschel Harkins, D-Bun-combe. told the committee, This is not a bill for prisoners. This is a bill for society.</p>
        <p>Rep. Claude Hamrick. D-For-syth, committee chairman, said that when he first looked at the bill he was not keen about it, but the more I looked at it the better it appeared.</p>
        <p>Rep. Ernest Paschall, D-Wil-son, said, The bill has a lot of merit.</p>
        <p>House Blocks George In Toga</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - In a sur-prise move, the House has killed a Senate-passed bill which would have placed a marble statute of George Washington in a mini skirt Roman Toga in the rotunda of the North Carolina Capitol.</p>
        <p>The measure had been given tentative approval by the House last week but was killed Monday night. The statue was to be financed by a group of private citizens and would have been a replica of a marble carved by the famous Italian sculptor, Ca-nova. and destroyed when the old Capitol burned in 1831.</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP) - Red China may liave detonated its first z i hydrogen bomb from an altitude of from 18 to 31 miles up, indicating it was sent aloft by| a missile, Japanese scientists: and defense e.xperts speculated! today.</p>
        <p>If this speculation is correct, i it would be a shock to the West for it would mean that Red  China has produced a hydrogen bomb small enough to be carried by a missile.  ,</p>
        <p>The scientific findings are i based on reports from the Research Institute of Atmospherics of Nagoya University in cen-' tral Japan and from posts of the telecommunications Ministry.</p>
        <p>The sources said the institute'</p>
        <p>reported an abnormal rise in radio wave recordings Saturday, the day of the test, waves of the type that often disturb radio communications. So did the government posts.</p>
        <p>Radio communications ordinarily are affected mainly by sun spots which disturb the earth's wave-reflecting ionosphere about 100-200 miles high. Thunder and atmosheric conditions also sometimes affect radio communications.</p>
        <p>Dr. Tetsuo Kamata, assistant profe.ssor of Nagoyas institute, reported that to the best of his knowledge there were no other abnormalities recorded t',at day. He calculated the Chinese blast took place from 18 to 31 miles high, informants said.</p>
        <p>Traffic Toll</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The-Motor</p>
        <p>'Vehicle Departments report of 'highway deaths and injuries for the 24 hours ending at 10 a.m. todav;</p>
        <p>Killed-1</p>
        <p>Injured (rural)17 I Killed this year695 'Killed to date last year725 Injured to May 1. 196614.692 Injured to May 1. 196715.881  ,</p>
        <p>! REDS SANK BOAT</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>' SFOUl., South Korea lAP)  Seoul newspapers reported that Nortn Korean shore batteries sank a small South Korean fishing boat off the ea.^t coast Monday. They said two fi.shernien .were injured and a third was I missing.  '</p>
        <p>Bloodmobile Falling Short</p>
        <p>Collections for the Tidewater Bloodmobile, now on a two-day visit to Greenville, fell short of its first day's goal yesterday by 67 pints, according to Chairman Joe Clark.</p>
        <p>We collected a total of 58 pints. he said. Some 18 people were rejected for medical reasons.</p>
        <p>The Bloodmobile is carrying out the two-day visit here at the Greenville Moose Lodge. The facility will be at the Moose Lodge until 4 p.m. today.</p>
        <p>Our quota for Tuesday Is 125 pints, said Clark. We need to collect that plus the 67 pints we fell short yesterday.</p>
        <p>Clark pointed out that the current visit of the Bloodmobile is the last of the fiscal year.</p>
        <p>We have to collect our goals to meet yearly quota, he declared.Procedural Wrangle Snarls Debate Over Censuring Dodd</p>
        <p>By JOHN CHADWICK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate debate on proposed censure of Sen. Thomas J. Dodd is snagged in a procedural wrangle that Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield says could last all week.</p>
        <p>Chances for an early vote on the censure resolution dimmed Monday as Sen. Russell B. Long, self-appointed defender of Dodd, renewed his demand for a vote first on the charge that the Connecticut Democrat knowingly double-billed the Senate and private groups for travel ex-lonscs.</p>
        <p>The Senate ethics committee, which recommended Dodd's censure for what it called financial misconduct, remains insistent that the Senate vote first on the separate charge that Dodd converted at least $116,083 in political funds to^is personal use.</p>
        <p>Long, D-La., said he has no intention of filibustering. But neither did he indicate readiness to yield the floor until his colleagues agree to vote first on the double-billing count.</p>
        <p>Long said he expects the Senate to reject the double-billing charge and contended it was</p>
        <p>unfair to leave it hanging over Dodd while the other charge is debated.</p>
        <p>Mansfield met Monday with Dodd, Long, Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen and Chairman John Stfennis, D-Miss., of the ethics committee to try to break the impasse.</p>
        <p>We got together but we didnt get anywhere, Mansfield later told reporters. But he said efforts would continue.</p>
        <p>Long needs the Senate's unanimous consent to reverse the order of vote on the charges leveled by the committee. When he asked for it last wee.., mem</p>
        <p>bers of the ethics panel objected.</p>
        <p>Mansfield said he would be willing to vote on the double-biling charge first if an agreement could be obtained to follow this, aftei^ three or four hours of additional debate, with a vote on the other charge as it now stands.</p>
        <p>Long maintained that if the double-billing charge were rejected, a couple of days should be allowed for additional debate on the charge Dodd used campaign contributions and the proceeds of political testimonials fo&amp;gt;- per.sonal expenses.</p>
        <p>Long indicated he plans to offer softening amendments, and probably a substitute, to this count.</p>
        <p>But he said if the vote went against Dodd on the double-billing count, this would indicate Senate sentiment and he would take very little time in ai'-siing further against the other charge.</p>
        <p>The fifth day of debate .Monday found Dodd under severe verbal fire from Wallace F. Bennett. R-Utah, vice chairman of the ethics committee.</p>
        <p>Bennett attacked the white-haired senators contention that</p>
        <p>the double-billings resulted from .loppy bookkeeping by a former Dodd aide, Michael V. O'Hare.</p>
        <p>Tlie record shows, said Bennett, that it could not have happened except vpith his (Dodds) full knowledge under hi. jiL'r.sonal directions .uid through his actual participation in a manner and to an extent that demonstrates a willful course of'conduct.</p>
        <p>Last week Dodd, in an emotional speech, told the Senate that if he deliberately attempted to defraud the government through double-billing, he should be expelled rathei than censured.</p>
        <p>Bennett said, Obviously Sen. Dodd had to be involved, essen. tially and inescapably, in the double-billings and also emphasized it was Dodd  not OHare  .who was enriched by the scheme.</p>
        <p>He said the fact only $1,763 was involved is beside the point. Dodd disclosed last week that he refunded that amount to the Senate disbursing office.</p>
        <p>Dodd has called OHare a witless. slovenly bookkeeper, but Bennett said OHare received numerous and substantial increases in salary while working for the Connecticut Democrat.</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0002" />
        <p>1Th Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, June 20, 1967</p>
        <p>Unrepaired Equipment In Vietnam Is Exposed</p>
        <p>   . .  , .  _ t:  I t; Qoiiinmanf ni of COnstrUCOll</p>
        <p>Bv WALTER R. MEARS tional Development program in Lippman to Asia.  I  Lippman  said  this  equipment, pi ec^ o^f construction</p>
        <p>\\ ASHlNGTX lAP)  A Asia and Europe.  Lippman told an interviewer is sent to AID depots or contrae- ment vehicles, all oi tnem un-</p>
        <p>Senate inve.'tigator says broken-  They re paying millions of  there is evidence that repair  tors in \okohama, Japan; In-  usuable.</p>
        <p>down construction equipment is  dollars for repair of equipment  work financed by the Agency  chon, Korea; Okinawa; Amster-   It had  been reparen,</p>
        <p>rusting and ratting in Vietnam  that has not been properly re-  for International Development  dam. The Netherlands; and  posedly Put into orating</p>
        <p>because repairs paid for by the  paired, said Joseph Lippman.  in both areas is being done un-  Rota. Spain.  conditon.  he said Its  all</p>
        <p>United States were left undone, the Jubcommittee's staff satisfactorilyor not at all.  Much  of  more  than  $2.5  mil-  inoperative. None ot tne stutf</p>
        <p>The Senate subcommittee on director.  The program involves reclaim- lion in work on equipment des- works.</p>
        <p>foreign aid expanditures p!an.&amp;gt;  The inquiry stems from an  ing and repairing for foreign  tined for civilian programs in  Lipmann  said the cranes</p>
        <p>to open hearings July 27 on that  inspection trip in Europe by  use construction equipment,  Vietnam has been unsatisfacto-  needed to  unload supplies  for</p>
        <p>and other allegedly unfulfilled Lippman and the subcommittee cranes, trucks and jeeps de- ry. said Lippman.  AID programs in Vietnam, and</p>
        <p>irepair contracts involved in a chairman, Ernest Gruening, D- dared surplus by the armed $400-million .Agency for Interna- Alaska, and a separate trip by services.</p>
        <p>At one area in Saigon. Lipp- the construction equipment is</p>
        <p>man said he saw some</p>
        <p>San Francisco Nervous Over Big Summer Invasion By The Hippies</p>
        <p>place for them to eat.</p>
        <p>.Already 60 to 70 more young</p>
        <p>By ROBERT STRAND United Press International</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO lUPI people from all parts of the i city officials to do something to'$650.000 on attracting the</p>
        <p>500 used on civil works projects, some linked with the pacification program.</p>
        <p>Other equipment was shipped out into the countryside before it was found to be unusable, Lippman said. The informtica I get is that the countryside and some of the villages are virtually littered with broken-down pieces of equipment.</p>
        <p>going to see the hippies. district with his family for will be left there to rot, said The hippies have pleaded with i years, says if the city can spend Lippman, because of the ex-</p>
        <p>+ x  /^r\  c  rvi-ncf  Hi  n  n  in  ,  AAfl  nn  otfrontina  fhp    i   :__i   a.</p>
        <p>THE BEACH IS JAMMED - Thousands  of alewlves litter beach north of downtown</p>
        <p>Chicajto where park distnct crews have fought a la^^ing battle asam.st the (porous mess. Fish were Washed ashore by easterly wirjds along most of the city s beaches. The migrants from salt water, BOW irJesting Lake Michigan, also clog intake .screens at city s water cribs. In background is lifeguard s tower . . . but there s no swimiming today AP Wirephotoi_</p>
        <p>Washingtons School Board Policies Are Ruled Discriminatory</p>
        <p>i. .  .  I  .   o   ---   o  -  -  pense  involved  in  shipping  T. out</p>
        <p>Love is ju.'t around the corner, country are reporU arriving!help feed and shelter the Republican National Convention,  j.gpgjf._</p>
        <p>and San Francisco is as nervous every day because San Francis-: summer inva.sion. arguing that it can afford these people. Lippman said he received ,as a bride.  jco is where it s happening. it is coming, like it or not. Kavanaugh and some other sjjyijiaj- reports from Thailand,</p>
        <p>The flower children  are Once the schools are out. their Manv ^ the newcomers will straight citizens are urging jneiyij-,a one from an AID con-coming for a summer of love, numbers are expected to be short on change, and many private organizations to help, ^j-gotor who said supposedly re-and nobody knows wnat might multiply.  of them will  e teen-age They say churches and schools  equipment  shipped  ther</p>
        <p>happen, or jusi when. ,\t best  ^  runaways, the hippies say. should prepare to open their</p>
        <p>.there will be harmony and 3 has' adopted a firmal But the city has flatly refused doors.  than  a  coat  of  paint.</p>
        <p>happiness in the Haight-.Ash- ,e.solution. which, while not to open up Golden Gate Park . The flower children have  complaint  came  from</p>
        <p>neii'Golln'Ga-eVark thaf ii  'w  Nr'!*  ririeif Twn or'S  f.Te?nTany An ATO</p>
        <p>krmvn as iinntifand At worsT*'"'''"''"'*  "t-'hwel-1&amp;gt;"  ^tigs.  .And  officials  ces of the r own. f or monlfe  75  ^</p>
        <p>known as Hippieiand. .At wor.st   g  are even colder to hippie the Diggers^ a  ,  reoaired  under con-</p>
        <p>here may be chaos m the park ical n e w s p a p e r columnist, proposals that the city set up have served several hundred  ^,ere  to  gTd</p>
        <p>tor tte thousands of the hungry Charles .McCabe, guaranteed a soup kitchens and a special hot meals each day ^1  , |^ Yj</p>
        <p>and homeless ones.  ,,,333  medical clmic.  r^ngli and begled  'T    g  t  i.st  alter  list  of</p>
        <p>:  When  you come to San the Haight-Ashbury because  Encourage  Invasin  scrounged and Deggea.  countries of</p>
        <p>Francisco be sure to wear a forbidden sweets are sweetest. These things  would only To the hippies "o omploy-  </p>
        <p>flower m your hair, say the ,0 us all.  encourage the invasion, sav the  heatr.cal  group,  pman  aid</p>
        <p>%l?y;rcorr"^  Chlet,  Thomas Cahill politicians. ___________ I ...</p>
        <p>Frai cisco. youTl find gentle people there.</p>
        <p>No matter how gentle the visitors, there may be more than the city can handle. Some estimates of the coming summer invasion of the love generation run as high as 200.000.</p>
        <p>That number is approximately 200,000 greater than the city fathers will welcome. The</p>
        <p>^S 3II.  I  cilA-WUi ciit:  MAC  H1VCU31U11,  oa&amp;gt; iiiv,  ,</p>
        <p>, Police Chief Thomas Cahill politicians.  newspaper,  clothing coop ,</p>
        <p>San predicts t-ouble bcause this .\ot everyone agrees. Frank reactions thev now have contractor has certified th some year the tourists won t be going Kavanaugh. a high school dHed f hou=ine aaCTawialled ''"''k has been done and an AID to see the topless, they 11 be teacher who has resided in the British Embassv. The name inspector has certified it is sat-</p>
        <p>Lt. Col. Brierly New Kitty Hawk PR Man</p>
        <p>!is logical to hippies because it's isfactory.</p>
        <p>run bv Paul McCarthy. 21. a Lippman said the .Agency for drummer who is British International Development now ^citizen.  is  conducting  its  own  investiga-</p>
        <p>1 In reserve, the hippies have  the  .situation.  _______</p>
        <p>somehow obtained a huge tent.</p>
        <p>;big enough to cover an acre, but nobodv has been able to find a</p>
        <p>place where city officials might Lt. Col. J. Bryan Brierly hasj military service, the colonel has allow its erection.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (APi  The 1 from overcrowded schools to, White students get a propor-  H  th  hn  d  f    -..........  ____________</p>
        <p>Distnct of Columbia s Board of orimarily white schools, wr. tionately larger share of the  ^  been  named  to  take over publicjbeen a professional photograph-  are  being distributed to</p>
        <p>Education, its policies termed he said have enrollments under capitals tax dollar, said Wright P ^  F  relations  responsibilities  in  con-  er for 26 years. He served 18 Haisht - Ashburv householders</p>
        <p>disenminatory, is under federal capacity.  -near y $100 more annually per  nection  with  Exercise Kitty years of that time in the U.S^ "hrwill s'gnaTthe.r wi"^^</p>
        <p>court order to make massive Wright further ordered the student  ^  ^  ^  bi/arre  Eastern  Marine Corps as a photo and * * u . hioDie for the night</p>
        <p>changes in the capital's public board to file a plan by next Oct. ^ Wright said the track s&amp;gt;^ em,  Treauen  '  Ls^0'  information officer.  bv raising the Xgan Dig</p>
        <p>school system.  2 to increase racial integration because of improper  Col.  Brierly  comes from the He transferred his commis- uelcome </p>
        <p>Judge James Skelley Wright of students.  testing, denies Negroes oqu^l.  Enough  Room  information  office  at  Headquar-  gjon to the Signal Corps in 1957. ,,a  nrpnaratioas mov</p>
        <p>.1 the U.S. Circuit Cou.  .  XreduLon"t"Habtn:te! The "cdy^^^f wa^d that  .As a motion piCurCelevi.  Tugrrthu.-'LUcr</p>
        <p>peals issued e ' .  . the capital's public schools are  affluent  chil-!there aren't enough places for .  .  .    assignment  Col  ^'^n director and producerhis prominent Digger personality,</p>
        <p>^in a'^dec^sion Monday that ^egro. Appointments this spring ^jren.  hippies  to  sleep  and  not  enough  gj.jgj.jy  rwoT  dosely  wi'ili  ^ifeUve^pr^ducer'Lr^ome  F"'" ''-F-A^hbm; ovetl</p>
        <p>demanded revision of board pol- Aiave Siven Neg^^^^^  Hobson, a Negro native of _ _  _  .  _  .  .  the  Savannah,  Georgia District 25 ..gii picture" nroerams  .  1.</p>
        <p>demanded revision ot Doara poi-    ^  *u  a  nuuauu, &amp;lt;x .'.cbiw  v,.</p>
        <p>icies on student placement, fac- ity. their firsT ever, on the ed- Birmingham, Ala., is an econo-..iw.. i-:_: u.A  ucation board.  oijgj- for the Social Security Ad-</p>
        <p>ulty hirings, busing and attend-</p>
        <p>k  Engineers Office, which is</p>
        <p>nOQuSllY  I  riC6U handling the land acquisition</p>
        <p>ance regulations.  The judge said the faculties of  ministration. He is a former iwmvi# |  program for the giant military</p>
        <p>The verdict was a victory  for  District .schools are assigned  official of the National Associa-  maneuver.</p>
        <p>Julius W Hobson, a federal em- so that generally the race of the tion for the Advancement UAntAflAII Irllfl  relations officer</p>
        <p>ploye and civil rights leader,  faculty is the same as the race  Colored People and the Con-  rvlllQMvll  l\Uy  has just returned from a tour</p>
        <p>who hailed it as assuring  a  of the children. He noted the  gress of Racial Equality, but he  of duty in V ietnam,</p>
        <p>bright future for the poor black heaviest concentration of Ne- split with them and now heads a WASHINGTON .AP)  The bis Asian assignment, Col. boys and girls in the school sys- gro faculty, usually 10 per cent, city civil rights group called pgjj[g jj-^ information head- brierly served as Pictorial Ad-   -  schools...ACT.  q,3rters is getting a new car- vis&amp;lt;|r to the Umnianding Gen-</p>
        <p>25 Big Picture' programs.</p>
        <p>tern.</p>
        <p>The Board of Education with-keld immediate comment regarding a review by board attorneys.</p>
        <p>Hobson, 45, who 18 months ago filed the suit against the board charging discrimination, said he hoped school officials would appeal Monday's ruling to the Supreme Court.</p>
        <p>Network Attacks Garrison's Case</p>
        <p>eral. U.S. Army. Vietnam: the f^torial Officer for the Army's</p>
        <p>3S</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  The Na-</p>
        <p>He said if the .igh court up-;jjj^jjaj Broadcasting Co. said holds Wright's ruling it would ^/londav night that New Orleans strike a death blow to so-calltd  jj^  Garrison  built</p>
        <p>de facto segregation, or racial bis  </p>
        <p>pet. The price: $3,200.</p>
        <p>The carpet was ordeed as  Signal Brigade; and as</p>
        <p>part of a general refurbishing jjjj.gj.jQj. jjj jbg Southeast Asia being given a suite of offices</p>
        <p>occupied by Phil G. Goulding.  Southeast Asia Pictorial</p>
        <p>the new assistant secretary ot ^ggjj^.y ^35 recently establish-</p>
        <p>defense, and his immediate ^jj j^ coordinate all combat and</p>
        <p>staff.  documentation photography in</p>
        <p>Approximately $3.200 will Southeast Asia.</p>
        <p>provide 363 square yards of car- ^ veteran of 28 years in the</p>
        <p>^  ^  pet  for  13  persons  in  seven  of-  -------</p>
        <p>Garrison, who sought in vain  Woii  .</p>
        <p>wa"Pentagon' told a re'- PiedltlOnt Aifline</p>
        <p>nedv's death.</p>
        <p>fless youths, tourists, rock bands and police, will be explosive. He recently told civic leaders;</p>
        <p>You have waited too long, and it is too late.</p>
        <p>GUITAR</p>
        <p>LESSONS</p>
        <p>Teaching On The Premiws At (reenvilles Complete Music Store. Call 752-7344, For An Appointment,</p>
        <p>Dealer For Fender. Gretch, I nivox and Other Brands. We Service WTiat We Sell,</p>
        <p>JONES-POTTS</p>
        <p>MUSIC COMPANY</p>
        <p>408 EVA.NS ST.</p>
        <p>J. B. BRIERLY</p>
        <p>Dist. Atty. Jim t,arrison ouiii ^..j^j.,^ program, entitled The  ^  1  1</p>
        <p>his case against Clay L. Shaw con.spiracyi The Case of P/'*;''.Tt Asks CAB Add</p>
        <p>on le..timony that did not pass j, Garrison," said in New Or- That s s ig . &amp;gt;  ..  -</p>
        <p>1-  i__r-.r '  .  r  x-arH Q moHAratp rn.st nv retai  __.x^ _</p>
        <p>Pentagon loia a re- 1 icviiiiwiii  Picture    programs  are</p>
        <p>a series produced by the Army</p>
        <p>ji. ------ c  .  w  .  4  \  Pictorial Center and viewed</p>
        <p>The frantic nature of  a  moderate  cost  by  retail  ||.g R0UtS  over hundreds of television sta-</p>
        <p>rison knew this.  this  effort  to derail the prosecu-'standards.  tions across the United States</p>
        <p>Wright ordered the board to i shaw, a retired New Orleans jjjjj^-,. simply confirms the official said some parts 01 WASHINGTON (AP)  Pied- each week, abolish immediately its system businessman, is under indict- jy^^j QffjQg bas iincov- the 10-\ear-old carpet being re-  y^jrijnes of Winston-Salem</p>
        <p>of placing students in tracks ment there on charges of con- j^g j,.j,g jagj^ about Dallas Ptaced still have life in them ^^j^^jj j^e Civil Aeronautics /vf varvinu .qcaripmic difficultv  in  mnrrfpr Prc.sident  i wi_...   and  will  be  USed  in  Other  Penta-  r&amp;gt;____I  ona</p>
        <p>Imbalance in the schools, with</p>
        <p>sweeping ramifications for ur-, g ijg jjgjggjj;,. jggj and that Gar-ban areas of the North.  !      '  '</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>SUMMER TIME IS TEA TIME. TRY VES^ T^ AND TEA BAGS FOR A CHANGE.</p>
        <p>NOW AVAILABLE AT YOUR</p>
        <p>Bilbro Serviced Stores</p>
        <p>depending on the cores on aptitude tests.</p>
        <p>The judge called the aptitude Garri.son disputes the Warren  ___</p>
        <p>tests standardized primarily Commission finding that Lee  c.immcd un-</p>
        <p>on white, middle class children" Harvey Oswald acted alone 3^  *  P-</p>
        <p>and said thev forced most Ne- Kennedy.s killer, contending '^e cannot say that the mur-gro children into track.s which that the assassination was the</p>
        <p>Wr reduced curricula and result of a conspiracy.  happen  the  way  Jim Garrison</p>
        <p>.  to murder President;'|,'3';,;;|;7nw'a.sh- and will be used in other Penta-  Charlotte</p>
        <p>Students john F. Kennedy, who was as- jngjon, D.C., who know it.</p>
        <p>sassinaled in Dallas in 1963  r  ,t u</p>
        <p>.Vt the conclusion of the hour-</p>
        <p>gon office.s presumably for jjbarleston, S.C.. to its route be-officials with a less lofty status.  Atlanta  and  Washington.</p>
        <p>-  The  airline  also  asked  the</p>
        <p>To Stay With  CAB  for  a  new  route  from  Mi-</p>
        <p>Monetary Fund</p>
        <p>from which chance of escape xbc said the results of Gar-</p>
        <p>says it did. We cannot say he doe.s</p>
        <p>ami to Jacksonville, Fla., Brunswick and Savannah, Ga., extending to Charleston. Flor-WASHINGTON  (.VP)  Wil-  ence and Myrtle Beach, S.C.,</p>
        <p>... . uuf.s not have'the evidence to liam B. Dale will be nominated Wilmington, Fayetteville, Jack-Is remote.  1  rison s lour montns of public in-  bv President Johnson for his sonville, Camp Lejeune, Ni^v</p>
        <p>The decision also ordered the I vestigation have been to dam- ^  '  jbj,,jj 2-year term as United Bern, Kinston. Goldsboro and</p>
        <p>faculties of capital schools age reputations, to spread fear \Ve Can say this, the ca.se he  executive  director  of  the  Rocky Mount. N.C., on one leg</p>
        <p>substantially  integrated  and  and  suspicion  and,  worst of  all,  has  built  against  (  lav  Shau i.s  |j^jg^.j^yjjjmal Monetary Fund,  and the other to Greenville-</p>
        <p>said  the  board  must  provide  to  exploit  the  nation s  sorrow  based  on  testimony  that did not  white House  said Monday.  Spartaifourg, Asheville in one</p>
        <p>busing to take Negro students and doubts about President Ken- pass a lie detector test (larri-  ^^^^gjj  jj^ j^g branch and to Columbia. Char-</p>
        <p>P".- I' November 1962. He was loite, Winston-Salem. Greens-ness" a'dmitred he wa.s going to reappointed in -'^prinT_ . boro, Raleigh. Rocky Mount and lie.</p>
        <p>Untraditional Area _</p>
        <p>Service From PTI</p>
        <p>Pitt Tech, again, is first in the to be housed in their plant for  ^</p>
        <p>State to provide untraditional use bv their emplovees.  w.'xsni.NUi.'vri  in..</p>
        <p>services to the people ot  Jue'Downing. Director of Ex-^-'-</p>
        <p>^ BHl Fulford. Pitt Tech Presi-  ifmsorhelw'cn'indr;</p>
        <p>dent, says: Traditionally, we ,|,g ijhrarv at Pitt Tech. Commerce Ummission for per-have served readers and re- According to Mr. Downing. Sev-</p>
        <p>searchers who come to the lib-  ,,^3, istnes have already  8'"';  "'"""g''"'</p>
        <p>rary of their own desire or who  expressed an interest in par-</p>
        <p>were pushed in by school assign-  jjj.ipyjj,,g p ^ program, A  The  .VCL  wants  to  di.scontinue</p>
        <p>ments. Today, we are in par-  rotating technical and vocational  trains  No. 42  and  49.  which up-</p>
        <p>ticular pursuit of those employ jjbrary will be a new experience  ply  the only through  sleeping</p>
        <p>ed in industry, and we hope to jj^, ^j pjjj jejsb Por one out  car  service between  Washington</p>
        <p>capture a larger segment of this j^j gygpy four of our citizens, the  and  Wilmington.</p>
        <p>population, since we have the nbrary is a grand place to be.  -</p>
        <p>finest selection  of technic-al  jj ^ffjjrds information,  relax-</p>
        <p>books^ found anywhere in the ^,jon. and stimulation in books GOVERNOR HONORED</p>
        <p>a^^a.  and ideas. But for the other  CHAFFEE  Ark,  (AFi </p>
        <p>p-n rl'h  citizens,  if is as unknown Louisiana* Gov. 'john J. Mc-</p>
        <p>rwiictripc in the area with a mysterious as a lunar land- Reithen was honored for ex-industries in the area ith a gcape. and to their thinking, just j ,. service durine the complete listing of technical and -n  arcessihle  This  nro-  rx</p>
        <p>vocational books housed in Pitt,'^ird annual Governors Day T^h's library.  Management  ''am is to provide wavs  of ex-  review of the  .3Mh  Infanlry  Divi</p>
        <p>may reque.st of  the Institute  pnnding our services to  tho.se  si on.  Louisiana-Arkan.sas  .\  ,</p>
        <p>books listed on a  30 da&amp;gt;^ basis,  cnnployed in industry.  tional  Guard.</p>
        <p>Dale. 43. a native of Detroit Elizabeth City on the other, who now lives in Bethesda, Md., entered government service in 1948 as an economist in the Treasurys Office of International Finance.</p>
        <p>As U.S. Plxecutive director of the Monetary Fund, Dale re-, ceives .$25.000.</p>
        <p>PARKERHOUSE</p>
        <p>ROLLS 30&amp;lt;dox</p>
        <p>Diener's Bakety</p>
        <p>Wednesdays Special</p>
        <p>WAREHOUSE FABRIC SALE</p>
        <p>We will continue to clean up our warehouse stock of fabrics. We have several thousand yards that must go regardless of cost.</p>
        <p>Fabrics valued from 69&amp;lt; to $2.99 yard</p>
        <p>LOWEST PRICES ON</p>
        <p>DRUGS</p>
        <p>CkATC5.c Cf ^rSCVXSlr CR</p>
        <p>Pin PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0003" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, June 20, 19673</p>
        <p>me uaiiy Ketiector, oreenviiie, n. iues&amp;lt;Woman Golfers Playing In State Retarded 5iiidNeeds More L</p>
        <p>,ove</p>
        <p>Tournament Honored At Banque</p>
        <p>Participants in the North Carolina Women's Golf Association slate tournament, which is being played this week at Brook \ Tey Country Club, were en-t tained at a banquet last n.ght at the Elk Lodge.</p>
        <p>Mrs. .Line Rhinehart, NCWGA president, gave the welcome to tue 18th annual business meeting and expressed her appreciation to her otlicers and board members.</p>
        <p>Sae also presented gifts of appreciation to Mrs. Jane Sauve, tournament chairman, and Mrs.</p>
        <p>Harrictte White, assistant tournament chairman.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Sauve recognized the following local tournament chairmen:  Mary  Meade Powell;</p>
        <p>Barnie Rawl; Doris May; Teddy Proctor; Mildred Coleman:</p>
        <p>Evelyn Ward; Betty Lou Howard; Isabelle Rivers; Martha Move: Esther Lautares; Virginia Minges; and Harriette White.</p>
        <p>The state officers elected for next year are; Mrs. A. N. De-rouin, Pinehurst, president;</p>
        <p>Mr.s. John F. Dombroski. Tar-boro, fiist vice president; Mrs.</p>
        <p>Jeter Oakley. Morganton, second vice president; Mrs. Richard S. Davis, Greensboro, sec-</p>
        <p>The 1968 NCWGA state tour-</p>
        <p>Mrs. S. J. Craig, Tryon. trea- nament will be held in States-  TUESDAY</p>
        <p>.^rer; Miss Marge Burns, vjpe and the 1969 tournament 7:00 p. m.  Creasy K.</p>
        <p>Greensboro, rating chairman, ^yjn tagg place in Tyron.  Proctor, Order of DeMolay</p>
        <p>Mrs. Fred Sauve, Greenville.  ^vere  presented  to  cham-  meets  at  Masonic  Hall</p>
        <p>Mrs. Robert Eller, Newton, and pjonship flight glofers. .Mrs. 8:00 p. m.  Naval Reserve Mrs. Barnev Hartman, .\shevil- Rhinehart was also remember' meets in basement of Aastin le, board of directors.  vvith  a  gift  from  the  North</p>
        <p>A highlight of the meeting was Carolina Women's Golf .Associa-the announcement bv Mrs. Har- tion.</p>
        <p> By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN</p>
        <p>DEAR .ABBY: Several months</p>
        <p>De&amp;lt;w.-A)6</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>^ is</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>THE 18TH ANNUAL . . . business meeting and banquet of the NCWGA was held last night at the Elk Lodge. Pictured above, left to right, are Mrs. Betty Lou Howard, Mrs. Jane Rhinehart, Mrs. Harriette White, Mrs. Teddy Proctor and Mrs. Jane Sauve.</p>
        <p>riette White, of the pairings andj starting times for todays'</p>
        <p>Calendar Events</p>
        <p>Returns From Cruise</p>
        <p>phone Mrs. Savage, 752-3966 or Mrs. Gillahan, 758-3634</p>
        <p>10:00 a. m.  Ladies day at Brook Valley Country Club</p>
        <p>6:30 p. m.  Exchange Club meets</p>
        <p>7:00 p. m. -- Winterville Ki-wanis Club meets in Community Bldg.</p>
        <p>7:00 p. m.  Civitan Club meets</p>
        <p>8:00 p m.  Chapter 1308 ol the Women ol the Moose</p>
        <p>'ersonals</p>
        <p>Big.</p>
        <p>8:00 p. m.  Chapter No.</p>
        <p>149 Order of Eastern Star</p>
        <p>8:00 p. m.  Woodmen of the World meet in basement of Home Savings and Loan Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p m. - Pitt Co. Al-coh.olic Anonymous meets at AA Bldg. on F'armville Hwy.</p>
        <p>Telephone 752-5115</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY  .  ...  ...    .</p>
        <p>1:45 p. ni.  Wednesday Af- ...  J^st  ^fg (g know how much he was</p>
        <p>ternoon Duplicate Bridge Club '^^^dnesday for Boeblingen, Ger- actually getting for the house u'ookTv !';inip nt PUmtpr'; Rank maiu, wheic she will spend the bgcause she s the kind who</p>
        <p>ne.xt veai vsith her husband, spends a thousand if she thinks I PC Thomas E. Dail. Mrs. Dail ^pgy have a hundred, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>D Lacy Harrell Jr. of Green- ^^ould there be anything viiig,   wrong with my doing this for</p>
        <p> __him as a favor?</p>
        <p>Bruce Bradbury left Saturday for Gainesville, Ga.. where he DE.AR FRIEND. Yes. Plent\.</p>
        <p>changed. .And for only 50 cents! </p>
        <p>I kept putting if off because ago we learned that our baby  I thought 1 would have to go to</p>
        <p>! was retarded. We were stunned  court and maybe thei^ W ould</p>
        <p>and heartbroken, and all we  be a lot of red tape, publicity,</p>
        <p>could do was pray for ,the and expen.se involved. I can't strength to do everything we'^find words to tell you how much could for him. According to our I appreciate your helping me doctor, a retarded child has a With this worrisome situation, better start in life if he lives  I wonder if other mothers with</p>
        <p>I at home, so we decided to keep  the same problem know how</p>
        <p>him home.  easy it is to solve?</p>
        <p>Abby you wouldn't believe  FOREVER GRATEFUL</p>
        <p>the remarks made to us by DEAR GR.ATEFL'L: If they</p>
        <p>; friends; Why don't you put  didn't and  they  read  this,  they  standing on  the  subject  of lu.-  Fur a  posunal  replv.  eii.Tose</p>
        <p>him in an institution*  Hell  do now.  mosexualitv  is  Sexual  Inver-  a .Ham|jed,  self-addres.^ed  cube better ott with his own  kind.  CONFIDENTIAL  TO  ::PRE-  sion bv Dr.  Judd .Marmor ipsv-  veio.;,..</p>
        <p>And, Aren't your other child-  fERS TO REMAIN ANONY-choanalyst);  published b\ Bas-  I'. r  Aub&amp;gt; .s Oooklet, How to</p>
        <p>ren embarassed by him? Abby,  MOUS ": The name of the book  ic Books.  Have  .) Lovtl&amp;gt; Wedding. send</p>
        <p>our other children are not em-  which, in my judgment, offers Troubled?  Write to .\bb&amp;gt;. Bax  S it o  .\l)'j;.. Box 6970, Los An-</p>
        <p>barrassed. If anything, it has  more enlightenment and under-  69700. Los .\nge!e.s, ' al. 9?:iii9  tM.-..  I'al. 90069.</p>
        <p>given them a better understanding of life and problems and how to accept the inevitable.</p>
        <p>There are dark moments, of course, but what I really want to convey is that a retarded child needs love and affection as muchif not morethan a normal child. And more people should realize that it  means</p>
        <p>more to parents of a retarded child to have their friends inquire about him. It is so much kinder than all the hypocritical evasions and pretense that the child is normal.</p>
        <p>: Just putting this dowm on pa- per has made mefeelsomuch Iper has made me feel so much better. Thank you.</p>
        <p>A MOTHER</p>
        <p>DEAR MOTHER: Thank you for your wonderful letter. Millions of people will see it. and you will never know how much kindness you and your retarded child have inspired in otherwise well-meaning, but thoughtless people.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBYT I am buying a hou.se from a friend of mine for $55,000. He asked me if I would do him a favor and state the price of the house as $33.000 in the agreement of the sale, and give him the balance in cash.</p>
        <p>He said he didnt want his</p>
        <p>weekly game at Planters Bank 6:30 p. m.  Kiwanis Club meets</p>
        <p>8:00 p. m. -- Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at A.A Bldg. on Farmville ilwv. Telephone 758-2969 or 758-2811 THURSDAY 9:30 a. m.  Newcomers Club meets at Planters Bank for bridge and canasta. Tele-</p>
        <p>Special Meet Set For Thursday</p>
        <p>OUR MOST FAMOUS MAKERS</p>
        <p>fair,</p>
        <p>BRA &amp;amp; GIRDLE</p>
        <p>FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY!</p>
        <p>BUY YOURSELF A SUPPLY OF THESE FAMOUS NAME GIRDLES AND BRAS WHILE THIS SALE IS ON. COME REPLENISH YOUR LUXURY BRAS AND GIRDLES.</p>
        <p>MR. AND MRS. JAMES BRADDY  of Greenville ri'turnert hnnie Thursda.v nitihl from a lO-da.v cnii.se aboard the M S Princesa Lcop&amp;lt;-)ldina to tlv \'irain Islands, Puerto. Rico. Na-saii and Jamaica. They wen' accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. William Davis of Danville, Ky.</p>
        <p>GRIFTON NEWS</p>
        <p>enrolled at Riverside Military  falsify the price of the</p>
        <p>Academy. He was accompanied  agreement  unless</p>
        <p>bv his father, K. R. Bradbury, you want to be a parly to a and brother, who will return fraud. Tell your friend heTl home Wednesday.  have to work out the problem</p>
        <p> 1__  of an extravagant wife some</p>
        <p>IJ. and Mrs. Alf A. Forbes III *^fher way.</p>
        <p>. , .  are \isiting their parents, Mr. DEAR  ABBY: Altho  it's been</p>
        <p>A special intere.si meeting  on  nd Mrs. lf Forbes. Falkland  a vear  since I wrote to you</p>
        <p>.Accessories in the ^^ine will  u^vy. They recently returned:about a  problem that  kept me</p>
        <p>be given Thursday, June 22,  by  jrom a tour of duty in Bitburg,  up nights and since I  got vour</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lillie Little.  Germany.  answer. I still ask God to bless</p>
        <p>The same demonstration will   prayers</p>
        <p>be held in the new courtroom Mrs  Eloise Mozingo and  ^  ^  . ,  /  ,</p>
        <p>of the Pitt County Courthouse daughter. Sheila. Miss Sue Mac-  ^  wedlock.</p>
        <p>at 2:30 p.m. and again at 8 Gregor and Mrs. Vera Worth-</p>
        <p>o'clock that evening. The two ington left Sunday for New York.  certificate.  Less  than</p>
        <p>hours have been arranged in and a New England tour plan-,^ year later I married a fine</p>
        <p>order to give more people an ned by Carolina Trailwavs and m  k  m</p>
        <p>opportunity to attend.  sponsored bv the Degree'of Po-</p>
        <p>"^^.Certificate was worrying me. I</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>Mrs, Little is housing and cahontas of Greenville, house furnishings specialist. N.,</p>
        <p>C. State University.</p>
        <p>didn't want our boy to go thru</p>
        <p>B. E .\ewbv has returned to  Y'jf</p>
        <p>his home after being hospitalized</p>
        <p>for the past three weeks.</p>
        <p>Are Announced</p>
        <p>The Faculty Duplicate C</p>
        <p>Mrs. LeAnn Gilbody and son, Board of Health, which I did Gary, have returned to Califor-i immediately. They referred me y nia after having spent the past!to the city clerk, and in a mat-'  '  ter  of  minutes I was on my</p>
        <p>way to having my son's name</p>
        <p>\Mii fo the suinimw Tlv'y also</p>
        <p>aPcnd the gradualion of kn'ir  Wnudbridgc,  v'a.'S,  Wilk</p>
        <p>mccc, .Mary Dcllc P.itiick. hum  y,^|t,.d  her daughter. .Mills. s(</p>
        <p>the Annandale Higa ochoo .  ^|j.  La('a\a  and  rv  Kauf</p>
        <p>Mrs. .\lbeii Batson of MountiJohn Connolly and children. Mr.  Bridge  Winners</p>
        <p>Or\e vi&amp;gt;ited here during ihe and .Mrs. Herbert Tirser and weekend in the home of her children and Tommy Riley, aunt. .Mrs. F.F. Cox and Mr. \ir. and Mrs. R.H. Bates we^c</p>
        <p>'"? H  Ilf  n.,i,  hv'"  tri4ekl?^  a.or parents,</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. II.C. Oglc.&amp;gt;b&amp;gt; a visit with Mr. and Mis. W..\1.  p|ater  Bank  Friday  evening Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Newby,</p>
        <p>tiavc'relm-ned roMa\as:niigtun. Janu.-u-y and to attend the grad- altracted eight tables of D.C.. where they visited vvith nation of tlieir granddaughter,</p>
        <p>Iheir sen, f^u. wilo IS employ- Lorraine. They were accompa.i-</p>
        <p>c!i in the ofliec of Senator Kr- ,od by .Miss Krina Nelson. I Mrs. Jaek Cuthbertson and Mrs.</p>
        <p>M,-,. L.L. .'\Ieuborn has re-M, (;. Murphrev. first; Mrs. J.</p>
        <p>Willard and Mr.s. F. W. A.</p>
        <p>second; Dr. and Mrs. Jer-iaufman, third.</p>
        <p>.Mr, and .Mrs. .M.G. Mitchell daiieiiiers Sallie .Anne and East - West winners were: a'-ci (laughters. Kathy and .Mol- Laurie.  Mr. and Mr.s. Eustace Coinvay,</p>
        <p>]\. iKivc returned to their home d,.  Rasber'-y  iirst; .Mrs. Wiley Corbett and</p>
        <p>in Stall'll. Tex. after a vi&amp;gt;it h re  Barbara Rasberry Ed. Edmundson. second; Mr.</p>
        <p>with .Mr. and Mr.s. John Ogles- h.,ve retiuaied from a Weeia, and Mrs. Gordon Smith, third.</p>
        <p>b&amp;gt;.  trip to New York and Mount  ----</p>
        <p>Miss Mae Holloway has re- Xu'\. Md. with her parents. Mr. tii.aied to King.-i iark. Y.  .Mrs. Walter Smirricr</p>
        <p>after a visit here with her si -le , Mrs. Sallie Smith, and of her relative^.</p>
        <p>Miss Rhonda Jean s:ient last week at Hague Soima</p>
        <p>a a "UC't  Miss Joan t'onne'W  .</p>
        <p>m.Mon-Salem arc visiting Helen Terrv Flanagan of Green-parenl.N, Mr. and Mrs</p>
        <p>I wrote to you. and you told me to get in touch with the</p>
        <p>Sjiurrier luiiice Casey is in Greensboro attendinu a sum-</p>
        <p>BIRTH</p>
        <p>Wolverton</p>
        <p>Born to the Rev. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>iiicr n.ui'sc nl L'NC-C toi-home  "Ovcrlon of High</p>
        <p>,Tui...mi&amp;lt;'3 k'lK'hor.s.    f'!";;</p>
        <p>.  , .. .  1967.  in the High Point Hospital.</p>
        <p>M:-s. Cecil Hell and children  Wolverton  is  the  former</p>
        <p>0! Kinston.</p>
        <p>Mr, and Mrs. ('luirles lear: e'fe and cldldri'ti, Slu:iron and</p>
        <p>n!</p>
        <p>her</p>
        <p>El-</p>
        <p>wood Thompson.</p>
        <p>ville.</p>
        <p>. .  1.  ,  .Miss  Dianna  riiomosog  is  :n</p>
        <p>V.'Mir. loined bv Wes!e\ I.lake  u  i  '  i</p>
        <p>C.- "nsboro lor .summer .scnool</p>
        <p>ol Pa.TsmoiiLh. va. are on ,i</p>
        <p>,  g    I'    \  .  til I A L'w</p>
        <p>t ! ) to the mouniains ol ( aia-</p>
        <p>liu I and TenPf'ss.e  Raleigh  lor</p>
        <p>s i na ne the wa.'ckcnd at  week  as  page  hi  the</p>
        <p>Vnite Lake and participating in General Assembly, t' &amp;lt;-!)l! matches were Miu and Miss Deborah Phillips is re-yu-s."'Edwin Reeves and daugh- cuncrating at her home in For-t( ;'s. Olvia and KeUv, Mr. and e.st Acres after being a patient Mr:-. George Gardnt'r Sugg and in Pitt Memorial Hospital Green-daiiglder. Nancy. Mr. and Mrs. villc.</p>
        <p>LAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>Diamonid Settiug, Remounting And Repairs Done On The Premises Gref'uvilles Only Reeustered Jeweler</p>
        <p>Registered Jeweler American 6em Society</p>
        <p>EYEGLASSES</p>
        <p>CONTACT LENSES</p>
        <p>HEARING AIDS</p>
        <p>Bring your prescription to:</p>
        <p>pidgBiua^s</p>
        <p>OPTICIANS. !.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>503 Evuu.s St. PhoiK* 752-7171 Other Offices io Raleigh, Greensboro, Charlotte</p>
        <p>REMOVE</p>
        <p>OLD</p>
        <p>FLOOR</p>
        <p>WAX</p>
        <p>#</p>
        <p>SAFE</p>
        <p>SURE</p>
        <p>ECONOMICAL</p>
        <p>CONCENTRATED  One quart makes 10 quarts of the most effective floor wax stripper. Pleasant odor  non-irritating to hands  will not harm floors.</p>
        <p>Removes old discolored wax instantly.</p>
        <p>ALSO AVAILABLE IN HALF-GALLONS</p>
        <p>TREWAX</p>
        <p>WAX STRIPPER</p>
        <p>STORE HOURS:</p>
        <p>MON. - THURS. - FRI. 9:30 am - 9:00 pm TU'^S. - WED. - SAT. 9:30 am  6:00 pm</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>EVERY BODY'S BRA is not named that for nothing. It's really something, the way reports from all over the country repeat the same raves .  . . Feels better</p>
        <p>than any bra I've ever worn . . . The nylon and Lycra" spandex power net is terrific . . . Gives me the right lift and line for my clothes . . . Comes in colors I love. A cup 32 to 36, B and C cups, 32 to 38</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>DOUBLE TULIPS</p>
        <p>plants the thought for thr da.\ in your mind: Double Tulips do twice as much for vour looks and your outlook on life! The reasons simple: super control is built into double stn*n-gth panels of power net e\-aetly where you need them. Fore. And aft. So your clothes suddenly fit. And you feel young and slim and gorgeous. 01 course you deserve Double Tulipsso does your public! So do come in:</p>
        <p>REG. 15.00</p>
        <p>PITT PIAZA DOWNTOWN</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0004" />
        <p>Tuesday, June 20, 1967</p>
        <p>Concentrated Efforts Cant Hurt</p>
        <p>A decision to coiiceiiirate elloils ul tlie State Highway Patiol in sunie 25 counties termed accident prone  by the Department of Motor Vehicles is certain to draw criticism out of concern for the other &amp;lt;5 North C'arolina counties.</p>
        <p>Ill all probability, however, special attention to the 25 counties in an ei'fort to reduce highway accidents will not have an adverse elfect upon the safety records in the othei- 75 counties.</p>
        <p>From time to time o\ ei- a pm-iod of years N(rlh Carolina has used the method of special concentration of its highway patrol forces in an elforl to cope ith particularly difficult tiaffic areas. Fach time these moves have brought critici-m in adxance, and o-ich time they have bemi effectixe in doing the job they wore de-igned to do.</p>
        <p>It was just a few xears ago that theie was a the state hccause &amp;lt;'f the use of so-called wolf pack concentrations of highway patrol</p>
        <p>men in ceriaiii areas. It was a nieuiod used by the rairol to saLurate cciiaiii uan^icions or prone sections oi the siuie mgnways sysLeni. me niCLiiod brungiiL vigorous coinplaiiits, out it also hioi-igiit Lcnipurary reoucuon in tne numuer ui acci-ileiits in Lliose areas which gained its' attcntioiL</p>
        <p>the state's hignway patrol cannot afford to focus its full attention on 25 counties of the state and neglect the remaining three-fuurtlis of North Carolinas counties. 'J'ne ])ublic is aware of this no Ic.-s than those who are resiionsible for the High-wa\- pa!rol and its operation. There is nothing to indicate that the patrol will neglect the other 75 counties while it concentrates on the other 25 it considers accident prone.</p>
        <p>There will conlinnc to he patrolmen on the highways of the other eonnties and supervision of traffic will he maintained at a Ieasonable level.</p>
        <p>In the meaiitinK', the conceiitiation of effort ill the 25 counties designated for special attention will re'till in greater safety conscioiisne.ss not just in those counties, hut in tin other counties of the state as will.</p>
        <p>negionai univ.</p>
        <p>No NgW IcIgQ Senate Should Not Be</p>
        <p>Scapegoat For Dodd</p>
        <p>Ry WILLIAM A. SHIRKS</p>
        <p>Hcflector Raleigh Bureau</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  The issue of regional university stiitus for PJast Carolina Codege and perhaps two or three other senior colleges remains alive and kicking in the Gencrci Assembly, and certainly in the political thinking of the state.</p>
        <p>Whether such a regional universities system will come into being remains to be seen.</p>
        <p>WILLIAM</p>
        <p>SHIRES</p>
        <p>It has become clearly defined as an issue of major proportions and far - reaching, statewide significance as a result of action by the Senate s Higher Education committee. But its proponents insist it is not a new, flash - in - the - pan idea.</p>
        <p>Cite*5 Jenkins Speech</p>
        <p>Sen. Robert Morgan of Harnett cited the now famous ,\ov. 19. 1985. speech by Dr. Leo Jenkins In Raleigh in telling the Senate committee that the concept of regional universities is nothing new.</p>
        <p>In that sneech, in which Dr. Jenkins advanced the idea of reeionpl univcrsitv status for Erst Carolina College, he said. The need for rcjional nnivcr-siCes in other stales has al-readv been noted and acted upon. In Louisiana. Tennessee and Florida." among others, he said, if'the movement toward a b'egional university progiam is well underway and apparently successfully so. More recently, ECC's university status advocates have cited Kentucky's program.</p>
        <p>Goes To Floor</p>
        <p>The amended regional universities bill including Western Carolina College and Appalachian State was voted out of the Senate committee the other day.</p>
        <p>This was a shocker, both politically and otherwise. There was strong support for the original bill by Sen. John Henley of Cumberland which would have done little more than change the name of East Carlina College and bring it</p>
        <p>iiitd an embrxonic. e.xjit'rimen-t il .sxsuin oi I'egional universities as the first and only such institution. Few ubscrv-ers expected that sucli a plan would be expanded in t h e same legislation to include Appalachian and Western Carolina.</p>
        <p>There vxere thociC who felt East Carolina's support e r s would oppo.se this as sort of a Trojan horse tactic to defeat the idea.</p>
        <p>But it went to the floor of the Senate because ECC's supporters. led by Senator Morgan. embraced Appalachian and Western Carolina with open arms. .Morgan heartily endorsed an amendment to include these txvo schools on grounds that their inclusion would carry out the regional university concept which Dr. Jenkins expressed.</p>
        <p>To Be Decided</p>
        <p>Now the overall issue must be decided on the floor of the Senate and later the Hou.se.</p>
        <p>There is formidable opposition. The Moore administration is opposed. So are some of the legislature's most influential and persuasive members. Some of the supporters of the original university status bill for East Carolina College are wavering and may come out totally against the completely new .systeiu" described by Sen. George Wood of Camden.</p>
        <p>Political Implications</p>
        <p>The overall political implications of the fight for univer-.sity status for East Carolina College have been clouded by the latest developments.</p>
        <p>Everyone realizes there are political implications in the background of such maneuvering. but it has become difficult to define and pinpoint. The East itself, insofar as as Eastern legislators are concerned. is divided and confused. Some are now ready to agree it may be better to wait for two years, until the 1969 General Assembly, to decide the issue in a calmer, more calculated way. Others want to go ahead, saying that if there is a mistake it can be corrected later.</p>
        <p>In the meantime, however, the participants are aware of possible political effects in next year's elections  both local and statewide  resulting from leaving such an issue unsettled.</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 cxf the Board</p>
        <p>JOHN S. WHICHARD-AVID J WHICHARD</p>
        <p>Publishers</p>
        <p>Entered at Post Office, Oreenvllle, N. O. as second class mail matter</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES Home Delivory by Carrier or Motor Route Week 40c By Maib Payable in Advance</p>
        <p>One Year .......................................... 118.00</p>
        <p>81z Montbe .......................................... 9.M</p>
        <p>Three Montba  .................................  .OO</p>
        <p>One Month ......................................... 2.00</p>
        <p>^Prices Include sales tax where applicable)</p>
        <p>MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS The Aaaoclated Press la exclusivehr entitled to use for pubil* cation all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited to thla paper and also me iocaJ news published herein. All rlRbta of publications of special dlspa tenes bere are aJifio reserved.</p>
        <p>U xvuiikl be even more ilil'ticult, it seems to us, fur tno.-e same Smialors to suljject the Senate and its Si 11. Thomas llodd on charges of double billing for transiiortalion or converting political contributions to ])ersonal u^e.</p>
        <p>It xvould be me more difficult, it sees to us, for those same Senators to subject the Senate and its prestige to the disrespect that xvould come with the exoneration of Dodd on the charges against him.</p>
        <p>The Senate Ethics Committee, after careful consideration of Sen. Dodds activities, has recommend-(h1 censure. Certainly it was no less difficult for in-(lix idual members of the commiltee to come to that conclusion than it xvill be for other members to reach a conclusion on the recommendation. Sen. Dodds activities have not reflected credit upon himself as an individual and much less as a member of the I nited Stales Senate. If the Senate itself passivi'-ly condones such (nestionable conduct on the part of one of its memhers. it^; pre.stige xvill suffei- heavy loss in the ex es of the American people.</p>
        <p>Sen. Dodd should not he made a scapegoat for Dm' Sonat(. but it is more imnortant that +he Idrked States Senate is not made a scapegoat for Sen. Dodd.</p>
        <p>Small UN Role n Settlement</p>
        <p>Slowly</p>
        <p>To Adc.</p>
        <p>d Don I lliiiik I (lal Sheep Dni: l.ook&amp;lt; :i' llap^ v No.Mniax^. Hill Miau l ^i( l .mni'di lo ICmMx I eh</p>
        <p>6/ ART BUCHWALC</p>
        <p>Why States Declinec.</p>
        <p>I7NITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL</p>
        <p>Advcrtislhff rates and deadlines available upon request Member Audit BUreau of ClrculatiOL</p>
        <p>By .I.WIES MARLOW</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Before the end of the Israeli-Egyptian war debate in the U. -N. General .A.sscmbly. the United States and the Soviet Cnion may get along better or xvorsc. It's that unpredictable.</p>
        <p>Bui cxnicism is part of the bloodstream of the United Nations which, at the time of its creation in 1945. looked like a holy of holies, or so the world hoped then.</p>
        <p>The Soviets, who promise the Arabs their support if they got into xvar witii Israel, did nothing except piously protest violence xvhcn war came and the Draclis demolished the Egyptians. Tins cost tlic Soviets dearly in Arab conli-dence.</p>
        <p>So what tfiey did when th.e quick war ' ir.ed o')\ i'-as: They .SCI out to 1C ..[a' goodwill by asking the U.N. Israeli as an aggressor and dedemand it withdraw irom tiie</p>
        <p>Strength</p>
        <p>For Today</p>
        <p>By EARL L. DOUGLAS All We Could Understand</p>
        <p>The greatest forces in nature are silent and unseen. The law of gravitation conditions our every movement, yet no one has ever seen this force. Ciod made the world and sustains every moment of its existence, yet no man hath seen God at any time."</p>
        <p>Probably all of us have fell at times the desire to have the mystery swept from bclwcen ourselves and God. so' that we might sec Him face to face and know our dearest friends. But we have nothing in our mental or spiritual capacity which makes this possible. Only by faith can we reach out and grasp that to which our five senses are denied access. Yet what it is possible to do. God has done. He has made Himself known in Christ. All that the human mind is capable of understanding about God wc see when we look at Christ. There may be certain aspec-ts of Gods power which He did not see fit to reveal in Christ, but vve may be sure (hat it was because these things arc beyond our power which He did not sec fit to &amp;gt;e-veal in Christ, All that xve need to know and all that it is po&amp;gt;-.^ible for us to know is lo be found in xvhat Christ was. xvhat He said, and what He did.</p>
        <p>If we want to know xvhat God IS like, we need only look at Christ, for in him dwellith all the fullne.ss of the Godhead b(dib</p>
        <p>.^rab land it seized.</p>
        <p>The Soviets lost on the maneuver in the council when a majority of the i5 members, including the United States, refused to go along. So then Moscow asked the full .Assembly lo do what the council refused to do.</p>
        <p>This was a sxvitcl. In 1961, when India overran the Portuguese enclave of Goa-Damao-Diii on liic south.vX'.st coa.st of India, territory Portugal had held since the 16th century, the United States, Britain and France asked the Security Council to condemn India's aggression and demand it withdraxv.</p>
        <p>The Soviets, who had praised the Indian attack, vetoed this proposal. Egypt also opposed it.</p>
        <p>In 1956, when Moscow sent its army into Hungary to crush the anti-Communist revolt there, the United States asked the Security Council, with the supnurt of 10 other (Continued On Page 5)</p>
        <p>ODinionu</p>
        <p>^n Brie:</p>
        <p>By FOV H. DUNCA.N June 20, 1967 Salvation Army Doing Much Good</p>
        <p>That the efforts of the Salvation Army to reach the people of the rural communi-lies of the county are meeting with success is contained in a report made public today by Capt. Summers, head of the local organization... It was stated (hat a total of 1,700 people attended various services conducted by Capt. Summers and his co-workers during last week...</p>
        <p>There turned up in the mail the other day a trim little booklet from the Commiltee for Economic Develop m e n I, It vvas styled A Fiscal Program for a Balanced Federalism," and one read it with a few hopeful reflections upon the techniques of the Big Lie.</p>
        <p>This is not to suggest that the CED was engaged in spreading falsehood. On the contrary. The committee was in fact propounding the Big Truth. It was saying some things about the importance of the States in American government and what most be done to raise them out ol impotence. The theory of the Big</p>
        <p>Lie is that if you just repeat a given statement often enough, it gets lo be accepted. It would be marvelously pleasant if the same techniques of repetition worked with the big but overlooked truths of fed-crali.sm today.</p>
        <p>"The States are es.sential to the federal sy.slem." saxs the CED report. And it goes on to explain why:</p>
        <p>A federal system is valued becau.se it permits wider choices in the pursuit o general welfare, greater frecTim lo develop different public values in different localities, and more opportunities .or inn ovation by individual communit-es that mav set standards lor</p>
        <p>Other Editors Saying Extension Of The Draft</p>
        <p>(Christian Science Monitor The draft will be extended for four more years. There will be some changes. But they will be fewer and less sweeping than either the administration or Senate liberals had hoped for.</p>
        <p>Despite their repeated criticism of many of President Johnsons Vietnam policies, Senate doves were almost solidly behind his request for reforms in the draft. But the compromise finally hammered out saw the conservatives and hard-liners getting the better of the bargain.</p>
        <p>The President xvon permission lo call up 19-year-olds first. But he fsiled to get the go-ahead to do it by lot. It would take the introduction and passage of another bill before a random selection system could be established The measure put severe limitations on the President's authority to induct college un</p>
        <p>dergraduates. Barring major changes in military re(|uire-ments, undergraduates are virtually guaranteed delcr-ments regardless of their grades. Tlie system of college class fitandings and test scores xvill no longer be used as a guide lo local draft boards.</p>
        <p>Not only was Congress reluctant to grant requests by the administration for changes in the draft. 11 showed its disapproval of the Supreme Court's interpretation of the old draft law provision for conscientious objects by rewriting the law so as to xvipe out the broadening accomplished by the court in the Secger case.</p>
        <p>By and large, the new draft provisions are an improvement on the old. But they do comparatively little to remove the inequities and special priv-Icgcs which brought the selective service system under increasingly heavy fire.</p>
        <p>the rest of the country.</p>
        <p>Now, that is the sound doctrine. But if it is so bjund, why has the doctrine fallen onto the scrap heap o unu.sed ideas?</p>
        <p>In its e.xcellent booklet, the CED advances some rational explanations for the States' decline. To these 1 would add a few observations of my own.</p>
        <p>Four factors have contributed mo.st significantly to t h e States' moribundity; urbanization. technology, the Sixteenth -Amendment, and the natural negativism of mankind. P u t them all together, and y o u xvind up with the (?EDs blunt conclussion; For many years. States and their loci 1 units of government have not been performing as effectively as they should.'</p>
        <p>Tiie Republic as a whole has been predominantly urban for the past 50 years. What often is forgotten, however, is tliat the great migration to the cities has been a .spotty business among the separate Slat e s. .As recently as 1940, 28 of the 48 Slates were still predominantly rural. Their legislatures responded with reasonable fidelity to the needs and wishes of an agrarian constituency, it is a fair guess that today not more than seven of the 50 States remain predominantly rural. An astonishing shift has developed in a brief span of years.</p>
        <p>If everything else had remained the same, the States might have been able to cope with their internal migrations. But this s.'ime postwar period ,Naw more revolutionary changes in technology than ever had come along before. Overnight, the unleashed automakers, free of the war's restraints, produced tr a f f ic jams and smog. The chemical industries produced new pollu-(Continued On Page 5)</p>
        <p>i roops</p>
        <p>By ROWT.AM) EVANS and</p>
        <p>ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>W'ASiliNGTDN  Although precise details a'c a closely* held seci;ct, Gene'al William Westmoreland, U. S. commander in Vietnam, wants to bring nearly 140,1)00 new U. S. troops into the fighting -- making a total of 600,000 - plus.</p>
        <p>Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara's trip to Saigon to confer with Westmoreland, however, wont produce official conlirmation that President Johnson has approved a ground - troop escalation approaching anything like that.</p>
        <p>The fai more likely prospect is that Mr. Johnson will approve the reinforcement only in staggered amounts. Thus, if the McNamara - Westnure-land conference produces any announcement at all, it vvPl be something less than 80,000 re-in.Mrceinents.</p>
        <p>The budget for fiscal year 1968. which starts July 1. is based on a troop level of 500,-lion Americans in South Vietnam.There is reason to believe, however, that this estimate underestimates the war cost by as much as $5 billion. Further reinforcements anything close to W'cstmorelands request would, of course, swell liie budget deficit, which the Administration now very cun-scr-vatively estimates at $14 biilion.</p>
        <p>Thus the Presidents deci-cisin on Westmorelands re-(luest for more troops is highly dependent on fiscal, as opposed to military, criteria.</p>
        <p>If the war cost creates a 19-68 deficit of even close to the S29 billion figure now being u&amp;lt;cd by Congressional pessimists. President Johnson xvill face an economic crisis fully as difficult as his military headache in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>.Meanys Boo-Boo</p>
        <p>The death of President Johnsons plan to merge the Departments of Labor and Commerce vvas directly due to Meanys inability to deliver his AFL-CIO executive council as promised.</p>
        <p>The story of how this wdll-laid plan went awry starts with the Presidents penchant for super - secrecy. Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz did not know about Mr. Johnsons plan to merge the two departments until the Sunday before the Stale of the Union message was delivered to Congress on Tuesday, January 10.</p>
        <p>Anticipating an angry reaction from bureaucrats in both Labor and Commerce, Mr. Johnson kept the merger inside the White House until the last minute. The proposal was inserted in the State of the Union message on Sunday only after the President had cleared it with Meany, Mr. Big of U. S. labor. W'ith Meanys assent, thought Mr. Johnson, the plan would have clear sailing in Congress no matter what bureaucrats thought.</p>
        <p>But when the proposal was unveiled on Jan. 10, powerful members of the AFL-CIO executive council screamed. When Mcany presided over a routine meeting of the council in February, criticism of the merger overwhelmed him. Caught between his own angry colleagues and his earlier consent to President Johnson. Meany took the obvious out: he went back to the President, explained that the merger had loosed a hornets ne.st, and withdrew bis approval. That explains the Presidents own decision to back away</p>
        <p>A footnote: Administratioa</p>
        <p>.More About John Low's Story</p>
        <p>Horse Shoe Tournmcnt To Be Planned</p>
        <p>One of the latest features in connection with the Boys Work Campaign now in progress in this city is contained in an announcement of a horse show tournament to be played on the courts in the ravine back of the high school building. The contest will get underway Friday afteimoon at 2:.{0 and continue until a champion has been determined...</p>
        <p>Presbvterian Sunday School Picnic</p>
        <p>5 ou .li e coi diail} invited to attend and enjoy the picnic at Riverside on Tuesday, June first. Please meet at the Prc.s-Dvteiian Chuicii beiore 12:00 and 1:00. Bring your bi.ske( to the chiireh here it will be</p>
        <p>l.IKf'li t'.iic uL</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER</p>
        <p>Early this month reference was made to John Law who probably was the inventor of the printing-press system of inflation and quite a boy at nmlcting the public.</p>
        <p>Law, of course, did nut invent inflation. Ever since money was invented, rulers have been clipping coins, mixing base alloys with gold and silver and using other devices to make money seem more plentiful. '</p>
        <p>But Law's activities had a touch of Keynesianism about them. In fact, through the centuries many authorities have said the Law might have been successful on a more niudc-i scale, as Franklin D. Roosevelt was 216 years later</p>
        <p>Law was born in Edinburgh in 1661, His first large proposal was that Scotland, wni' fi was sulfering a recession, &amp;gt;s-sue paper money to flic va'oe ui all land in tlie kingdom.</p>
        <p>but tlie Scottish Parliament rejected his proposals.</p>
        <p>Moves Activities To France Law became involved in a duel and fled Scotland to Venice and Genoa, whence he xvas banished as a dosignin;&amp;gt; advqnturer. He accumulated a large fortune by gambling in</p>
        <p>ELMER</p>
        <p>ROESSNER</p>
        <p>France, got lu know llic Duke ol Urleaiib; the l icir ii i r ciit. and pcr-uadcd Ji' Du , ' P ni-tliorize the esiablishm nl ui a bank by l.av, .aid liis l:'otii ; William in 1716.</p>
        <p>Tlie bank became the depos-itoix tor all jJiiblie reeei])l:i and</p>
        <p>I.aw set up a company lo develop the French territory of Mississippi. Law persuaded the regent to declare the bank a royal bank and Law began issuing an unlimited amount of currency.</p>
        <p>The currency was readilv accepted, altliough there was Shares in the bank scored to 20 times their original value and shares in the Mississippi company even more.</p>
        <p>But by 1720 the valucless-ness of the currency began m dawn on the hardlieaded Fi'cnch; the money became aiiiRHt worthless; the hank -hares dropped to almost nothin ;. and what became known a,'- the- Mississippi Bubble bur.sl. 'i'liou:-ands lost tlicir ^aving-^ laxx fled France and lived in relative obscuity until lie died in Venice in 1729.</p>
        <p>I.ESSDN IOR TODAY </p>
        <p>lie alwaxs said his nl.aiis would haxc worked if it were</p>
        <p>not lor his enemies and the people's lack of iaith.</p>
        <p>Hitler tried printing-press money just before and during WMrld War II; after his collapse ihe German republic issued renten marks based on the value of land, another Law idea. And from time to time other rulers have used direct inflation to create the illusion of prosperity and to enrich themselves.</p>
        <p>Wc dont simply print money as we need it n the United States today. Wc print bond.s and notes and sell them instead. But the two .systems -ii e related. And in both syslcnv., currency cannot readily be redeemed in gold and silver.</p>
        <p>Now that the fedc;'al go vis n-mcnt faces a deficit o! UU billion in tJie coming year, it may be well to review the fiscal policies of John Law, who piactically bankrupt France, and sec what xve can learn from his failure.</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0005" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, June 20, 19675</p>
        <p>ar More TB Cases in The Coastal Plains</p>
        <p>By ROB WOOD Associated Press Writer RALEIGH (AP)  Tuberculosis strikes far more often in the Coastal Plains of North Car-</p>
        <p>tinued, nevere experienced the disease until the white man began mingling with him in Africa. Later the Negro, when brought to other countries, was</p>
        <p>Thus, Dr. Berry added, ef- mal life. forts must be made to check the If all individuals. Dr. Berry non-white population closely and said, would submit to chest X-</p>
        <p>counties covering 38 per cei^ of the states total population. Further assistance is expected</p>
        <p>FORECAST - Ralu Is expected Tucsda.v nighi from the eastern Lakes to</p>
        <p>^juthwesf nnJ  aSi  the  Rockies.  It  wiU  be  warmer  in  the Northeast and</p>
        <p>boutnwest, and cooler in the Midwest. (AP Wire photo)</p>
        <p>Adjournment Effort Starting in Assembly</p>
        <p>olina than in the industrial Pied-1 exposed to the TB ger.m. mont or the mountains of the west.</p>
        <p>Last year, 39.7 per cent of the 1.266 new active eases of TE in the state came from the more sparsely populated East, compared to 19.5 per cent in the Piedmont and 16.4 per cent in the mountains.</p>
        <p>It is in the East where progress in control of the disease 1 must be made, experts agree,! if North Carolina hopes to accelerate the rate of tuberculosis! decline.  i</p>
        <p> Since 1963, when 1,386 new' leases were reported, TB has!</p>
        <p>hope for early diagnosis.  rays or the skin test the di-ito be provided this year for  an</p>
        <p>The health department  offi- sease could be brought under  additional six to 12 counties,</p>
        <p>cial said for many years, peo- control sooner.  The  federal  funds are paid di-</p>
        <p>The Negro just  has  no na-|ple have had a great fear of  Currently, he said, the U.S.  rectly to local health depart-</p>
        <p>tural resistance.  Dr.  Berry j tuberculosis. Today, such a fear  Public Health Service is provid-  ments having significant tuber-</p>
        <p>said. He is similar to the is ungrounded.  ing financial assistance for im-culosis control problems.</p>
        <p>American Indian,  who  easily- If we can catch the disease  proved tuberculosis control ac-  At present. Dr. Berry said,</p>
        <p>falls to the TB germ, never hav-! early there is ho reason the vie-  tivities in North Carolina at the  the disease appears to be either</p>
        <p>ing been  exposed until the white tim within a short space of  time,rate of .?350,000 annually.  localized or merely sporadic  in</p>
        <p>man came.  cant carry on a perfectly  nor-' This sum is divided among 23  North Carolina communities.</p>
        <p>One</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>Hundred Share Of</p>
        <p>Descendants</p>
        <p>$300 Million</p>
        <p>Fight</p>
        <p>Estate</p>
        <p>By REESE HART Associated Press Writer RALEIGH (AP)  The North Carolina General Assembly is</p>
        <p>by Gov. .Moore to clamp down on terrorist activities. One makes it a felony punishable by one to five years to burn a cross</p>
        <p>headed into the homestretch of I on property without the own-</p>
        <p>SARITA, Tex. (AP) - Sitting slowly, although gradually, de-!on dusty folding chairs beneath i dined in the state.  |a forbidding oil portrait of the</p>
        <p>( Dr. Roy V. Berry, chief of the late cattle and oil baron, Capt. tuberculosis control unit of the Mifflin Kenedy, 100 Kenedy de-I North Carolina Health Elepart-iment, said in an interview that</p>
        <p>Ocle ope,-ato.-s wear safety hel-'</p>
        <p>the Highway  "ipossible  in  any  short</p>
        <p>planes for all  'S</p>
        <p>range outlook is bright.</p>
        <p>its adjournment drive with many still unsettled issues, including the proposed state Dudg-et and congressional redistrict-ing.</p>
        <p>ers consent. .Another makes it-ing. a felony punishable by 10 years  to life to use high explosives to| bomb an occupied building. The i third measure permits the gov-!</p>
        <p>mets.</p>
        <p>11. Authorizing Patrol to use</p>
        <p>traffic violations except speed-</p>
        <p>scendants crowded into Kenedy County courthouse Monday to</p>
        <p>to draw up the will.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Easts holdings were valued by the federal government at $29 million for tax pur</p>
        <p>poses. The discovery of a vast her first cousins to share her pool of oil and gas beneath her interest in La Parra Ranch.</p>
        <p>leaving various amounts to rela-imadc Christopher Gregory, son tives, a Catholic religious order of a Western novelist, came into and charitable institutions. the picture.</p>
        <p>A second will named two of .\s Brother Leo, Gregory had</p>
        <p>joined the Trappist order in 1938 and worked as a cobblerina</p>
        <p>part of the La Parra Ranch After the second will</p>
        <p>begin a summer-long fight over I built up by Capt. Kenedy more a $300-million estate.  I  than  a century ago, boosted that</p>
        <p>The hearing run through</p>
        <p>is scheduled September.</p>
        <p>estimate to around $3(X) million. The case is being heard by</p>
        <p>Evans-Novak</p>
        <p>stake is the 200.(0e-acre hold-li^pecial Probate .Judge William</p>
        <p>DEEDS</p>
        <p>i Particular attention, he said, should be centered on preventing as many children as possible from becoming infected.</p>
        <p>Tuberculosis is a highly infectious malady that is spread</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4)</p>
        <p>chiefs claim the plan is still alive under study by Mr. Johnsons committee on labor-man-agement policy. In fact, it is</p>
        <p>ings of Sarita Kenedy East, a|R Edwards, a Corpus Christi granddaughter of .Mifflin Kene-'^Rorney. dy. Her last will brought a mid-1 La Parra borders on the King dle-aged lYappist monk into a' Ranch. Capt. Kenedy and Rich-hassle over some of the Kenedy - Ling once were partners | stone - cold dead, millions  'before  each  carved  out  a  king-!</p>
        <p>The tangled estate of Mrs. Ii!\</p>
        <p>East has been the subject of fi&amp;gt;  ^</p>
        <p>mountains of litigation since she Marita Kenedy East became a</p>
        <p>widow in 1944. A few months </p>
        <p>Legislative leaders are hope-1 ernor to offer $10,000 reward ful the General Assembly, in' for information leading to the Howard M Allen al to Allen R"&amp;gt;rough coughing or simply by session 4M&amp;gt; months already, can'arrest and conviction of persons lEnterprises $1*0 00   exhalation of living tubercle ba-</p>
        <p>end its work late next week, - wanted for infamous crimes.  charles L. Chappel, al to Bra- cilli. Mostly attacking the lungs,</p>
        <p>e^r^; ifdT;^e^hT^.a^- nVhrstrteZar'd''ftet^^^^^  after  her  husband's  death  she</p>
        <p>makers pack their bags and to set up jail standards and in-Annie Carrol! to Forrest H.' jh explaining the high per-i"</p>
        <p>head home.  spect jails.  iHansbrough  $10.00  centage of TB in the coastal  Brother  Leo  in a</p>
        <p>A heavy backlog of bills re- Liberalization o, the states; Harriet Stocks Graves, al to gi-ea Dr Berrv pointed first  order,</p>
        <p>mains to be cleared away. abortion laws.  Charles  E.  Cannon  $10.00  thp heavv concentration of non-1  relatives  of  .Mrs.</p>
        <p>More than 100 bills were in- Creation of three-member simon Corbett, al to N.C. Dis-^j^j^gg |-|^g section  ^  East  are challenging a 1960 will.</p>
        <p>^      -They  charged  in  court  Monday</p>
        <p>was monastery at Spencer, Mass. .After World War II Brother Leo I was selected to venture forth and raise funds for additional lands and buildings for similar monasteries.</p>
        <p>He visited La Parra in 1948. In the late 1950s he introduced .Mrs. East to another benefactor of the Trappist order, Grace, president of W. R. Grace and I Co. .Mrs. East, then 70, opened a checking account at CJrace National Bank and Brother Leo</p>
        <p>4. Creation of</p>
        <p>troduced last week, bringing jury commissions for the state s (net Council of the Assemblies the total for the session to 2,078.  counties, plus elimination of of God, Inc. $10.00  ...</p>
        <p>This tops the number for any j'^ry exemptions.  Betty  Pearl  Carney to Noah's  </p>
        <p>session in the last 25 years ex-  Creation of a State Board of Ark Holiness Church of God of</p>
        <p>cept 1963 when 2,101 were in-  Resources  to re- the Americas  $10.00</p>
        <p>troduced.  P*^ce the Slate Board of Water j h. Huff, al to Melivin L.</p>
        <p>Money matters, education and  ,Sate  Stream  PuHx *10.00</p>
        <p>Sanitation Committee.  Hardee  Realty  Co. to Gar-</p>
        <p>6. Authorizing the use of tax- land M. Lancaster, al $10.00 exempt revenue bonds to pro- Brook Valley Realty Co.</p>
        <p>:mote industrial devf'lopment in William L. Tripp, al $10.00 ^ ,  u    1  .  North Carolina.  Robert  Franklin  Sumerlin,</p>
        <p>A brown - bagging liquor bill - requiremcnl that photos to Linwood Patrick Moore, appeared on the legislative ]^g placed on drivers' licenses. $10.00</p>
        <p>In 1966 there were 14 TBni^^j_ ^j]j written when</p>
        <p>,  , ^  Hshe was under influence by</p>
        <p>North Carolma and 62.5 cases Q,.ggQ|,y .Attorney William</p>
        <p>per 100,000 non-whites.  'WYight of Laredo, Tex., said</p>
        <p>Negroes nre! Qi-ggoi-y and shipping executive</p>
        <p>J. Peter Grace of New York</p>
        <p>Army's General Orders Change</p>
        <p>Moderates Veto Reagan Fears by moderate Republican leaders that rank - and-file moderates are being se- was given power of attorney to duced by California Governor )draw on hundreds of thousand.*; Ronald Reagans new image  of dollars there for expansion of</p>
        <p>the Trappist order.</p>
        <p>.Mrs. East became ill with cancer while traveling in South America with Brother Leo, by</p>
        <p>liquor issues have consumed perhaps more time in the General Assembly than any other legislation.</p>
        <p>the</p>
        <p>ex</p>
        <p>scene on opening day F'eb. 8 and occupied much attention un-</p>
        <p>Louis Ci. May, al to</p>
        <p>8. A bill granting immunity to</p>
        <p>ministers from having to te.stify M. .Nicholls, Jr., al $10.00 til a substitute measure was fi- i court on information they re- flerbcrt H. Proctor, al nally enacted weeks later. Un- reived from comniunicanls. Thomas N. White, al $10.00</p>
        <p>much more susceptible to TB germ than whites. He plained;</p>
        <p>The Negro hasnt lived as long with the tubercle bacilli as has the white man. Whites al for centuries have been exposed to tuberculosis and naturally Donald have built us a resistence.</p>
        <p>The Negro, Dr. Berry con-</p>
        <p>conspired to get Mrs.</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>al</p>
        <p>Kilpatrick</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>der the new law, persons can brown-bag liquor in the state's legally wet counties. Brown-bagging is the long-time practice of taking liquor in paper bags to certain dubs, restaurants and hotels.</p>
        <p>The General Assembly lost no time enacting a bill to create an Intermedicate Court of Appeals. Authorized by a vote of the people, the new court will operate between the Superior Court and Supreme Court level.</p>
        <p>In the weeks that followed, the General Assembly enacted other measures, including Gov. D'ln Moores recommendation.s to _;rant tax relief totaling $23.3 million to North Carolinians. (Jlher new laws include:</p>
        <p>1 Three measures requested</p>
        <p>Secret 'Danger' Alarm Flashed; Republicans Near</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p> CI</p>
        <p>Senior Citizens Went Ou Tour</p>
        <p>A trip to Belhaven and the Texas Gulf .Sulfur Plant near Aurora was taken by member.s of the Senior Citizens Club i'hursday,</p>
        <p>A luncheon was held at the Forrest River Manor in Bel-'</p>
        <p>9. Measures outlawing glue-  L.  Gladson to Sallie M.</p>
        <p>sniffing in .North Carolina and Norcott $10.00 bringing LSD under the state's William McGee Tucker, al to narcotics laws.  .Anne S. Waters $10.00</p>
        <p>10. A requirement that motor- Faye Salsbury Huff, al to</p>
        <p>------------ Malcolm  S. Carmichael, al $1.00</p>
        <p>Talton  Construction Co.  toi</p>
        <p>.Marjorie P. Quinerly, al $10.00 Furman G. Smith, al to Charles E. Woodall, al $100.00 Charles B. Rice, al to John Donald Whitehurst, al $10.00 SALT  1.AKE CITY  I API -  ,  B&amp;lt;yd  Thorne  al</p>
        <p>When  the sec-rot  ' danger</p>
        <p>alarm' flashed outside Gov.</p>
        <p>Calvin Hampton's private office Monday, an armed state trooper sprinted across the Capitol plaza and burst into the governor's private chambier?:.</p>
        <p>o  VY  Grcenville Realty Co., Inc. to</p>
        <p>The trooper found the Demo- ^  ^  ^ Kropinack, al $10,00</p>
        <p>rat,c governor meeting with'  E,  Williams, al</p>
        <p>three Republieiin sLite .senators,   ^</p>
        <p>Senate Pros,(k I,  iiavcn  J  Bar-   .r,eru,n &amp;amp; .Sons, Inc.</p>
        <p>low told the trooper:  He s  p  (-urrin, al $10.00</p>
        <p>in trouble, but not in danger, ;  McDaniel,  Jr., al to</p>
        <p>The three leaders of the Re- Bruce Allen Hudson $10.00 publican-dominated State .Sen- James W. Everett, al to Rate were conferring with Gov. dolph Robinson, al $10.00 Hampton over 200 gubernatorial Juanita S. Morgan to Milo appointments which require H. Smith, al $10.00 Senate approval.  y q Turnage, al to Serene</p>
        <p>During the conference the T. McLeon $10.00</p>
        <p>Melvin Dupree Bovd, al David Lee Eiks, al $10.00 Jean H. Williams, al to Town of Grifton $5.000.00 J. P. Quinerly, Jr.. al to Nelson I. Baldree, al $10.00</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>haven with devotional given by Yiovernor had inadvertently hit T. C. Turnage, al to Bernice Mrs. K. T. Futrell.  alarm  button  B. Turnage, al $10.00</p>
        <p>Fallowing a 30-minute ride on which the ferry across the Pamlico  River, tiie group was greeted | upon arrival at Texas Gulf by Wilton Smith, public relations officer.</p>
        <p>Smith invited the group into a reception room for refreshments and showed color slides and gave a lecture on the total operation of the plant.</p>
        <p>A guided tour of the plant facilities followed.</p>
        <p>summons emergency | T. C. Turnage, al to Dallas Lee Turnage $10.00</p>
        <p>Marlow ...</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4)</p>
        <p>me.mbers, to condemn the action and demand Soviet withdrawal. Moscow .etoed this. This time, in the General Assembly, the Soviets may try to fry a lot of fish. Posing as friend of the Arabs, it can seek to make the United States look pro-Israel and anti-Arab, which the Arabs think it is anyway.</p>
        <p>For the Soviets this would be a worthwhile project if the result froze the United States out of the Middle East, which doesnt seem likely, and made itself the dominant force.</p>
        <p>But the unpredictables in all this are endless.</p>
        <p>So V i e t-American relations have been improving, and the Soviets showed reason and restraint when the Mideast war broke out. It's possible that, while trying to endear themselves to the Arabs all over again by castigating Israel, they will ty to avoid anything that would anger the United States.</p>
        <p>It seems likely that no matter what the General Assembly says about the Israel i-Arab war it will have little effect on a Mideast settlement.</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4)</p>
        <p>tants faster than water control boards could deal with them. Automation induced traumatic shifts in employment. Families moved in great leaps across State lines, and abruptly the educational shortcomings of Alabama, which hitherto had been largely the business of Alabama, became a real concern to the employers of California.</p>
        <p>No Safety With Trading Stamps</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Lots</p>
        <p>of things military are being streamlined these riayseven' East the time-honored Army General Orders which soldiers for years had to memorize before going on sentry duty.</p>
        <p>The change could strike a note of nostalgia for millions of Army veterans but the change should be welcome to todays soldiers.</p>
        <p>; Starting Aug. 1, the Army will Idrop the 11 General Orders and  substitute these three:</p>
        <p>1. I will guard everything within the limits of my post and iquit my post only when properly 'relieved.</p>
        <p>2..I will obey my special orders and perform all my duties in a military manner.</p>
        <p>3. I will report violations of my special orders, emergencies, and anything not covered in my instructions, to the commander</p>
        <p>have been dispelled by a secret mail poll.</p>
        <p>The Presidential poll, sent to the mailing list of Republicans for Progress (a national moderate Republican organization), shows these preliminary results: Governor George Romney of Michigan, 29.6 percent; Richard M. Ni?inn, 21.5 percent; Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, 21.2 per-cent; Senator Charles H. Percy of Illinois, 19.6 percent; and Reagan, only 2.9 percent.</p>
        <p>The breakdown of around 70 percent moderate (Romney - Rockefeller - Percy) and 30 percent conservative (Nixon - Reagan) simply reflects the built - in bias of the mailing list. But surprising to the moderate leaders was Rockefellers strength and Reagans weakness.</p>
        <p>then her religious adviser, traveling companion and sometime secretary. She died Feb. 11, 1961.</p>
        <p>A 26-volume deposition has been taken from Christopher Gregory, who was expelled from the Trappist order in January 1566, after he violated his superiors orders to remain out of the will contests.</p>
        <p>Do FALSE TEETH</p>
        <p>Rock, Slide or Slip?</p>
        <p>FASTEETH, an Improved powder to be sprinkled on upper or low'er i plates, holds false teeth more firmly in place. Do not slide, slip or rock. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. FASTEETH is alkalinedoes not sour. Checks "denture breath.* Dentures that fit are essential to health. See your dentist regularly. Get FASTEETH at all drug counters.</p>
        <p>SALT LAKE CITY (AP) . ,  </p>
        <p>There seemed to be something  reliet.</p>
        <p>strange about the auto safety-: 4. The General Orders have inspection-sticker on Ralph Biil-ibeen part of Army life at least ingsly's car.  since 1882. A soldier then had to</p>
        <p>Officer G.' W. Maughan, who, memorize 22 separate require-decided to make a closer check'ments. By 1893, the number of of the green windshield sticker,'orders was reduced to 12. There found it wasn't a safety sticker was little change then for at at all, but a block of green-col-i least 40 years, until the 11 or-ored trading stamps.  | ders which are now passing into</p>
        <p>The auto was impounded. history became standard.</p>
        <p>Easiest travel on earth</p>
        <p>(Have yon tried it krtdy?)</p>
        <p>New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair</p>
        <p>Two Watchdogs Lose Reputation</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) -Two German Shepherd watch-(li) rs were returned to their jobs M nday, their reputations tar-iii.shed.</p>
        <p>'llie dogs disappeared from the storage yard of a roofing</p>
        <p>ijiin.</p>
        <p>i'olicc said they discovered two tccn-aged boys walking ;ilong a street, each leading a watchdog.</p>
        <p>Had An Unopened Safe With Him</p>
        <p>EAST ST. LOUIS, 111. (AP) -J: mcs Green, 28, of East St. l.oui.^. 111., was arrested Monday ;i., he walked along a street pushing a wheelbarrow.</p>
        <p>In the wheelbarrow, police Sl id, was an unof)ened safe, a in tney order machine and 32 l-n:,tage stamps. Green was (' arged with the burglary of an Ea.sl St. Louis pharmacy.</p>
        <p>Be Sure to Let Him Know Before \ ou Leave Home</p>
        <p>Shall I Send the Newspaper or Save It?</p>
        <p>Your Carrier Offers 2  Vacation News ^rvices.</p>
        <p> A SPECIAL way yoor earner can be helpfiri this summer, is to arrange about newspaper service during your vacation.</p>
        <p>IF YOU plan to spend R al one spot, he wiM gladly have your newsp^xir mailed there daily, so yon can keep up with the latest news from home, and continue to enjc^ your favorite pages, columns and features.</p>
        <p>OR, IF you expect to visit several different places, he will hold your newspapers and deliver them when you return. Then you ciin catch up with all that hapj&amp;gt;ens in your absence. No extra charge for either service!</p>
        <p>LET HIM know before you go, which vacation news plan you prefer. And, please be sure bo pay him for aJJ copies he delivers up to the time you leave. Hell appreciate it.</p>
        <p>HOUSTON, Texas - If you don't suffer from male pattern baldness, you now stop your hair loss and grow more hair.</p>
        <p>can</p>
        <p>stages of male pattern baldness and cannot be helped.</p>
        <p>But if you arc not already islick bald, how can you be sure wliat is actually causing your hair loss? Even if baldness may For years they said it coundnt gocm to inn in your famUy,</p>
        <p>be done. But now a firai of laboiTitory consultants has developed a treatment for both men and women, that is not only stopping hair loss ... but is really growing liair!</p>
        <p>They don't even ask you to take their word for it. If they believe that the treatment w ill ! help you, they invite you to try it for ;i2 days, at their risk, and see for yourself!</p>
        <p>Natui-ally, they would ijiot of ter this no-risktrial unless the tivat-incnt w'orked. However, it is impossible to help everyone.</p>
        <p>The great majority of cases of excessive hair fall and baldness are the beginning and more fully developed</p>
        <p>this is certainly no proof of cause of YOUR hair loss.</p>
        <p>the</p>
        <p>IMany conditions can cause hair lovss. No matter which one is causing your hair loss, if you wait until you are slick bald and your hair roots are dead, you i are beyond help. So, if you still hove any hair on top of your! head, and would like to stop your, hair loss and grow more hair . . .  now- is the time to do something about it before it's too fete.</p>
        <p>Locscli Laboratoi-y Consult-; ants. Inc., will supply you with treatment for 32 days, at their risk, if they believe the treatment will help you. Just send them the information listed below. All in-' quirics arc answered confident!-1 ally, by mail and without obli-' gaiion.  Adv.</p>
        <p>If you havenT traveted on Tialhrays., yam bam a lot to look forward to.</p>
        <p>The special treatment you get from reservations gals, ramp men, captains, everyone. Oar colorful new terminals. Our bright restauratHt.</p>
        <p>And the buses? The new 4107s and Siher Eagles. Solid comfort. Easy-chair seats. A Kst-room, of course. Air-conditioning.</p>
        <p>Faster schedules, too, on the new Interstate and thru highways. Next trip, take a flyer with us. Last year millions of people did.</p>
        <p>Trailways</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>NO OBLIGATION COUPON</p>
        <p>To; Locsch Laboratory Consultants, Inc.</p>
        <p>Bo\ 6600L 3311 West Main St.</p>
        <p>Houston, Te?Kis 77006</p>
        <p>f am submitting the following inl'ormation with the understanding that it will be kept strictly confidential and that I am under no obligation whatsoc\ci'. 1 now have or have had the following conditions:</p>
        <p>Do you have dandnifT'.' Is it dry? or oily?__</p>
        <p>Docs your scalp have pimples or other irritations?_______</p>
        <p>Does your forehead become oily or greasy?_</p>
        <p>Does your scalp itch?____When'._</p>
        <p>How long ba.s your hair been thinning?_</p>
        <p>Do you still have hair'. or fuzz'. on</p>
        <p>How long is it?_Is  it  dry?_</p>
        <p>top of your head. Js it oily?_</p>
        <p>FROM GREENVILLE</p>
        <p> NEW YORK Thru Express via Turnpikes</p>
        <p> RALEIGH 4 Convenient Trips Daily</p>
        <p> WILMINGTON. N.C.</p>
        <p>2 Thru Trips Daily</p>
        <p> .ST. PETERSBURG Only 1 Change via Wilson CHARTERS / TOURS / PACKAGE EXPRESS</p>
        <p>UNION BUS STATION JIO W. 5th Street 75T."1 </p>
        <p>1-way</p>
        <p>R645</p>
        <p>265</p>
        <p>*365</p>
        <p>2385</p>
        <p>Attach any other information you feci may be helpful. NAME_</p>
        <p>ADDRESS. CITY______</p>
        <p>S I'A I I</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0006" />
        <p>Sandy Barnhill Grabs Medal In Ladies Golf</p>
        <p>76 To Edge Out</p>
        <p>From Greensboro</p>
        <p>R.</p>
        <p>Split</p>
        <p>C., Lions in Of Pair</p>
        <p>R. C. Cola split with the Lions ion a fielder s choice and ad-yesterday to remain a half- vanced on another. He scored on game off the pace in the North Ronald Moores single.</p>
        <p>State League.  The  Lions won  The  Lions  tied it up in  the</p>
        <p>the make-up  of a  protested  fourth  at 2-2.  Wayne Elks reach-:</p>
        <p>game. 3-2, then lost the regular ed on a fielder's choice and ad-scheduled game, 4-3.  vanced on Allens single. Ed-</p>
        <p>Coca-Ccla leads the league ward Johnson reached on an with an 8-2 record.  R. C. Cola  error,  which  scored Elks,</p>
        <p>is a half-game  back  at 8-3. fol-  The  game  went into extra  in-</p>
        <p>Icwed by the Kiwanis, 6-4. and nings still tied at 2-2. But in the' the Optimists. 5-5. The Lions,  top of  the seventh.  David  Pre-</p>
        <p>3-8, and the Jaycees. 1-9, have  wett singled to lead  off the  Lion</p>
        <p>been eliminated from any half of the game. He moved up chance at the title.  on a single by Charles Chand-</p>
        <p>The protested game took up ler and stole third. Anthony i in the sixth inning with the Phelps then singled him in score tied at 2-2.  with the go-ahead run.</p>
        <p>It then ended very quickly. But R. C. fought back to tie In the top of the sixth, F^dvvard it up again. Donald Williams Johnson slammed a home run,  led off  with a single  and Randy</p>
        <p>and it was all over as the Lions  Cates  doubled to  drive  him</p>
        <p>won.  across for a 3-3 deadlock.</p>
        <p>In the second game. R. C. Finally, in the eighth, R. C. started the scoring, getting two scored the winning run. Dary in the second inning. Bobby Matera reached on an error, Jones led off with a walk and and two walks, to Danny Conmoved up when Bill Speight zales and Don Williams loaded W'alked. David Jackson reached the bases. Randy Cates then hit on a fielders choice which got a sacrifice fly to score Matera Speight on second. Bill Macon with the winning run. singled Jones in and Wayne To- Danny Allen and Charles lar walked, loading the bases. Chandler led the Lions with two Dary Matera then walked to hits each, while Randy Cates force in Jackson with the sec- and David Jackson each had end run.  two to pace R. C. Cola.</p>
        <p>In the third, the Lions scored Lions ........ 001 TOO 103 9</p>
        <p>one run. Danny .Allen reached R. C. Cola 020 000 114 8</p>
        <p>Fires</p>
        <p>Pair</p>
        <p>,  ,  Oakley,  Mimosa  Hills,  Morganton,  92;</p>
        <p>Mildred Clemmer ot bantora  Mitcneii,  Kinston,  92;  Dot  spang-</p>
        <p>jnH  ih HnHrick  of ThomaS- ler, Duke, Durham, 92; Bet^ Ayentt,</p>
        <p>ana .1ID naancK  muuia  vallev, Wilmington, 92; Erma Ber-</p>
        <p>ville took low gross honors in Benvenue, Rocky Mount, 92; Ma</p>
        <p>Sandy Barnhill, a rising junior at East Carolina College .from Williamston, assumed the</p>
        <p>'role of favorite in the North me be^lUI^ luuiiidiiic..., .....""  Barbara  Ann</p>
        <p>I Carolina Womens Golf Associa- ing with 82s. Linda Briggs ot Ahoskie, 92. jtions State Tournament at Nashville won the low net hon-i Brook Valley yesterday.  ors with a 72.</p>
        <p>North theseniors tournament, linish- ora^iv, Ben.en.., Rock,</p>
        <p>Edwards,</p>
        <p>Mount, 92; Beachwood</p>
        <p>MEDALISTS Sandy Barnhill points to her 76 on the scoreboard after she</p>
        <p>won the medalists honors at the North Carolina Women's Golf Association tournament at Brook Valley. Jane Reinhardt, center, and Mary Evelyn Church, both of the Starmount Country Club of Greensboro, were in the scoring honors, with 77s. Miss Barnhill is from the Roanoke Country Club of Williamston. (Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>Frances McKay, Duke, Durham, 93; Ellen Thomas, Greenville, 93; Debra Jan Rhodes, Oakwood, North Wilkesboro,</p>
        <p>Miss Barnhill, 20, tired a 76 Low putts went to Ruth Young to take medalists honors from of Winston-Salem and Mary Em- |p,._ catawba. Hickory, 94, pam waters, two Greensboro women who fin- ma Manley of Asheville, both p^ne  mIh</p>
        <p>jished the qualifying round of of whom used 28 putts in ttie ^red Coleman, Brook Valley, GreanvilH, the tournament with 77s.  round.  *Mrs Roy Cochran cherry Point, 951</p>
        <p>I A member ot the Roanoke  The tow gross  team trophy ^</p>
        <p>Country Club at Williamston went to  Starmount  wadesboro, 95; Margaret Morris, Netv</p>
        <p>Miss Barnhill said she was not Club ot Greensboro willi 232.</p>
        <p>worried about being in the fa- The team made up ot i\iis. .\tin- po^eii, chapei him, 97; sara perguson, vorite-s role in the tournament, hardt. Mrs. Church and M.irge  iSyriS:</p>
        <p>I've been playing lor about Burns. Starmount also ''on me  97;  Bee  Morton,  Washington,</p>
        <p>'10  )  1  j  i.  1  1  riTth  'j  bn.t  Mfi;  97; Woodie Newcomb, Willow Haven,</p>
        <p>jl2 years, she said, seriouslv low gross with a jw. ah. _  </p>
        <p>I for about five  years. And Lve  Church,  Mrs.  Reinhari.t  and  ,g.</p>
        <p>been  in lots of  tournaments.  Madge  Banks  made up  Ihat</p>
        <p>I That may be an understate- team.  Brook vaiiey, Greenviiie, 98; justin</p>
        <p>Iment. She has been the women's  Match  play in  seven tlighl^s</p>
        <p>champion at her home club for was to get under\va\ this mom 99. Hannah Davis, southern Pines, 100; Jhe past six years, since she  ing and  continue  through Fri- ^tanghursr Hiiicrest. winston-sa.</p>
        <p>was  14 years  old. .She's also  day.</p>
        <p>played for the past two years  Qualifiers  tor the tournament, home</p>
        <p>on the Carolinas-Virginia mam</p>
        <p>This is her first trip to the  V7""i.,np"Reinha''rdt  siar-  len Small. Mimosa HIIs, Morganton, ICl;</p>
        <p>NCWGA tourney.  S!TrWn7bcr;"77; Sr'a Wares, Ruby Daniels, Waynesvllle,. 101; Hazel</p>
        <p>In  her four-over-par round.  Hiq^land,  FayetlevHle, 78,- Marge Burns</p>
        <p>club, gross score:</p>
        <p>ames Reddock, Cherry Point 100; Judy Svoboda, Cherry Pcint, 100; Kathy Price, Chapel Hill, 100; Ann Anderson, Catawba, Hickory, 100.</p>
        <p>Virginia Lansche, Greenville, 1P1|</p>
        <p>lllP 76^^"M!ary'*'Evelyn^Churck  Frances  Johnson,  Jacksonville,  111;  He-</p>
        <p>- 'pcnsboro, 77; Jane Reinhardt, S.ar ^ ^  ^  ,</p>
        <p>^  .1____ -f-T. I  /.Ao.apoc;. Rubv Dfinicls, Wsyi   _  ..</p>
        <p>102; A/'abel B-ount#</p>
        <p>Elks Defeat Exchange, 5-2</p>
        <p>State</p>
        <p>Gain</p>
        <p>Bank</p>
        <p>Teener</p>
        <p>College</p>
        <p>League</p>
        <p>View</p>
        <p>Wins</p>
        <p>Just behind her were Jane ciemmer,</p>
        <p>Reinhardt and Mary Eveivn ^cTTce'^McB^i^drV^newood.' 7Vmstnn-Sa- 106; Lucy Perry.</p>
        <p>Church of Starmount'  nkP.  Durham,'ham, lO; Margaret Cleetwood, FrooH</p>
        <p>ngton, 107; Marl#</p>
        <p>Colonial Thom.isville, Bright, Red Fox, Tryon, 107; Mildred ' ' '   107;</p>
        <p>The Elks downed the Ex-!gled to score Ford.</p>
        <p>6-5. The Moose and Greenville In the fourth, the Elks got</p>
        <p>Ward New Bern,</p>
        <p>she p,cked up two double bo-</p>
        <p>gevs, on 17 and one. She birdied  r7pn  Vafl7  Fayettrville  si  Mb H. d- nne Medlin, Kinston, 105;  Aildrcd Green,</p>
        <p>Jour and six, and picked up two  S"'G%eS, ToL</p>
        <p>S"-''  Brock v.0k, GrcoovUlV,^,^.,d^r__oO w.rOk, CoO.rwooO =  Hr.O.</p>
        <p>Bessie Hudson, Willow Haven, Durham, _  _  Willow Haven, Cur-</p>
        <p>r'cvnntr^; lem 83' Becky Heron, Duke, Durham,'ham, 106; Margaret Country  ^^^3P,P,,  ^^hov  lle,  84;  Vallev, Greenville, 106.</p>
        <p>Club in Greensboro. Both had  Linda  Briggs, B.rchv.ood. Nashville, 84;  Hellcn JVvers, Washi</p>
        <p>77. Mrs. Reinhardt took up golf-  ^staT''v\n;or'Haven''DuV7am;  Fr'ickson,'7hapei' HiM  107;  Margaret</p>
        <p>ing after attending a class  84-  Icne  EvVrett.  Jacksonville,  S.S.  Bosl, Catawba, Hickory,  107;  Gr^</p>
        <p>,   ,  r -1   J u Ann  Dav ' Pine Vallev, Wilm ngton,  ves, Catawba, Hickory,  107; Marge De-</p>
        <p>taught by a  family friend who  g;  Oombroski. Hilma.  lartoro,  Cennaro, Cherry Point,  108; Ruth &amp;gt;cung</p>
        <p>state Bank rolled lo its fifth lord. Larrv tiatton reached onundefeated. Billy Clark singled "'as a golf pro, Mrs. Church.  Eofio9;  ;n,r!'"i!i9r</p>
        <p>straight victory last nieht in the an error to score Gaskins and and Smith doubled. Clark came "i?"'?! w ,,,  S"'</p>
        <p>across on a passed ball, and an goil WOUia make a gooa noooy  Q;g^,3,^,  L.ngvie/.  or  'mJoro,  no,- sue Esval, Duke Durham, tlO; Soiv</p>
        <p>allnupH Smith to  score  for her. She  has  been  club  g9,  Cwin Der-i  n  Sandhills, Pm-nurst,  nv Alexander, Tryon, 110; Nell Tucker,</p>
        <p>aiiowea ijmiin lO score  g,;  ..asmngtun b9; BoM Willo.v Cmek. High Point, 110.</p>
        <p>CnampiOn inree limis.  ^  Sta^''  .cet.  Gieecsnoro 69 Matlle Long Prterr.on. New B?rn, HI;</p>
        <p>Mrs. Church has been in the  Shiney  'Crctchfir d Chocov-^'e, Roan-  Belty Lou Howard, Brook  Valley,  Greetv</p>
        <p>,  .  , -  Cl-  i  u  nkf.  Rnri.dc 9f-  kv Pfeaf,'-' D I'e,  viiie. 112; W'elta Ryan, Brook Valley,</p>
        <p>,5  championship  flight  twice be-  9^.^  ay^ ^  v.Muv,  Greenviiie. 113; Pickett Duffy New</p>
        <p>1  fore and has  participated in five  Wilmlngton, 9I; Le la Semav  scotch  Bern, 115, Juiia Braun,  Chapel Hill, 115;</p>
        <p>, ,  rc    m nu  u 1*  Lauri-.tura ' E'izabeth Mc- Ju^y H,a'el, Morehpad  City, 118; 7/ary</p>
        <p>StHG ciffciirS  .^IrS. Rh^inhcirclt  ^^Hpy  wbi^pFi'ing  Varqf''rpi  Shipf:, bJr v B* rn. 118;  Lrola Hai ght#</p>
        <p>1  \^ili be in  the championship  C^tQ.  Rp^Fox. Tryco 92  .Aa,oa et  Cherr/ Point, 126  _</p>
        <p>3 flight for ihe second time in 10 tourneys. She recently won the spring tournament at Starmount.</p>
        <p>Besides medalists honors, several other awards were made after Monday's rounds.</p>
        <p>Teen-er League, edging out Car- Cobb for a 5-0 lead, olina Dairy, 2-1. In the other Pepsi-Cola picked up  its  only  error</p>
        <p>game,  College View picked up  run in the fourth, a home  run  with the winning run.</p>
        <p>its second straight win, beating bv Barry Whitney.  birst  Game</p>
        <p>Pepsi-Cola, 6-1.  in  ^be  fifth. * College View</p>
        <p> .....  State  Bank holds a tw^o game  ps  final run, a homer  Vi</p>
        <p>change,  5-2.  to  stay  in  the  racej  The  bottom  of  the  frame  saw  second place Carolir^  by Mike Harrington,</p>
        <p>for  the  Tar  Heel  League  crown the  Exchange  move  out  again.  Dairy  ^ fhe loop with a 0^   Hatton hurled the win  for  Col-</p>
        <p>yesterday.  Tommy Harrison singled and record. CditJina Dairy is 3-2.  allowing  three  hits.</p>
        <p>Pepsi-Cola continues to lead advanced on a wild pitch. Ho- ^Howed by Home Buildeis 2-2,  ^ne  and  striking  out</p>
        <p>the league with a 9-1 record,, ward Adams singled and a pair  five</p>
        <p>while the Elks are three and a cf walks, to Coltraine and Louis  The  second  game  was  really  a</p>
        <p>half games back in second at  Lesley forced in Harrison.  piace  ai u-4.</p>
        <p>homer ^^^ge View 104 010 x-6 Second Game Dairy 000 100 01</p>
        <p>Caro.</p>
        <p>State Bank . 000 002 x2</p>
        <p>first game. College pitchers duel between Lee Galt '   -  of Carolina Dairv and Russ</p>
        <p>Tobacco are both 5-5. The Ex- the runs that counted, scoring  'Bad  in  the  firsi    ^  ^</p>
        <p>change is 4-7 and Security Life three times. Wayne Bailey &amp;gt;nmng. Uarnson Gaskins v alL  ^</p>
        <p>ic 9.JI anH hnth havp hppn pli- rpached on an error andGarrv  second.  He  then  Gat  gave  p</p>
        <p>hits, walked one and struck out 10. Smith</p>
        <p>is 2-8, and both have been eli- reached on an error and Garry</p>
        <p>minated from the title picture. Hall singled. Howard Adams scored on an eiror.  hiq  uLniu-pa  thrpp</p>
        <p>The Elks moved out in the then homered for a 5-1 lead. i 1" e '''d. Gohege View add- allowed two hits, walked three</p>
        <p>second inning with one run.  The Exchange got its final ii ^  a z' .</p>
        <p>Tommv Coltraine singled and in the sixth. Nunn walked as doubled and Gai y Alfoi d</p>
        <p>Quinn Signs 6-9 Cager</p>
        <p>Food Mart Is Palmer Sent Foiling On</p>
        <p>East Carolina Basketball Coach Tom Quinn announced to-</p>
        <p>The Exchange got its final run  Tommy  Dur-  and  struck  out 15.  Coach  Tom Quinn  D^^l/  Ta  II</p>
        <p>me E^xcnange goi us nnai run ^  Carolina  Dairy  scored  first,  day  the  signing  of  Tyron  Wyche,  |)(]^|\  y  IL</p>
        <p>luuunv  cw.i  rt.  iwv  ...  ,  ,u  r.gRkipR  vvas  getting  its  run  in the fourth a 6-H, 24o pound hasKeioaii siar</p>
        <p>moved up on an error. He later did Robert Bri^^^^^^^^  Hud-    loading  the  Galt  walked  and  stole  second,  from James Soloman Russell</p>
        <p>1  ^is21  Si- ..........-........</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE (AP)</p>
        <p>into the act. scoring my Ford singled and advanced tc get a more than one hit.</p>
        <p>an error scored Durham and Al- back with their two runs to stay</p>
        <p>on an error on Jack Richardsons grounder. Dean Nunn sin-</p>
        <p>Exchange ........ 001  001-2  3</p>
        <p>Elks ............. Oil  30x-5  5</p>
        <p>Presbyterian</p>
        <p>St. James In</p>
        <p>... uii UXa o  g  M  f  *  T  T</p>
        <p>And</p>
        <p>F'ood Mart continued to move|tilth, along in the Ladies Softball Lea-' Pollard s jumped oft to a 2-0 gue. taking a 38-1 victory over icad in the firs! inning and Big Value Di.scourit  last night,  bmit p to  3-0 in the third. But</p>
        <p> ,   Jim  In other games, the  Little Mini  the Little  .Mint rallied in the</p>
        <p>in Lawrenceville,  gapimore  with  downed  Pollard's.  8-3.  and  VVa-  tiuh.  scoring  three to tie it up</p>
        <p>15 victories last .season and chovia edged Cuca-Ciola, 8-f. on a httmer by Dorcas Carter, pitched a  shutout  as  the Orioles Hood Mart leads  with a 60  Then in  tlie sixth, five more</p>
        <p>swept  the World Series, was  record, while the Little .Mint is  Little .Mini runs came across</p>
        <p>optioned to Rochester of the International League today on 24-hour recall.</p>
        <p>We hope Palmer will make a couole  of  starts  for  Rochester.</p>
        <p>There were  almost  as  many  rained out. \Va.shington  and Chi-</p>
        <p>medical communiques as base-'cago were not scheduled. Undefeated St. James and  St. James  went on to add 10  ball reports coming  out of  jn the National League,  San</p>
        <p>First Presbyterian continued to  more runs  in the third, with  American League ballparks  Francisco beat Cincinnati  6-3,</p>
        <p>roll along, although Presbyter-  homers by R. Vincent and Beas-  Monday night, and the  immedi-  Pittsburgh edged Chicago  4-3,</p>
        <p>ians road got a little bumpy  ley. In the  fourth the Metho- conclusion might be  that the  st. Louis outlasted Houston 5-4</p>
        <p>last night. St. James  downed  di^ added four more.  '^gg gj ^|jg  j-gy,-,  gyer  in lO innings and Los  Angeles</p>
        <p>Pentecostal, 26-7, while  Presby-  Pentecostal picked up  three j</p>
        <p>terian edged Meadowbrook 7-6. more m the fourth and one m  Monday,  Earl Battey  and  New York were idle.</p>
        <p>throughrdchedule'. Pres\yTer- In 'the second game, Presby-haru'takes'mTfthan .  ''f</p>
        <p>ian is a half-game back, 6-0, Im- terian inched out into the lead   fnock  to eT a fe low</p>
        <p>manuel is next at 3-3, followed with one run in the first. Then   ^  ^  the  first game, but not until  the</p>
        <p>5-2. Wachovia is 4-3. followed by to finish Ihe game.</p>
        <p>Pollard's and Coca-Cola at 3-4, fn the final contest. F'ood Mart Big Value is 0-7.  had little trouble in disposing</p>
        <p>In the opener. Wachovia soor- (,| Big \ ;)lnc. as thev scored 20</p>
        <p> .....  _  _________ ed three runs in the first, but runs in the third and 18 in the</p>
        <p>and get in sufficient work to get fhe lead when Coke came lourth to finish thing.^ back in .shape, said Harry Ual- back with four in their ha f of Baltimore's director of ^ ^ b'^rnc. In the second m-</p>
        <p>Wachovia tied it up at 4-4.</p>
        <p>ton, Baltimore s payer personnel.</p>
        <p>Palmer, a 21-year-old right j hander, has been bothered with Tecurring pain in his right shoulder dating back to last August. He had made only two starts for the Orioles since hurling a one-hitter on May 12 to beat New York.</p>
        <p>Prior to Monday's twi-night; doubleheader with Minnesota.. Palmer threw for about 25 minutes and experienced no pain. The decision was immediately made to send him out so</p>
        <p>ning.</p>
        <p>Coke took the lead back in the third as they scored three more, but Wachovia tied it again at 7-7 in the fourth The winning run then scored in the</p>
        <p>EASTERN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY</p>
        <p>ComiuiMciid k Hcsidontial I{uildin;( l.jOt S. Fvatis St. Pi. 8-3136 Bn'cnvillc, .\.C.</p>
        <p>by ML Pleasant and Meadow- in the third, they added three  fourtti  inning  of  the  finale did he</p>
        <p>brook, both 3-4. Oakmont is 24, more on a homer by Moore for ^ H-ei non-io nf Kancn ritvg  a  quick  trip  Quinn  considers  the lad a fine he could pitch,</p>
        <p>followed by Gum Swamp, 1-5, a 4-0 margin.  twi  night  dmihlphpgHpr  to  the hospittil for a check-up. prospect and showed his evala- ]f Jim still had pain, we</p>
        <p>and Pentecostal, 0-7.  I  Meadowbrook scored twice in7* Apparently, there were no tion of Wyche in saying, Ty- probably would have placed him</p>
        <p>In the first game, St. James the fourth but Presbyterian got;Cleveland but did^^^^^  problems  because  the  rone is only seventeen years old on the disabled list, Dalton</p>
        <p>rolled into the lead with nine one run back in the fifth to re- ra&amp;gt;s uniii me ^e.ona  t  outfielder  left  soon  and still growing. His balance, said. We didn't make this</p>
        <p>runs in the first'inning, includ- main in the lead at 5-2. '  a  oi  coniesib,  x-rays  were  taken.  mobility, and size will enable move earlier because we kept</p>
        <p>ing a homer by Riddick. Pen- Then in the seventh. Meadow- and 2-1.  Battey was on the receiving him to progress quickly. With hoping he would come around.</p>
        <p>tecostal scored three in its half brook rallied to score four runs:  Battey  was  bounced  arouno  in  powelTs  240  pounds  when  steady progress, Tyrone could _</p>
        <p>of the second, only to see St. and take a 6-5 lead. Presbyter-;a collision at the plate with big Oriole first baseman got help bolster our most obvious ^ ill James match that on another ian had to come back in the.Boog Powell of the Orioles as  jjj ^ rundown on a rebound weakness.   L&amp;lt;03ST3l  LGd^UG</p>
        <p>homer by Riddick, making it bottom of the seventh with two the Twins split a twi-nighter.  squeeze bunt attempt. Tyrone is the son of Mrs.</p>
        <p>12-3.  iruns to win the game.  j.n  .jnH  l  ..  ...</p>
        <p>Alous Blooper Brings Buc Win</p>
        <p>By DICK COUCH  ithe  Cubs at Pittsburgh. Two of</p>
        <p>Associated Press Sports Writer'his 10 singles during the spree The harder Matty Alou at- have been bunts and four have tacks a baseball, the more it been infield taps.</p>
        <p>winning the first game 4-0 and  tagged  out,  but  Martha  Wyche  of  Lawrence-  ^  ^or^the^^Dodgers over 'the</p>
        <p>losing the seccntd 9-o^ Bu the   tory  ^</p>
        <p>.Minnesota catcher didnt leave  Red box in Loasiai league piay</p>
        <p>ithe enme until the next innino ,P'';ess. Earl left tor a pinch^and attending classes at East ,^3, the game until me next inn nt,.  the  next  inning.  Icarolina.</p>
        <p>And Skowron, playing only a I week after being spiked in the hand while sliding home a week ago, reopened the cut while batting in the eighth inning of ^he first game of the Angels dou- By THE ASS0CI.4TED PRESS</p>
        <p>bleeds.</p>
        <p>Alou, the National Leagues 155-pound batting king, butchered the (^icago Cubs with a run-scoring, bloop single in the seventh inning that carried the</p>
        <p>But the biggest hit was the looping fly that fell just beyond second baseman I&amp;gt;on Kessing-ers reach to snaj. a 3-3 deadlock Monday night.</p>
        <p>While Alou was gouging the</p>
        <p>Baseball Scores</p>
        <p>W. L. Pet. G.B.;</p>
        <p>Daniels allowed just three hits and struck out 17. The game was decided in the fifth when Jeff Higgins brought in the only run on an error.</p>
        <p>In girls, softball, the Junior</p>
        <p>bleheader with Detroit. California won the opener 2-0 and the Tigers took the nightcap 5-1. New York and Boston were</p>
        <p>National League</p>
        <p>North Tar Loop</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh Pirates to a 4-3 vic-iCubs, light-hitting Dick Scho-tory Monday night,  Tield  of Los Angeles overpow-</p>
        <p>The little Dominicans thirdlered Atlanta 3-2: surprising Ju-single in the game gave him 12, lio Gotay of Houston wasted five hits in his last 15 at bats and an straight hits in a 5-4 11-inning impressive .317 average for the loss to league-leading St. Louis ggggon.  Francisco  whipped  Cin-</p>
        <p>I dont think anytime in  6-3 despite a of</p>
        <p>career I have ever been hitting h'e&amp;lt;;s by Don Bavletich. Phi -the ball as hard, said Alou, adelphia and the New York</p>
        <p>who led the league with a .342 mark last season but was under ,280 when he began his rampage last Friday night with an eighth inning double at Philadelphia.</p>
        <p>He went 4-for-5 against the Phils on Saturday, 4-for-5 again</p>
        <p>C^inHov nnrl ^-^or4'</p>
        <p>on</p>
        <p>and the Mets were idle.</p>
        <p>Bir Mazeroski, whose two-run single capped a three-run Pittsburgh burst in the first inning, reached first on third baseman Ron Santo.s error to start the seventh. He took second oh a RinfT)# hv .Tcrrv' Mav and scored</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>.L.</p>
        <p>Pet.</p>
        <p>G.B.</p>
        <p> St. Louis ....</p>
        <p>, 37</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>.627</p>
        <p>Cincinnati ..</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>.606</p>
        <p>'2</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh ..</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>.550</p>
        <p>4&amp;gt;2</p>
        <p>San F'ran. ..</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>.548</p>
        <p>4&amp;gt;2</p>
        <p>Chicago .....</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>.533</p>
        <p>5^2</p>
        <p>Atlanta .</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>.500</p>
        <p>7'2</p>
        <p>Phila.......</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>.467</p>
        <p>9'2</p>
        <p>Los Angeles</p>
        <p>. 26</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>.419</p>
        <p>121 2</p>
        <p>Houston</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>.400</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>New York .</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>.345</p>
        <p>161,2</p>
        <p>Chicago ..... 36</p>
        <p>Detroit ...... 34</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>31 28 28</p>
        <p>Cleveland Boston . Baltimore California</p>
        <p>Washington</p>
        <p>3 .610 28 .548</p>
        <p>31 .508 31 .500</p>
        <p>32 .484 .478 .477 .459 .438</p>
        <p>_ Athletes beat Newton, 24-12 for j 31/21 their third win. Annie Moye led' fi The Athletes, while Alice Wiggins</p>
        <p>35 .34 33</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>6 &amp;gt;'2 7V2</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>1012</p>
        <p>was the winning pitcher.</p>
        <p>The Junior Athletes meet Kearney Park tonight at 8:45 p.m.</p>
        <p>League play.</p>
        <p>Edward Stancil was the winning pitcher in the first game, while Mike Pollard hurled the second game.</p>
        <p>Bethel swept two games from Pactolus, 20-8 and 12-2 behind</p>
        <p>the pitching of .Mike Martin and  Dos Angeles 3, Atlanta 2</p>
        <p>Danny Briley,</p>
        <p>This week, Belvoir-Falkland and Bethel collide while Stokes meets Pactolus.</p>
        <p>Bethel and Belvoir-Falkland are now 4-0. while Stokes and Pactolus are both 0-4.</p>
        <p>Mondays Results</p>
        <p>San F'rancisco 6, Cincinnati 3 Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 3 St. Louis 5, Houston 4, 11 in-</p>
        <p>Only games scheduled Todays Gaines New York at Philadelphia, N Chicago at Pittsburgh, N St. Louis at Houston, N Atlanta at Los Angeles. N Cincinnati at San Francisco,</p>
        <p>Mondays Results</p>
        <p>Minnesota 4-5, Baltimore 0-9 Cleveland 4-2, Kansas City 2-1' California 2-1, .Detroit 0-5 Boston at New York, rain Only games scheduled Todays Games Kansas City at Cleveland, N California at Detroit, N Boston at New York, N Washington at (liicago, N Only games scheduled</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>the go-ahead run on Ainu's two-nut blonder</p>
        <p>4men&amp;gt;Mn f.eapoe</p>
        <p>Prompt Expert Service All Work Guaranteed S(*r\i(7( While You Walt</p>
        <p>Saad's Shoe Shop</p>
        <p>Located In College View Cleaners Main Plant</p>
        <p>Also Sundaes, Shakes. And 25 Flavors Ot lee Cream To Choose From</p>
        <p>C.J.'s</p>
        <p>WORLD OF ICE CREAM</p>
        <p>J,orJ</p>
        <p>1. Front End Alignment</p>
        <p>2. Wheel Balance</p>
        <p>3. Brake Adjustment</p>
        <p>3 SAFETY SERVICES... ONE LOW PRICE</p>
        <p>OiTT spcrialiNts correct easier, camber, toe-in, toc-out and in-.spcct .steering. They precision balance both front wheels to assure even wear. And adjust brakes to manufacturers specifications.</p>
        <p>Phone for an appointmettt ... or drhe in,.. TODAYS</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>sunoN's</p>
        <p>SERVICE CENTER</p>
        <p>1105 DICKINSON AVE. PHONE 752-6121</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0007" />
        <p>(laston Claims Exemption From '65 Voter Act</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, June 20, 19677</p>
        <p>Liquo</p>
        <p>Bill</p>
        <p>Store Referendum Approved By Senate</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  A bill authorizing any North Carolina town with 1,000 population or more to hold a referendum on liquor stores awaits House action after being approved by the Senate Monday night.</p>
        <p>Senate the bill was amended to specify that any municipality which is the seat of a county would qualify for a referendum regardless of its population.</p>
        <p>to exempt Burke and Caldwell counties. Sen. James Green. D-Bladen, wanted to remove his county from the measure.  ..  .</p>
        <p>White told the Senate the ex- Washington.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The chairman of the Gaston County, N.C., Board of Elections says the county should not be covere oy the 1965 Federal Voter Act because  we feel</p>
        <p>that we didnt discriminate and this has given us a badi mage.</p>
        <p>L. B. Hollowell Jr., the elections Iward chairman, was; g gog  Negroes registered.  By</p>
        <p>among Gaston County officials  1966  there  were</p>
        <p>to testify Monday  before a ^2 898  whites  and 4,381  Negroes</p>
        <p>three-judge federal  court ml on the voter  rolls.</p>
        <p>THERE OUGHTA BE A LAWl</p>
        <p>were registered but less than 50 per cent of the whites were registered. Whites considerably outnumber the Negroes in the county.</p>
        <p>PARCEL PEST DEP'T ^- OR ** THE POSTAL CLERH's LAMESTT" |</p>
        <p>Testimony brought out that there was a general reregistration of voters in the county in 1962 when 33,162 whites and</p>
        <p>The amendment submitted byiemption of a county from the</p>
        <p>Sen. Jack White, D-Cleveland,</p>
        <p>Under current law county-who also introduced the bill, wide liquor referendums can be i also says any minicipality hav-</p>
        <p>called without legislative approval but cities wanting Alcoholic Beverage Control stores need special permission from the legislature.</p>
        <p>be</p>
        <p>ing an ABC store would exempt from the act.</p>
        <p>The Senate beat down two amendments to exempt counties from the statewide bill.</p>
        <p>Before being approved by the | Sen. Joe Byrd, D-Burke, tried</p>
        <p>bill would raise serious doubts about its constitutionality. Sen. Ed Kemp, D-Guilford, agreed. This is not like other state-</p>
        <p>The court is hearing testimony on thee ountys suit asking that Gaston County be exempt from the Voter Act, which nullified literacy tests for vot-</p>
        <p>Number Of Cases In Pitt Recorder's Court</p>
        <p>Judge Dink James disposed of the following cases at the June 13 term of Pitt County Recorders Court.</p>
        <p>Wll-</p>
        <p>li-</p>
        <p>James Leroy Sanderlin, Rt. 2, liamston, driving after and while cense revoked, continued to.</p>
        <p>Richard Lee Braxton, Negro, Route 1, Box 22, Wintervllle, speeding and improper equipment judgement suspended</p>
        <p>Richard Judson Harris, 1407 Palm St., payment of costs and not operate^ a</p>
        <p>Goldsboro, speeding, judgment suspend- ^or vehicle^</p>
        <p>ed on payment of $25 costs deducted and  Negro,  Box 33, Falk-</p>
        <p>is -</p>
        <p>r-  1 TiArir tor  vehicle  for 10 days and surrender</p>
        <p>St., no valid operators license, continued  ^'Srke^^^  Negr^  515</p>
        <p>.rvin L. BOX  N.wrl.</p>
        <p>Ing, pay $10 and costs.  h  JpI  HarrK  '99  Route  3  Box  515,</p>
        <p>Richard  Roscoe  Wainwright, Pitt  St.,  assault 'with a deadly weap-</p>
        <p>Avden, assault and dr.vmg under the m-  j^ansfered  to  superior  court.</p>
        <p>Hnwi p  lAOt  Beaumont  Pd ' Charlie  Lee Nobles, 28, Negro, Route</p>
        <p>DsniCi R.  SaiWQi  i60i  oeaumonT  kg.,  rrppn^iiip ;^s;^uit with a</p>
        <p>worthless check, continued to upon pay- 3,_Box jOS.^G  ,Vansfered  to  su-</p>
        <p>The county  elections  board</p>
        <p>sought to simplify the literacy test required under North Carolina law, Hollowell testified. He said he took  from the  State</p>
        <p>wide bills - Kemp explained tiers in states and counties ,n  he h^^ simplest</p>
        <p>rwnk yo^aise a%erS cloud^whi^ less  than  50 per cent of  ^^oe^ he  co-r d fmd and</p>
        <p>about ^he total bill with his  voters  actually were  -&amp;lt;l^hemJo^^</p>
        <p>amendment.  jregisierea.  possible</p>
        <p>Under Whites bill, a munici-l It is the first suit of its kind, pality must be incorporated and I The Justice Department is | i^^gistrars  also  were  encour-</p>
        <p>have one or more full-time PO', contesting  the suit, contending;  work  at their  homes</p>
        <p>licemen to qualify for an ABC the literacy test was more^"^  Neoro</p>
        <p>referendum. The governing strictly applied to Negroes than communities  in  oi'der  to  regis-</p>
        <p>would be authorized to call the</p>
        <p>referendum. The governing________ __________________ _____ ___________</p>
        <p>board would be authorized toj pj.gk E. Schwelb the Jus- of elections were three Negro register Negroes and said theyj</p>
        <p>call the referendum upon re-Department attorney, was I residents of the county who said knew of no instances of  ||^ Actioil</p>
        <p>expected  to  call a  few  witness-1 they knew of few, if any, cases  crimination - in Gastonia at</p>
        <p>es  to  testify during  todays'in which Negroes were denied  least.  WASHINGTON  (AP)  - Three</p>
        <p>court session.  '  registration  because of race. i under cross examination, the i North Carolina soldiers were in-</p>
        <p>WhEM a PACkAGE C0ME6 1W130UGM WITH AH ADDRESS 60 HEAT AHD CLEAR, VOU CAM BE 6URE,6RE, SURE THE RETURH ADDRESS'LL ALSO APPEAR'^</p>
        <p>But when a parcel's labelled</p>
        <p>WITH AH UHREADABLE CHiCREH-TRACR SCRAWL, CAN W "RETURN iT TO SEHDER**? HOPE THERE'S NO RETURH ADDRESS AT ALL.*</p>
        <p>to whites and that this was a|^^ Negroes, Hollowell said.</p>
        <p>form of discrimination.  i  Also  testifying  for  the  board  made  in  1962,  1964  and  1966  TsT  HggIs</p>
        <p>ceipt of a petition signed by 25 per cent of the voters in the last municipal election.</p>
        <p>Resort towns would be permitted to use their census figure of July when population is at its peak.</p>
        <p>Local Brothers WereGraduated</p>
        <p>On Monday, Hollowell test!-;They were Dr Cleveland W. fled that the board of elections;f, Gpstoma dentist, Rev. H. C.</p>
        <p>had consistently tried to regis-!,?  minister;</p>
        <p>three said they were not as familiar with what might have happened in the county outside of Gastonia and did not know</p>
        <p>ter atl voters, regardless of|f^ Donald E. Ramseur, a Gas-race. He said that as of Janu-  whether  the  literacy  test  may</p>
        <p>ary 1966, 52 per cent of the eligible Negroes in the county</p>
        <p>the city school board.</p>
        <p>They told of strenuous efforts</p>
        <p>^ have been waived for white registrants.</p>
        <p>eluded in a list of 55 men killed</p>
        <p>son of Mr. and Mrs. Fied D. and Pfc. William W. Young Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William W. Young Sr. of Asheville.</p>
        <p>Have an urge to get dad and</p>
        <p>the boys to shove the furnitura</p>
        <p>X  T&amp;gt;    I  around to new locations? If so,</p>
        <p>in action in Vietnam, the Penta-,^^l,e  ,34 your helning</p>
        <p>gon said Monday night.  i.  .    ,  *  </p>
        <p>!hands are clean. Otherwise</p>
        <p>Sn:wIeruban*^ofMr"BS:|y&amp;gt;'"  y kandprln^ o.</p>
        <p>ty G. Snowden of Fayetteville; |tke upholstery, the Cleanliness Spec. 4 Harmon T. Respass, Bureau reports.</p>
        <p>"of cosTs'bv prosecuting witness.  Formef  Greenvillc  residents,</p>
        <p>4C,* Greenville, driving while license sus- Ethel Mae Nobles, 17, Negro, Route I Kenneth and JamCS GreenC, p,neM,_ rot suiiix.  .  recently  graduated from 1</p>
        <p>Johnnie Ray Clemons, Negro, Slmp-</p>
        <p>pson, no valid operators license, 60 perior court.</p>
        <p>'College. They are also graduates</p>
        <p>days lail and roads, suspended on pay- James Edward Acklin, no address, as- .   F.nnPR Hiffh School ..... ault with a deadly weapon with intent 101 L,. m. Ejppttis mgii ociiuui.</p>
        <p>ment of $25 and costs and not hereafter j sau, .......   i  -  j</p>
        <p>operate a motor vehicle without a valid to kill, not guilty.  I  JameS  C.  GreenC W3S grauU-</p>
        <p>operators license and adequate liabi-. caleb Hyman, Neqro, Box 592, Farm- i j fmm FavpttPville State lity insurance.  ville, fail to comply with restrictions  irom  r ayeiiev lie oactie</p>
        <p>Calvin Mitchell, Negro, 1108 West operators license, pay $10 and costs. College 111 FayetteVllle. He IS par$5 fid c"osts''^'''^ chauffeurs license  recipient  Of a felloWShlp tO</p>
        <p>Rivev Sr,i,r. Ne,ro. ,B L'Howard University's Law</p>
        <p>ineooore rtoosuvci, a...i n,  mvu    j,  9q  a|  gnd  roads,  sus-  ilOWara  univerbliy  S  udw</p>
        <p>school. Washington, D. C and</p>
        <p>.... w I ,h  ..rrih,  "&amp;lt;1  m'*'  [jjg  jjujjeg  n  Septcm-</p>
        <p>John W.  Lynch, no address, worth</p>
        <p>less check  (two counties) 90days  jail  rnontns.</p>
        <p>and roads,  suspended on payment  of  H. E.  Shirley Farmville, worthless fjgr_</p>
        <p>costs and amount of checks, $339.61,  for  check, continued to on  payment of  costs  Kenneth  H.  Greene</p>
        <p>use and benefit of James E, Brewer. by prosecuting witness  ,  e</p>
        <p>Jimmy Mitchael  Evans, Route 6,  Rufus Brown, 20, Negro, Bethel lar-  recelved hlS B. D.  degree from</p>
        <p>Box 50, Greenville  no valid operators  ceny, 90 days jail and roads, suspended  rrv,o1rsmr.ol  Q/xminnrv in</p>
        <p>license, 60 days jail  and roads, suspend-  on payment of costs, placed on proba-  CrOZer lhe0l0glC3l  oCminary in</p>
        <p>ed on payment of $25 and costs and not tion fo^r one year and not  JunC.  Hc  S  nOW  Working 3S</p>
        <p>hereafter operate a motor vehicle with- any theft or larceny and not change</p>
        <p>residence without consent of dlFCCtor of (JhriStlSn EdUCatlOn</p>
        <p>out a valid drivers license and adequate place of liability insurance.  probation  officer.</p>
        <p>IVeiv Canal Net Will Drain 20 Acres</p>
        <p>at Emmanuel Methodist Church Philadelphia, Pa. He will</p>
        <p>in</p>
        <p>continue as DCE while working on his D. D. degree at Temple University.</p>
        <p>Their parents are Mrs. Allie L. Greene of Greenville and the Rev. W. Haywood Greene of iSnow Hill, Md.</p>
        <p>J. H. and Wilson Sumrell,; To prevent erosion of top-soil! Mrs. Sandra Greene, wife of brothers in the Grifton com- into the canal, a practice of crop , the Rev. Kenneth Greene, was inunity, have recently complet- residue use will be utilized. In graduated from Cheyney State ed the construction of a 2,600 accordance with this soil con- College, Cheyney, Pa. Mrs. foot canal from their farm to a servation practice, a 12 feet Greene will teach English at lateral canad (no. 3) which in wide grass border will be plant-1 Stoddard Junior High School, turn connects with the Gum ed on the field side of the can- Philadelphia, Pa., while working</p>
        <p>Swamp drainage channel.</p>
        <p>al.</p>
        <p>This 12 feet wide by 5 feet  the  canal  for  main-  University.</p>
        <p>on her Masters degree at Tem-</p>
        <p>deep canal was constructed in  Penance purposes will be pro-'</p>
        <p>according with recommcnda-  ^j^g non-field side by  RgVoIvGT  And</p>
        <p>tions made by the Pitt Soil and  ^ leveling of the spoil, soil from.</p>
        <p>Water Conservation District to  the canal not fit for cultivation)!  CasH  StOlGn</p>
        <p>.solve a severe drainage problem  create  an embankment i</p>
        <p>on the Sumrell farm  ^^gj.  fggt  high.  The*  Approximately  $20  in  change</p>
        <p>Futile plans call for the in- embankment will then be'was taken from Artis Cannons stallati()n of a network of jarm fg^tnized and seeded to keep it Service Station at Cannons Ooss</p>
        <p>drain tile and open field ditch-  prevent  erosion,</p>
        <p>es. At the completion of this, phase the project, over 6.000 Pitt Soil and Water Conserva-feet of drain tile and 1,000 feet tionist Elmer Bland commend-of open field ditches will con- ed the Sumrell brothers for nect vdth the newly constructed their cooperation with his local canal. This network will drain conservation agency in solving a 20 acr area of the Sumrell their special farm drainage farm.  !  problem.</p>
        <p>Road during the weekend.</p>
        <p>A revolver was also reported missing. Entrance was gained by forcing a front door. The theft was reported Monday morning.</p>
        <p>Charge Driver In Monday Accident</p>
        <p>Judy Bass Taylor, 21 of Farmville was charged with failing to yield the right of way in a 12:10 p.m. mishap here yesterday at the intersection of Tenth and Cotanche Streets.</p>
        <p>Police said the Taylor car collided with a car driven by Jesse Glenn McLawhorn, 25 of Route 2, Greenville.</p>
        <p>Damage was estimated to be $100 to the Taylor vehicle and $50 to the McLawhorn auto.</p>
        <p>No injuries were reported.</p>
        <p>Mecklenburg Tax Hike Proposed</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)  Meek-</p>
        <p>lenburg County resicients would pay an increase of 20 cent per $100 valuation in personal property taxes under a preliminary budget released Monday by County Manager J. Harry Weatherly.</p>
        <p>The current tax rate is $1.60 per $100 valuation on an e#ti-mated tax base of $1.38 billion.</p>
        <p>The Mecklenburg tax hike proposal follows a request by Charlotte officials for a 20 cent hike. Charlottes rate now is $1.54 per $100. valuation.</p>
        <p>ROACHES?</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>Ivey Coward</p>
        <p>RETURNS PROM VISIT TO SON IN CUBA - Mrs.  H.</p>
        <p>P Pearoe of Birmingham, Ala., tries to hide her face at the Mexico City airport Monday on arrivaJ from Cuba where she visited her .son. U. S. Army Maj. Ricliard H. Pearce. Pearce flew to Cuba in a private plane May 21 for rea.sons of conscience. Relatives said tlioy bcdieve lie went to Cuba because he wanted custody of his .'i-year-old son who had Ix'en living with his former wife. lAP Wirepholo;</p>
        <p>CO., INC. YOUR COWAR-DEX MAN TEL 752-5175</p>
        <p>next few</p>
        <p>minutes can be</p>
        <p>an eye-openmg</p>
        <p>experience</p>
        <p>Sit back in your favorite chair while you take a careful look at The Daily Reflector Classified Section. You'll really be amazed at all you can accomplish by roading through the Classified Columns.</p>
        <p>People read Classified Ads to find the better job that means a brightar future. Others locate the home that offers more enjoyment and convenience for family living . .  and it's the proven place to find the best car buys in town.</p>
        <p>You might find the pet that brings greater happiness to your children, a reliable man to save you money on that home repair job, or a bargain buy on the appliance or piece of furniture you've been thinking about. There are people advertising who want to loan you money, too.</p>
        <p>Get the profitable habit of browsing through the Classified Columns daily to solve problems, save money, get ideas. Do it right now . . . It's an eye-opening exporionco.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFlEaOR</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0008" />
        <p>!% D)ly *efl#eler,  N.  C.TuM^sy, im 10, 116F</p>
        <p>Goren on BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHMILES H. GOREN</p>
        <p>: 1*47 fey TIM CiMcaM Trikuatl</p>
        <p>vulnerable. West deals.</p>
        <p>NORTH 4 AKJ78 V A 0 764 4K643</p>
        <p>EAST 4Q1084 ^KQJ8653 032 4 Void</p>
        <p>South 34 4 O 4</p>
        <p>WEST 4 953 V 10 9 2 O K Q 10 9 4QI2</p>
        <p>SOUTH 42</p>
        <p>V74 O AJSS 4 AJIOSTS</p>
        <p>The bidding:</p>
        <p>West  North  East</p>
        <p>Pass  14  2 ^</p>
        <p>Pass  3 ^  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass  5 4  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead: Ten of ^ yhiea North heard his partner enter the auction ireely wkh a bid of three ciubar,  h e envisioned big</p>
        <p>things, and in order to make a slam try without committing the partner^p, he cue bid (Sie of^xments suit. The three heart bid aiuioiinces first round aontrol of hearts and implies a fit for partners suit. Sooth rebid four dia-sumds and when North con-femed cldb suj^&amp;gt;ort, South aacriedoato asmaUalam in</p>
        <p>West led tba ten cf hearts</p>
        <p>which was won by dummys ace. Declarer observed that if the spades divided four-three, he could obtain two diamond discards on that suit, uid the contract would then hinge merely on picking up the queen of chibs. His first play was to cash the ace of spades and trump a spade in his hand.</p>
        <p>He was now ready to test the trump suit. There is no pr(^lem, of course, unless there are three clubs to the queen in one hand. From the bidding it appeared that since Easts heart overcall marked him with length in that suit^ he was more apt to be short in clubs than his partner. South accordingly played the ace of clubs from his hand, and he was duly rewarded when his right hand opponent tiiowed out. The proven finesse was now taken diru West and two more rounds of clubs cleared up the Crumps.</p>
        <p>The king of spades was cashed as South discarded a diamond and the queen of Slides was ruffed out on the next lead to establish dummys jack for a second diamond discard. South ruffed out his remaining heart, cashed the good spade and cheerfully conceded one trick to the opponents, in diamonds.</p>
        <p>Disney Studio Stock Still Soars</p>
        <p>By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP)  The Disney studio has always occupied a unique position in the</p>
        <p>old- fashioned. The Disney peo- huge corporation, pie merely point to happy au- Roy scorns such an idea, diencesand stockholders. For the half-year ending April 1, net income from Walt Disney</p>
        <p>movie companies</p>
        <p>Many Cases Heard In City Recorders Court</p>
        <p>Judge CSiarles H. Whedbee ihaposed of the following cases in Municipal Recorders Court Aine 8:</p>
        <p>Daniel Bteunt, Nearo, 1-B Nart Morthlau check, verdict not fluHtv;</p>
        <p>Willie Reavi Sharford, Nesro. Rt. J, aoc 32, WInterville, drunk, verdict not</p>
        <p>Jarnw Olenn Rtee, Yaneayvllle, are-IMS and reckless driving, prayer for Iwdgment aontlnued on payment of the</p>
        <p>**Robert Watson, Negro, 418-A W. Third St., selling beer without permit, 90 deys lall and roads, suspended on payment ef $50 cost deducted;  ^</p>
        <p>Ray Herbert Manuel, Front Royal, Va., careless and reckless driving, mak I n g Improper turn, prayer for lodgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Allen Brock, Negro, Rt. I, Crlmesland, exceeding stated speed limit, prayer for Judgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Joe Mills, Rt. 1, Wintervllle, aiding and abetting careless end reckless driving, verdict not guilty;</p>
        <p>Jim Vinson, 108 S, Pitt St., drunk, 30 days lall and roads, suspended on payment of the $24 cost deducted:</p>
        <p>Greely Peterson, Negro, 1222 Railroad</p>
        <p>St., disorderly conduct, 30 days all and  ............  ^</p>
        <p>roads, suspended on condition that he. appear, capias issued;</p>
        <p>film industry, and so it remains Productions and its subsidiaries six months after Walt Disneys was $4,898,000, up from $4,502,-</p>
        <p>000 for the like period last year. Many expected  Disney stock</p>
        <p>take  in  stars,  producers'to plummet after  the death of</p>
        <p>directors  as  partners,  the empires guiding genius.</p>
        <p>Astonishingly, it  rose to new</p>
        <p>highs. The quotations was 69 when Walt succumbed Dec. 15; lately it has been in the high 90s.</p>
        <p>...  5  o  President  Roy  Disney  has</p>
        <p>other studios purvey increas-^  ^</p>
        <p>mg quanties of sex and vio-</p>
        <p>death.</p>
        <p>All other now and</p>
        <p>giving them autonomy and a share of the profits. The Disney studio remains authoritarian, and no outsider participates in the profits.</p>
        <p>of sex and lence. Disney fims are doggedly aimed at the family audience.</p>
        <p>Highbrow critics rail at the</p>
        <p>have risen as buyers realized the immense worth of the movie backlogs. Investors may also</p>
        <p>Disney product as juvenile and have been influenced by *umors</p>
        <p>of a merger of Disney with a</p>
        <p>Bright Elected Ass'n President</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>; 5:00 Bronco</p>
        <p>E. B. Bright, director of gen-, eral adult education, at Pitt 6-25 weather Technical Institute, was recent-, ly elected to the presidency of | 7:3o oaktan the North Carolina Association'  for Public School Adult Education.</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT - Ch. 9</p>
        <p>We continue to get offers of merger companies chandising, technical companies and conglomerates like Litton, he said. If we accepted such an offer, it would mean dominance by outsiders. We know our operation; weve been selling entertainment for over 40 years. We dont need anyone to tell us how to do it.</p>
        <p>Why would we mergefor money? We dont need money. Now, were not going to turn our back on any money thats of-fered us. But its not worth it at that price.</p>
        <p>dreaming for the future.</p>
        <p>Thats why were in such good condition today. Most oth-</p>
        <p>or acquisition by big 1 er film companies are in a hys-in steel, food, mer- teria of mergers, acquisitions and diversification; thaT because they didnt plan. Weve got enough going to keep us busy for years.</p>
        <p>He outlined major areas;</p>
        <p>1. Disney World. The Florida Legislature passed and the gov-</p>
        <p>$22-million Tomorrowland in | called Walt Disneys Wonder-late June. Total improvements ful World of Color.</p>
        <p>- All of us decided against</p>
        <p>for the past three years: $60 million.</p>
        <p>Now well give priority to Florida, said Disney.</p>
        <p>But well always be looking for ways to improve capacity at Disneyland. This year we expect 7,400,000 visitors, a record. We have to give people new reasons to go to Disneyland.</p>
        <p>3. Feature movies. Three</p>
        <p>Jessl* Nobles Jr.. drunk, 30 days |all end roads, suspended on payment of $20 , deducted;</p>
        <p>Woodrow Gaskins, Negro, Rt. 1, Box i 196, Greenville, drunk, 30 days |ail and roaids suspended on payment of $,0 cost deducted;</p>
        <p>Robert Lee Jenkins, Negro, IbOl Pitt $t., speeding, pay $25 cost deductsd;</p>
        <p>George Arthur Yelverton, Negro, 1217 Clark St., fail to stop for stop light, prayer for ludgmcnt continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>William H. Roach, Negro, Rt. ?, Ay-den, drunk, called and failed to appear capias Issued;</p>
        <p>Lillian Langley Hooks, Negro, 1616 S. pm St., assault with deadly weapon, 6 months Woman's Prison, suspended on condition that she not possess any fire-1 arms for 2 years, remain of good behavior and obey all laws, pay $50 cost deducted;  i</p>
        <p>Judith Woolard Jenkins, 202 N. War-; ren St., fail to see safe move, prayer for i Judgment continued on payment of the I</p>
        <p>8:30 Red Skelton 9:30 Petticoat 10:00 CBS Hour 11:00 Fmal Report 11:30 Movie WEDNESDAY 6:30 Carolina 8:35 News 9:00 Kangaroo I 10:00 Can. Cam. 10:30 Hillbillies 11:00 Andy 11:30 Van Dyke 12:00 News 12:15 Farm News 12:25 Weather</p>
        <p>12:30 Search 12:45 Guiding Light 1:00 Love Life 1:25 Timely Tips 1:30 World Turna 2:00 Password 2:30 Housepartv 3:00 Tell Truth 3:25 News</p>
        <p>3:30 Edge of Night 4:00 Secret Storm 4:30 Cartoons 5:00 Sugarfoot 6:00 News 6:10 Sports 6:25 Weather 6:30 News 7:00 Art. Smith 7:30 Billy Graham 9:00 Green Acres 9:30 Gomer Pyle 10:00 Danny Kaye 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>Rov added that the Disney]and a design for the park. Con-organization would not lacK for j sultations have started with big projects, thanks to the foresight of Walt.</p>
        <p>He was the damndest planner I ever saw, said the older brother with unconcealed admiration. He loved planning things mat might be three, five, even ten years in the future.</p>
        <p>That w^s what was so unusual about the fellow: He could take care of matters at hand while</p>
        <p>ernor signed enabling legisla-  completed  this</p>
        <p>tion for creation of a 43-squarc- _____forr,niQr</p>
        <p>mile complex near Orlando to house an entertainment park, city of tomorrow, industrial park and airport of the future.</p>
        <p>Research on the first phase have beguna water control pan</p>
        <p>having someone else introduce the TV shows, said Roy. We felt there was no way to rep'., ce Walt, so the .show will use 10 different montages to express the spirit of Walt throi ;!! his films.</p>
        <p>5. Mineral King. The st'ite of Caliiornia has approvca bi! .&amp;gt; ing of a highway to the prog, d resort in the High Sie.ra, v ii completion expected in J  i-ary, 1973. The company hope.s to have resort ready for operation</p>
        <p>year, all bearing the familiar label Walt Disney Presents, since he prepared them. Future movies, the work of other film</p>
        <p>makers, will carrv such an im- Roy Disney likes to recall how print as A Walt Disney he and his brother started their Production   enterprise  44 years ago with</p>
        <p>This summer the company is $5M borrowed from an uncle,</p>
        <p>----------- -  releasing its first road-show at- And here we are Prepared to</p>
        <p>corporations which want to i traction, The Happiest Million- ope"&amp;lt;t  on  the ,^ori-</p>
        <p>share in the whole project.</p>
        <p>We hope to open the entertainment complex in January of 1971, said Disney. Well open up with a good show, but the park will continue to grow for five to seven years. We hope to have the city of tomorrow up and running by 1978.</p>
        <p>2. Disneyland will open a new</p>
        <p>aire," which it hof^s will have the impact of Mary Poppins. A total of 49 properties are in various stages of production.</p>
        <p>4. Television. The company has almost completed its 26 hour-long programs for the coming season, to feature a new sponsor. Gulf. The Sunday night show on NBC will continue to be</p>
        <p>da project! said Roy. Well, weve gone through many stages of growth with this company. The chips get bigger, thats all. Truthfully, theres less to worry about now, because everything is on t sounder basis.</p>
        <p>Now when Walt and I wert trying to sell Snow White...*</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>CO</p>
        <p>WNBE - Ch. 12</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>5:00 Bozo 5:30 Texan 6:00 Early Report 6:15 Weather 6:20 Sports 6:30 News 7:00 Hwy. Patrol 7:30 Combat 8:30 Invaders 9:30 Peyton PI. 10:00 Fugitive 11:00 News 11:10 Weather 11:15 Sports 11:30 Joey Bishop</p>
        <p>Game</p>
        <p>E. B. BRIGHT</p>
        <p>11:30 Family 12:00 Talking 12:30 D. Reed 1:00 Fugitive 2:00 Newlywed 2:30 Dream Girl 2:55 News 3:00 G. Hospital 3:30 Dk. Shadows 4:00 Dating 4:30 Popeve 5:00 Bozo 5:30 Texan 6:00 Early Report 6:15 Weather 6:20 Sports 6:30 Newt 7:00 Hwy. Patrol 7:30 Batman</p>
        <p>/ CM, TMAT5 JUer fiAEAT/ what A</p>
        <p>urik^ war-</p>
        <p>pgnARTMENT/</p>
        <p>: '</p>
        <p>.afe.-,.. ,.k.</p>
        <p>PFANinS</p>
        <p>This is a professional organ-</p>
        <p>**willie Barrett Jr., Negro 1023 Penn j ization for adult cdUCatOFS an'l j Ave., drunk, 30 days Jail and roads, su-, is affiliated With the National'</p>
        <p> .vmen, C 0 C,</p>
        <p>Educaaon. Memberddp, 7|u.N'?n.</p>
        <p>suspended on payment of the cost; jm thlS gTOUp IS Open tO adult'  = </p>
        <p>Guion Elvis Lee, New Bern, fall to com- oHiipatnr^ in thp C'nmmiinitv ply with Inspection law, called and failed 1 euUCaiOrS in me L,ommuniiy</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Ben Moore 8:00 Romper Room 1:00 Monroes 8:45 King &amp;amp; Odie 9:00 Movie 9:00 Early Show 10:30 Dateline 10:55 Doctor 11:00 Supermarket</p>
        <p>11:00 News 11:10 Weather 11:15 Sports 11:30 Joey Bishop</p>
        <p>WITN - Ch. 7</p>
        <p>Deal</p>
        <p>pay $20 cost deducted, remain of good behavior and obey all laws for 12 months;</p>
        <p>Jesse King, Negro, Rt. 4, Box 14, Greenville, assault with deadly weapon, called and failed to appear, capias It-</p>
        <p>*'^w!lle Jenkins, Negro, 111 Cross St., drunk, verdict not guilty;</p>
        <p>Joe Daniel Joyner, Negro, Rt. 1, Box S, Greenville improper exhaust, pay cost;</p>
        <p>David Burney, Negro, Rt. 1, Box 338, Ayden, tpeeding, prayer for Judgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Norman E. Tripp, Rt. 1, WintervlHe, Illegal parking, called and failed to appear, capias issued;</p>
        <p>Otis Morton Congleton, 1910 K. 10th St., fail to stop for stop light prayer for Judgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Sidney Marks Posay, *16 . Pine St. Improper exhaust, prayer for ontlnued to;</p>
        <p>Dennis K. Rockwell, Wilmington, Improper equipment, paid cost;</p>
        <p>Iwan Trochin, Shady Knoll Trailer 6ourt, careless and reckless driving, call-d and failed to appear, capias Issued;</p>
        <p>Jake Elks, N. Pitt St., drunk, 30 Cays tall and roads, suspended on condition that he pay $20 cost deducted placed on probation for 12 months under the supervision and control of the alcohol probation officer and that he cooperate fully with him, agree that the A.P.O. who hes upervislon may enter his residence or business at any time he sees fit without ttie necessity of procuring a legal writ also authority to make an arrest at any Arne;</p>
        <p>Wlllle Telfair Jr., Negro, Simpson, propping a load, verdict not guilty;</p>
        <p>Jennis Earl Taylor, Rt. X Box #reenville, drunk, 30 days Jail</p>
        <p>, College System, Public Schools, Vi:25^th</p>
        <p>9:00 Movies 11:00 News</p>
        <p>Other pcrsoHs employed in</p>
        <p>suspended on condition that he not to: adult edUCatiOD. have in his possession any firearms for ,</p>
        <p>leadership</p>
        <p>placed on probation for 5 years 'n addi-' Pitt Tech haS onC Of the largest</p>
        <p>tIon to regular terms of probation the npral nrJiilt prliiratinn special terms outlined above are to ap-1 general aauil euucaiion</p>
        <p>pro-;</p>
        <p>Weather 11:30 Tonight WEDNESDAY 6:00 Aspect 6:30 Country 7:00 Today 9:00 Mr. t.d 9:30 Girl Talk 10:00 Judgment</p>
        <p>how and when fine Is to be paid;</p>
        <p>Tom McLawhorn, Negro, Rt. 2, Winter-ville, drunk, 30 days Jail and roads, suspended on payment of $20 cost Deducted;</p>
        <p>Lillian Langley Hooks, 1610 S. Pitt St. keeping disorderly house, 6 months Woman's Prison susperxted on condition that she remain of good behavior and obey all laws, not to have In her possession any firearms for 5 years, pay $25 cost deducted, placed on probation for 5 years. Judgment In addition to regular terms of proba-</p>
        <p>piy, tf p.^0. o_f&amp;gt;8v^|urisd[ction as to grams in the State. Through his  J.-JJ  co^cen^r^L</p>
        <p>I.,.  efforts, over the past three  ,ii!oo  pat Boone</p>
        <p>years, Pitt Tech has served over  jj:J  SebS^</p>
        <p>15,000 persons in adult education  12! 15  chanie s ate</p>
        <p>12:25 WesthBr</p>
        <p>programs.  12;30  Eye Guess</p>
        <p>Bright, former principal of Grifton High School, has been with Pitt Technical Institute since November, 1964. He re-"'Sides in Grifton with his fami-</p>
        <p>Ella Harris Buck, Rt. 1, Box 134-E,  ]y^</p>
        <p>12:55 News 1:00 Jeopardy 1:30 Make A 1:55 News 2:00 Our Lives 2:30 The Doctors 3:00 Another WorW 3:30 Don't Say 4:00 Match Game 4:25 News 4:30 runny Page Music 5:30 Wells Fargo 6:00 News 6:15 Sports 6:25 Weather 6:30 Hunt.-Brink. 7:00 Fishing 7:30 The Virginian 9.00 Learning 10:00 I spy 11:00 News 11:15 Sports 11:25 Weather 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>Greenville, fall to comply with Inspection law, prayer for Judgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Jodie McKague Sawyer, 2501 E. Second i St., fail to see safe move nol prossed; | Joyce McCandle Gladson, Rt. 1, Box 406, Tarboro, fell to see safe move, pray-; er for judgment continued on payment i of the cost;  |</p>
        <p>Willie Gray Sutton, Greenville, drunk, | verdict not guilty;</p>
        <p>Clean-Up Held By 4-H Clubs</p>
        <p>Vending Machine Thefts Reported</p>
        <p>Greenville police are investi-1 Z gating a series of coin operated machine breakins discovered early Monday by police patrols.</p>
        <p>Chief H. F. Lawson said police found a coin operated machine</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>Kis, suspended on payment of $*8 cost uc</p>
        <p>,.x  Eastern  forced open at the Little Mint on</p>
        <p>Burlee Richardson, Negro, 1914 S. Pitt i Pines 4-H ClubS held 3 Clean Up tt c oca ohont  am then</p>
        <p>St., exceeding stated speed limit, F^ yer  the Eastem PineS' j-  j  *    u-</p>
        <p>tor Judgment continued on payment of program on liie ^dbiern x-iues  machine</p>
        <p>Community Bldg. grounds oni^pg^jg^j 3^ Mannings Drive-In</p>
        <p>on Memorial Drive at 3:35 a.m. Following the clean up, Mrs. a third machine was found brok-Doris Hardee honored members ]en into at the Little Mint on at a weiner roast assisted by; 14th St. at 3:34 a.m.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Gladys Hardee.  I  No estimate of the money</p>
        <p>A softball game was played taken was given. Investigation at the home of Sidney Hardee, of the case is continuing.</p>
        <p>the cost;</p>
        <p>Walter Hugh McGowan 403 E. Eighth .ga St., fail to comply with Inspection law,</p>
        <p>' prayer for Judgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>, .  Jake Elks, N. Pitt St., drunk, continu-</p>
        <p>td to;</p>
        <p>Lloyd Vernon Hardee, ova Cttv, speed- wilbur Ray Beachum, 1603 Crockett big and passing In no passing tone, pay Dr., fall to set safe move, verdict not IBS cost deducted;  I  guilty;</p>
        <p>Curtis Ray Green Negro, Rt. 1, Win- otis Rudell Sawyer, 410 W. Village Dr., lorvllle, no eporator's Iteense, called and exceeding safe speed, combined v; it h felled to appear, capias issued;  another case; damage to persinal pro-</p>
        <p>James Calvin Darden, Negro, 421 Bon-1 pertv; combined with another caje; op- i</p>
        <p>rs Lane, careless and reckless driving, j erating under the influence, 90 days j^il I operator's license, defendant present- and roads, suspended on condition ttiaf gd proof that he was under 16 years of ^ he pay $100 and cost make restitution cf age, transferred to Juvenile Court; property damages, not operate a motor James Roosevelt Smith, Negro, 1404 vehicle for 12 months, surrender driver's</p>
        <p>ilonial Ave., aiding and abetting to license.</p>
        <p>reless and reckless driving, nol pros |  _</p>
        <p>brith leave;</p>
        <p>William Matthews, Northslde Lumber Co. operating under the Influence, 90 fays Jail and roads, suspended on con-jition that he pay for Rescue Squad $10, i pay $100 and cost, not operate a motor &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Vehicle for 12 months, placed on probation tor 2 years under the supervision of the Alcoholic Porbatlon Officer and co-pperate folly with him, agree that the A.P.O. who has supervision may enter his residence or business at any time without the necessity of procuring any legal writ, and the authority ie arrest t any time;</p>
        <p>Jeremiah Little, Negro, Simpson, fail to give proper signal, prayer lor Ji'dg-rnent continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>James Edward White Jr., Vanceboro, tell to *n? safe move, prayer for Judg-menf continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Mary Moore, Negro 1911 Kennedy Circle, larceny, called and failed to appear, caoias Issued;</p>
        <p>Bennie Russell, Negro, Rt, 1, Box 123,</p>
        <p>Ayden, non support, 6 months jail and roads, suspended on condition that he pay into court before release $15 for children and a like amount each week thereafter; Burnis Lee Kornegay, Negro,</p>
        <p>Simpson, possession of non tax paid whiskey nol pressed; exceeding stated apeed limit, combined with above; care-</p>
        <p>Two Injured In Wreck Saturday</p>
        <p>Two persons were injured about 9:02 p,m. Saturday when two cars collided at the intersection of N.C. 11 and U.S. 264.</p>
        <p>Police identified the drivers involved as Lucille Burrough Wiggins, 2904 Jefferson Dr., and William Donald Beaman 18 of 2406 East Third St.</p>
        <p>Damage to the Wiggins auto was placed at $200 while damage to the Beaman car was set at $500.</p>
        <p>Beaman and a passenger in his auto were reported injured by police who charged Mrs.</p>
        <p>ACROSS 1. Inexpensiw 6. Ingenious</p>
        <p>10. Furrow</p>
        <p>11. Tawn/ quadrupeds</p>
        <p>13. Table scarf</p>
        <p>14. Size of type</p>
        <p>15. Poems</p>
        <p>16. Cereal grass</p>
        <p>18. Resino I i.s tree</p>
        <p>19. EsjxHise</p>
        <p>20l Secondary</p>
        <p>SL Pent, fairy</p>
        <p>22. You and 1</p>
        <p>23. Rabbit hntch</p>
        <p>25. Basic pattern</p>
        <p>29. Of me</p>
        <p>30. Redact</p>
        <p>31. Salamander</p>
        <p>33. Beverage</p>
        <p>36*. Honey</p>
        <p>37. Oahu token</p>
        <p>38. Nfisstep</p>
        <p>39. Consolidate</p>
        <p>41. Thick lubricant</p>
        <p>43. Kitchen gadget</p>
        <p>44. Lowly</p>
        <p>45. Scene of first mirado</p>
        <p>46. Taunt</p>
        <p>QDO</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>QBQ</p>
        <p>QQDanaa</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>eMmIi ItI</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>Y</p>
        <p>P</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>p</p>
        <p>B</p>
        <p>LAJ</p>
        <p>SOLUTION OF YISTiROAYS RUZILI</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Bnpoliflhed</p>
        <p>2. Shaqiened S. Periods oC</p>
        <p>time</p>
        <p>4. Salukatim</p>
        <p>5. Pear dder</p>
        <p>*educted -I  Wiggins  With failing  to  see  her</p>
        <p>'wmaM  Harrell Needham,  Rocky I  intended  movement  could  be</p>
        <p>Mount, speeding, prayer  for Judgment |  rnaHp in  Safptv</p>
        <p>continued on payment of the cost;  i  saieiy.</p>
        <p>Edward  Earl Carmon,  Negro,  Ayden,</p>
        <p>tpeeding, prayer tor judgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Bobby Jackson Kelly, Kinston, speed-Mg, prayer for judgment continued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Frank Parker, Greenville drunk, callad and failed to appear, capias Issued;</p>
        <p>Hardy Little Jr., Negro, Rt. 3, Wnter-vllle, drunk, 30 days jail and roads, lu-apended on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Doris Bernice Bryan, Rt. 2, Box 46,</p>
        <p>Farmvllle, speeding, prayer for judg-Oontlnued on payment of the cost;</p>
        <p>Marvin Ralph Boyd Nagro, 911 Imperial St., improper exhaust, pay cost;</p>
        <p>Frank Joseph Anderson Jr., Negro, timpson, careless and reckless driving, pay $25 cost deducted;</p>
        <p>Robert Joseph Williams, Negro, Rt 3,</p>
        <p>Bathel, Improper equipment, pay cost;</p>
        <p>De^rah E. Edwards, 417 Pittman Dr., fan  for  stop  sign,  verdict  not  gull-</p>
        <p>*^Anna W. White, Negro, 1117 W F,fth ft., fell to yield, prayer for ludgment aontinuad  paymant of tb* cost#</p>
        <p>One Of Thirteen Honor Grads</p>
        <p>AYDENA former Ayden resident, Mrs. Laura Worthington Holly, was one of 13 cum laude! graduates of Meredith College. |</p>
        <p>Mrs. Holly is the daughter of Mrs. Mildred Porter Worthington of Ayden and the late Mr. R. H. Worthin^on.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Holly is now teaching advanced students in math at the I^Roy Junior High School in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>z</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>T-</p>
        <p>r"</p>
        <p>r"</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>iZ</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>lb</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>XI</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>2$</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>2B</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>d</p>
        <p>3.</p>
        <p>Jv</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>3S</p>
        <p>sL</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>3&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>4Z</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>4b</p>
        <p>Par tima 26 min. AP Nawi^ofuroc</p>
        <p>6, 20</p>
        <p>6. Wiage</p>
        <p>7. Cigaotio</p>
        <p>8. Shoe</p>
        <p>9. Con^ilelb</p>
        <p>10. Flouriah</p>
        <p>12. Eor.finch</p>
        <p>17. Evcrgreok</p>
        <p>tree</p>
        <p>20. Petitioa</p>
        <p>21. Fetret</p>
        <p>22. Wag</p>
        <p>24. Norse county</p>
        <p>25. Object</p>
        <p>26. Blissful</p>
        <p>27. Powdered quartz</p>
        <p>28. Bom</p>
        <p>32. Skimiish</p>
        <p>33. Spirited horses</p>
        <p>S4. Cotton thread</p>
        <p>35. Fencing-sfeard</p>
        <p>37. Glockenspiel</p>
        <p>38. Musical theme</p>
        <p>40. N1ora.ss</p>
        <p>42. bittorherb</p>
        <p>ANP Af^ VtAEf^fOFB f2E6WAKTur</p>
        <p>IM TA^TEf.</p>
        <p>.SfeTffecPLE WMOJ^APSlaa AMP Wink wetare nue.</p>
        <p>MJsrsdnecfiWsfhsmi</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0009" />
        <p>i25NrJH, mmny Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesdey, June 20, 1967#</p>
        <p>The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Somebody Must See Normal Rules Heeded</p>
        <p>Doris needs to grow up and imitate the usual physician. For doctors always Itave word as to where they are going and how they can be reached. That is a sign of maturity so you lyjh schoolers should, follow the same rule. And your parents will not be so bossy if youll act like adults!  ;</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph. D., M. D.</p>
        <p>CASE C-568: Doris D., aged 17, is the immature high schooler.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Dr. Crane. she began, an-: grily, my parents are too bos-' sy.  '</p>
        <p>They try to run my life .for me and are always telling me what to do.</p>
        <p>So I am getting tired of it. If they don't treat me like an adult, I think I'll run away from home.</p>
        <p>Being bossy often indicates a wider understanding of pro-lems.</p>
        <p>For a boss is taking the adult viewpoint, while the child or U'Ual worker is still relatively irresponsible.</p>
        <p>The reason Doris require.-^ bo.ssy parents is the fact that Doris still acts like a toddler.</p>
        <p>So somebody simply must see that the rules of normal family life are carried out.</p>
        <p>Doris fails to do her school homework part of the time.</p>
        <p>If her dad didn't turn out his quota of work daily at the factory, he'd be fired!</p>
        <p>Doris oversleeps and depends on mamma to w'aken her.</p>
        <p>.\dults waken themselves or U-e their own alarm clock.</p>
        <p>Doris stains her fingernails a buzht red because she thinks that makes her an adult. The same goes for her use of cigarettes.</p>
        <p>But she reneges at home on the many little chores whi&amp;lt;-h e\ery mature teen - ager ,'s simosed to perform.</p>
        <p>She barely gets up in time to rntch the school bus. That means she leaves her bed unmade and her room a mess.</p>
        <p>She doesnt even think to wipe the flecks of toothpaste off the bathroom mirror.</p>
        <p>Check Theft At Radio Station</p>
        <p>An $11 check was reported stolen from the f)fficcs of WP.XY radio station on Fifth Street at Five Points Sunday night.</p>
        <p>Violators removed putty from R window, then removed the glass to gain entrance to the building, Chief H. F. Lawson said.</p>
        <p>A filing cabinet was then forced open and a money bo.x containing an $11 check was taken, as well as a small amount of change.</p>
        <p>Investigation of the incident Is continuing.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET - 1966 Impala, 4 dr. hdtp., radio and heater, auto, trans., factory air cond., local owner, $2595. Phelps Chevrolet. 756-2150.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET - 1962 Impala 4 door hardtop. Power steering and brakes, V-8, real nice car. $1095. P &amp;amp; D Motors, PL 8-4408.</p>
        <p>And her washcloth may be draped over the side of the wash basin and her wet bath towel over a chair in her bedroom.</p>
        <p>Sometimes she has girl friends over for a party and wants to bake a cake.</p>
        <p>She then proudly boasts of her cake, yet mamma had to scurry around to procure all the ingredients and then clean up the mess of pots and pans Doris left in the kitchen.</p>
        <p>Girls, in the normal household, you are supposed to finish your job with a flourish.</p>
        <p>Baking a cake or spreading the icing thereon, is just the showoff or cheesecake phase of kitchen duty!</p>
        <p>Those dishe.s and dirty pans are still part of the job! Gei hep!</p>
        <p>Doris forgets to tell her mother where she is going and doesn't phone when she is late, thus keeping her parents worried far into the night.</p>
        <p>Why should you worry. she retorts with juvenile ignorance, for I can take care of myself?</p>
        <p>Thats malarky!</p>
        <p>Doris can't even take care of herself while at home and under the eagle eyes of her parents.</p>
        <p>In this day of zooming delinquency and rape murders, anything can happen, .so you teenagers should grow up and keep your parents alerted.</p>
        <p>A doctor always leaves word where is he going and how he can be eached by phone. That's the normal adult attitude.</p>
        <p>Parents, send for my Behavior Test for Teen - .Agers. en-cl(i.'-:ing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents and rate your children thereon.</p>
        <p>High school teacher.', use it in class to help your students mature!</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET - 1966 SS conver-l tibie. Mist blue. W'hite top, 327; engine, automatic in floor, power | steering, low' mileage. 1 owner. i extra clean. Call 756-0543 after j 6 p. m.  1</p>
        <p>CORVETTE  1966, two tops, radio, heater, 4 .speed trans., 3.50 engine, 17,000 actual miles. 1 local owmer. $3695. Phelps Chevrolet. 7.56-2150.</p>
        <p>FORD  1965 Custom, 8 cylinder, standard trans., radio, heater, original white finish. Only $1295. F &amp;amp; D Motors, PL 8-4408.</p>
        <p>JEEP  In excellent condition. 4 wheel drive, new tires. Call Kinston .527-56.57.</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN  Only 2 sold in 1949  428,000 in 1966. Are you one of the.se? If not. see Joe Pechles Motors.</p>
        <p>REPRESENTATIVE  FOR</p>
        <p>Snap-On Tools Corp. in Greenville, Wilson and adjacent areas. Supervised training with income guaranteed to qualified person. Write for personal inteiwiew, giving address and phone number to I Snap-On Tools Corp., P. O. Box 15216, Charlotte, N. C. ATTN: A., W. Spencer.  </p>
        <p>wantedI warehouseman.</p>
        <p>Middle aged man seeking employment w'ith a growing firm. Apply in person to A.B. Whitley, | Inc. 311 Boyd Ave.</p>
        <p>WANTED: Y0UNG'~MAN FOR mens and shoe dept, in local dept, .store. Experience preferred,,' but not nece.ssary. Will traih. Full' time. Write to Dept. Store , | Box 408, Greenville.</p>
        <p>SAVE UP TO $10 ON PURCHASE of two All.state XSS 4-ply tires. No money dowm, up to 18 months to pay. Call or visit Sears, Greenville. 7.56-2111.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sal#</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>SEWING MACHINE DIAL-A-MA-tic twin needle zig zag in beautiful modem cabinet just like new. Buttonholes, dams, fancy stitches, etc. without attachments. Wanted .someone in this area with good credit to finish payments $11.15 monthly or pay complete balance of $41.17. Can be seen and tried out locally. Write Nationals Credit Manager, Mr. Beane, Box 280, Asheboro, N. C.</p>
        <p>196.5 TAYLOR IMPERIAL MO-bile home 12 by 60. Equipped with patio cover. 3 bdrms., 14 baths. $600 down and take up pa&amp;gt;TTient.s. Can be seen at Lot 137, Shady Knoll Trailer Park.</p>
        <p>i%5 COBURnTo BY 52 2 BDRM. Hotpoint appliances. $3000. Also trailer .space for rent. Private lot, $20 per mo. Phone PL 8-4556 after 5:.30 p. m.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>FURN. APT. FOR COUPLE near college and bu.siness. Mrs. D. M. Clark. 409 Holly St.</p>
        <p>]~BDRM. FURNISHED EFFICI-ency apt. available immediately. Wilco ApUs., 402 Holly St. Phone PL 6-3415.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>FURNISHED HOUSE FOR .summer. Call 7.52-2862.</p>
        <p>7 ROOM H0USE~CENTRALLY</p>
        <p>heated and air conditioned. May be .seen at 203 Nash St_</p>
        <p>Resort For Rent</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH COTTAGfl THE CARRIAGE HOUSE ! near PavUlion. Call Van D. Hatcb</p>
        <p>collect 527-3110, Kinston, N.C</p>
        <p>MONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVICE</p>
        <p>Penn. Ave.</p>
        <p>WILSON</p>
        <p>RHODES</p>
        <p>Metrical Contractar</p>
        <p>752-4365</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN   1966  fully</p>
        <p>equipped, 1 owner. Call 752-7469 after 6 p. m.</p>
        <p>YOUR SATISFACTION HAS built our busine.ss. Large selection of new' and used cars. Wagner-Waldrop Motor.s, PL 2-4-52.5.</p>
        <p>WE BUY, SELL AND~ TRADE u.sed cars and trucks. Harrington and White. 752-27.30 or PL 6-3123.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONING AND HEAT-ing. Complete installation, sales, service. Lennox and Chrysler Air-temi&amp;gt;the best in comfort equipment. Financing available. No down payment. Free estimates. General Heating, Inc., PL 2-4187.</p>
        <p>Household Furnishings</p>
        <p>.36" WHITE KENMORE ELEC-tnc range. Excellent condition. $6,5. Call 7.58-2947.</p>
        <p>3 PIECE ^ET OF BABY FURNI-ture and triple dresser and chest of draw'ers. May be seen at 203 Nash St.</p>
        <p>CLEAN RUGS LIKE~NEW, SO easy to do w'ith Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Waters Carpet Center.</p>
        <p>FOR THE FINEST Di^^ARPET . . . Waters Carpet Center, your only exclusive Mohawk Carpet center in Pitt County, WintervlUe, N.C.</p>
        <p>FHA &amp;amp; VA MORE AVAILABLE NOW</p>
        <p>HOME LOANS Mortgage Loan Department</p>
        <p>WACHOVIA BANK</p>
        <p>AM) TRUST CO. PLAZA 8-2151</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>2 bedrooms  Kingsberry Homes Town House, 14 baths, built-in Hotpoint Kitchens, central air condition, fully carpeted, 10 x 10 concrete patio with redwood fence, swimming pool. Dial 756-34.50 or see resident manager. New Bern Highway.</p>
        <p>2 COTTAGES - ATLANTIC Beach, $75 weekly. Pungo River, $3.5 weekly. Jacksons Upholstery, Oreenvllle. Day 758-3276, nigM 7.58-1505.</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>REDWOOD APTS. 802 EAST 3RD</p>
        <p>St. Completely furn. 1 bdrm apt. Call day 752-6137. night 758-2386.</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS IN</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>CALL OR SEE</p>
        <p>E. H. Williford</p>
        <p>List Your Proptrty With Ut 105 E. 2nd St. PL -3011. Niaht PL 2-4400</p>
        <p>RIVERFRONT APTS. ONE 3 room apt., completely furnished. Call PL 8-2773 or PL 2-5807.</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONED ROOMS FOR rent for working men. Availabl immediately. Call PL 2-5430.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOTICES</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>SUNSHINE CLEANERS</p>
        <p>West End Shopping Center Quality First</p>
        <p>^ Free Mothproofing Free Storage 1Hour Cleaning 3Hour Shirt Service</p>
        <p>fTsHING AROUND FOR THE best repair service, H &amp;amp; M Radio-TV Shop offers it. 917 Dickinson, free parking, PL 8-2436.</p>
        <p>PACER CAMPING TRAILER. Completely self-contained. Call Thomas Butts. 7,52-7073.</p>
        <p>PITT CAMPING CENTER, INC.</p>
        <p>423 GREENVILLE BLVD. (UNITED RENT-ALL)</p>
        <p>BY OWNER:  4 BDRMS., 2</p>
        <p>baths, brick. 406 Rotary Ave. near college. Call PL2-3320.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER: 3 BDRMS., BRICK veneer, built-in kitchen, large family room with fireplace and screened in back porch., 2 baths. Call 756-2517.</p>
        <p>PARKVIEW MANOR</p>
        <p>1 and 2 bedroom furnished apts. Features: carpet, air conditioning, walk-in closets, laundry rooms, swimming pool. Cali M.E. Sutton or C.L. Thigpen. 752-6122.</p>
        <p>BE GENTLE. BE KIND TO THB expensive carpet: clean it with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shaBh pooer $1, Belk-Tyler's.</p>
        <p>1 BDRM. DOWNSTAIRS UNP.</p>
        <p>apt. clo.se to college and business. Private front porch, carport. Venetian blinds, hardwood floors, tile bath with shower. Call 752-4359 after 5:.30 p. m.</p>
        <p>Third In New Car Sales, Now In Seventh Straight Year! Discover The Many Reasons Why. Call Billy Brown, Dick Greene, Jimmy Pace. Robert Tugwell, Or Jimmy Robards.</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD INC.</p>
        <p>PL 2-7111</p>
        <p>1205 DICKINSON</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 whpn you .5end for one of his booklet.s.)</p>
        <p>DODGE</p>
        <p>(ARS &amp;amp; TRUCKS Sales &amp;amp; Service We Have A Good Selection</p>
        <p>ROUSE DODGE, INC.</p>
        <p>Dealer No. 4981 Goldsboro Hwy.  Kinston, N. C. Tel. .527-4121</p>
        <p>PUBLIC SECRETARIAL SERVICES</p>
        <p>Typing of all kinds for professionals or general public. Phone Dictation. Mailed Directly. Also photostat available.</p>
        <p>205 Boyd Fre Parking 7,52-2019</p>
        <p>GROUND SNAP CORN, MIXED,</p>
        <p>to your specifications, $47.00 a ton. Ayden Mobile Milling, 756-2016</p>
        <p>.304 LINDELL DR.. BRICK, 3 BR. LR. DR. bath, drive-in garage, enclo.scd breezeway. Bill Williams Real E.state. 7,52-2615.</p>
        <p>forSALE BY BUILDER: 2611 Calvin Way, 3 bdnns. dining room, very roomy. Call David Evans Jr., 752-2106, nights 752-4224.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER :  " BDRM., CEN-</p>
        <p>trally heated house in Bethel. Call 82.5-7.521,</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>208 S. ELM St.</p>
        <p>Offers you air condition, com-; fortable, modern, convenient liv-j ing at reasonable prices. Few; furnished 1 bedroom units avail-1 able now and In fall. Couples,  mature adults call PL 2-3376,  Manager, for appointment. |</p>
        <p>NOW RESERVING  60 FUR- i nished air conditioned houses, apts. and mobile homes for summer and fall occupancy for couples or student groups. Phone 7.56-3515.</p>
        <p>FUNDS AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>for first and second mortgagf loans on commereial, faidustiiali income producing property. $25,* 000 to $10,000.000. Residential (FHA-VA-Convennonal). Also fl* nancing lur accounts recehrabla Inventory, work in process, tilllt deposits, etc.</p>
        <p>F. B. CAMPBELL P.O. Box 833, Sanford, N.C. Phone 776-5513</p>
        <p>Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>DIAL PL 2-6166</p>
        <p>Place Your Daily R-for Classified Ad. Infer 7 Days, The Coat ,ess.</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>3 Line Minimuna ay_30c Per Line Per Day ays27c Per Line Per Day ays25c Per Line Per Day lontract Kates Available</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>S1.50 Per Column Inch :ontract Rates Available</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>lew ads, kills or corrections epted after 12:00 p.m. the before publication, except day and Monday editions, day deadline is 12 noon lay and Monday deadline Yiday 4 p. m.</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>ors must be reported hn-liately. The Daily Reflector not make allowancei lor &amp;gt;rs after 1st daj</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>INVITATION TO BID</p>
        <p>Pursuant to fhp Gnnnral Statutes of tJcrtn Carolina, Section H3-129, sealed proposals iMil be received by the Pitt County - City of Greenville Airport Commission until 8.00 pm. Thursday, June 29,  1967, by thp Airport Commission at</p>
        <p>its regular meeting in the Office of the Commission at the airport tor the purchase of the following</p>
        <p>One (i; Rubber - Tired Tractor for 90" Rotary Mower One (1; 90" Rotary Cutter /'/ower Specifications follow and on file at the Airport officn, Greenville, North Carolina. (James Darden, Manager - Phone 758-4587) Copies can be obtained on request.</p>
        <p>Specifications for four (4', Wheel Rubber - Tired Tractor for Rotary Cutter Mower</p>
        <p>Enqine-diesel or gasoline, 3 cylinder-minimum Drawbar horsppower-32 or over Power take-off-flf 540 RPM, 32 HP-min-imum</p>
        <p>Transmis|ion-6 speeds forward Clutch-heavy duty, two stage Live hydraulic system with 2 spools, control valve tor cutter mounting Wheel tread adjustment-40" to 72", minimum front &amp;amp; rear Rear lirer.-calctum chloride tested 6 ply 12 X 28 Headlights and tail lights with reflectors Seat belts</p>
        <p>Overall weiqht-5,800 pounds, including liquid ballast Standard 3 point hifch with heavy duty stabilizer</p>
        <p>Heavy duty air cleaner Muffler over hood Hour meter Fuel tank guage</p>
        <p>Specifications for 90" Rotary Cutler Mower 90" Cutter Belt driven spindle PTO drive</p>
        <p>Three (3) cutter blades Tongue hitch</p>
        <p>Safely chain shields on front or equivalent</p>
        <p>Rubber tires wheels, 15"</p>
        <p>Suction-type cutter blade Heavy - duty main frame Cutting heiqht, 1" to 14"</p>
        <p>Screw adjustment to control height No proposal will be considered unless it is accompanied by a Bid Bond, a cash desposit, or certified check on some bank or trust company insured by the Federal Depository Insurance Corporation and in the amount of not less than five percent (5 percent) of the proposal.</p>
        <p>Proposals should be quoted F. 0. B. Greenville, North Carolina and exclude Stale Sales Tax a"hd Federal Excise Tax. No equipment is to be traded.</p>
        <p>The Pitt County - City of Greenville Airport Commission reserves the right to reject any and all proposals.</p>
        <p>CITY-COUNTY AIRPORT COMMISSION John L. Howard Chairman June 20, 22, 1967</p>
        <p>395 .SFPER HAWK  1966. For .sale by owner. Very good condition. low mileage. If interested, call 7.58-3(147 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>HONDA 160  1966. Scrambler handlebar.s. 6.50 actual mile.s. Excellent condition. Call 752-.5328.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>SIDING</p>
        <p>Vinyl</p>
        <p>Aluminum  Asbestos</p>
        <p>GOODSON</p>
        <p>ROOFING SERVICE</p>
        <p>752-2142</p>
        <p>GOODBYE TO HEAT, DUST, Street noises with York air conditioning installed by Coastal Refrigeration. PL 6-2104.</p>
        <p>GOOD NEWS! STILL GREAT, Expert service at Carr Allens Texaco 'next door to old post office. PL 2-48.38.</p>
        <p>CAMPING TRAILERS SALES &amp;amp; SERVICE</p>
        <p>WEEKLY RENTALS $35 UP</p>
        <p>Phone 756-3862</p>
        <p>102 N. HARDING ST. OPEN FOR inspection daily until .sold. Fallow-field Realty. 7.58-4202.</p>
        <p>701 E. 3RD ST., 4 BR. LR. DR. 2 baths, screened porches, garage FHA financing available. 752-3760.</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD GOODS</p>
        <p>FORD  1959 pick up. New motor, paint, and tires. Call 7.58-4691 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>BOATS EQUIPMENT "</p>
        <p>16 FIBERGLASS BOAT, TRAIL-er. and 40 HP McCullen motor. Call 752-27.3.3,</p>
        <p>16 BOAT AND TRAILER FOR sale. Price $175. Call 7.58-2773.</p>
        <p>1965 15 GLASSMASTER BOAT, 65 HP Mercury motor, extr a large Fleet Captain trailer plus extras. Never been in salt water, less than 20 hr.'^. on motor. Exceptional buy. Call 7.52-7469 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>DOGS &amp;amp; PETS</p>
        <p>RED IRISH SETTER AT STUD. Cha -ipionship stock. F. D S. B. Registered. Call 7.52-3692</p>
        <p>FREE LONG-HAIRED KIT-tens. Call PL 8-4983.</p>
        <p>INSTANT COPY SERVICE</p>
        <p>Personalized Letters. Data processing, mass mailing</p>
        <p>STEVE VAN EVERY &amp;amp; ASSO.</p>
        <p>115 West Fourth Street 752-5135  7.52-4180</p>
        <p>GERTS A GAY GIRL  READY for a whirl after cleaning carpets W'ith Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Mary Carters.</p>
        <p>STINGER TWIN NEEDLE DIAL Stitch Zig Zag sewing machine in cabinet. Embro., button holes, etc. All w'ithout attachments. Someone in this area with good credit to assume five $10.12 per month payments. Can be tried out locally. Write District Office, P. O. Box 882, Dunn. N. C. 28.3,34.</p>
        <p>. 5 ROOM FRAME HOUSE IN colored .section on McKinley St. $4,000. Contact Jimmy Lee. H. A. White &amp;amp; Sons, PL 8-2149 or nights PL 2-7444.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER:nEW 4 bdrm. air conditioned house od | wooQta lOt in Stratford. Phone</p>
        <p>7.56-0741 or 756-2458.</p>
        <p>YOUNG ADULT NIGHT</p>
        <p>Live music and dancing ente^ tainment and all the bowling ani dancing you can do from 8:d p.m. to 12 p.m. at Hillcrest Lanett Admission $1.0(1. .Starts Tuesday June 20th. No one over 18 yearf old permitted to participate. N# alcoholic beverages on the preni* ises.</p>
        <p>TO BUY PROPERTY check tb real eskate marketplace, Clasrt-ned Ads.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>REASONABLE RENT AND SAT-i.sfied customers keep us in business. Grier Rental Agency, 'clo.sed all day Wed.) 752-.5700.</p>
        <p>WE RENT MOST EVERYTHING FOR YOUR DAILY NEEDS</p>
        <p>CONVALESCENT NEEDS ^</p>
        <p>VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>800 HEATH</p>
        <p>752-5100</p>
        <p>NFURN. APT: LIVINcTrOO^, dining room. 2 bdrm., kitchen, bath. Near College. Call days 752-2114 or after 5 p. m. 7.52-2040.</p>
        <p>GREENSPRINGS APART.MENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom Town House apartments. Furnished and unfurnished. Features: carpet, air conditioning and walk-in closets. Call M. E. Sutton or C. L. Thigpen.</p>
        <p>7.52-6121.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>GOOD USED CUCUMBER PIdC er or tobacco harvester. Will pay rea.sonable price. Contact Ray Stancill on Belvoir Rd. or call 7.52-6245.</p>
        <p>^Al'iT A MOTORCYCLE? Check the money-saving ofierf in todays Classified Ads-</p>
        <p>I ClXsSIHEDlDrSPLAY</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>TRAILER? THATS SOMETHING you haul in. Mobile home? Thats .something you live in . . . come w'here the living is . . . Circle M Homes, Inc. Ea.st 10th St., Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>^ BEDROOM HOUSE TRAILER for rent. Call 7.52-4993.</p>
        <p>Commodes Vaporizers Hospital Beds</p>
        <p>GET A JOB with work wanted* ads in Classified-_</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>UNITED RENT ALL</p>
        <p>OPEN 8 A.M - 8 PM 423 Greenville Blvd. 7.56-3862</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>HAWK TOBACCO LOOPER. u.sed one year. Reason for selling; owner stopped fanning. Call 746-6507 days or 746-3667 nights.</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, silver. Call 7.58-9.548 or see at 111 N. Woodlawn.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Female Help Wanted</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED WAITRESS FOR | weekends. Excellent salary. Willi consider middleaged lady without I experience. Apply at Carolina Grill.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Automotive Loans</p>
        <p>GET YOUR NEW CAR FOR ihat summer vacation. See Ak lantic Discount for fast, friendly service. 7.52-4112.</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>BARRACUDA - 1!)6.5, automatic, power brakes. 27.3 high perfor-I manco engine, 24.(X)0 miles, $1395. Call Bill Tingcn. 758-1809.</p>
        <p>' BUICK  1963 four dr. sedan. Light blue and white, real clean. $1.395. B. T, Rowe Chevrolet, 746-.3141.</p>
        <p>niFVELLE - 196.5 Malibu SS. Daytona blue. Bucket .sc'ats, 4  ! .speed. :?()0 H. P. 24.000 miles Ex-I ccllenl shape. Call PL 2-46.56.</p>
        <p>MAIDS NEEDED NOW! LIVE-' in jobs in New York. New Jersey Mass., Norfolk. One ,t $65 wk., if you are ready to leave now, call collect to Mrs. Anderson, Portsmouth, Va., 399-4031 or write now to me at Anderson Employment Agency. 469 Green St., PorLsmouth, Va. I will come for you.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. Morning and evening shifts available. Apply in person Holiday Inn.</p>
        <p>MAID^ TO CLEAN. COOK. AND ; care for small child. Must have own transportation. Call 752-4,348.</p>
        <p>STUDENT NURSES WANTED ' 3 yr. diploma R. N. Program. Good location, moderate cost. Apply immediately for September enrollment. Write Director, Hamlet Hospital School of Nursing. ^ Hamlet, N.C. for additional information.  j</p>
        <p>WANT PART-TIME SUMMER OR year round work? Call 7.58.324.5 Monday. Tue.sday and Wedne.sday nights from 8 to 11 p.m.</p>
        <p>YOUVE TRIED THE REST, now buy the best. Ask for Ab-bitts Corn Meal, available at your local grocers.</p>
        <p>TAKE AWAY SOIL THE BLUE Lu.stre way from carpets and upholstery. Rent electric shampooer $1. Gliddens.</p>
        <p>AT FLEMING ST. SCHOOl: ALL kinds of good used lumber. 2 x 12, 2 X 8. 2 X 6, 2 X 10. 25 longs, also u.sed bricks. J. H. Foitson Wrecking Co.. Wilson.  I</p>
        <p>AWN BOY MOWERS</p>
        <p>1 Y'ear Warranty See Our Riders And Save i Lawnmower Repair</p>
        <p>R.F. McLawhon &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>We Service What We Sell j N. Greene St.  PL  2-3281</p>
        <p>12 WIDE MOBILE HOME FOR rent. Lawsons Trailer Park, 756-2909.</p>
        <p>2  &amp;amp;  3  BEDROOM  MOBILE</p>
        <p>homes. Good location. Also lot spaces for rent, PL 2-3286.</p>
        <p>DEALING IN SERVICES? Classified Ads get you new bu-</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FURNITURE</p>
        <p>You Need It?</p>
        <p>We Have It!</p>
        <p>Trade With Ken The Po Mans Fren</p>
        <p>KENS FURNITURE STORE</p>
        <p>Open Wednesday Afternoon 90.5 Dickinson  752-5683</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Clean Cotton Rags Free Of Buttons</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITION</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>Add cooling to you*- existing warm air system. Be comfortable this summer. Prompt service, terms available.</p>
        <p>POLLARD'S</p>
        <p>Plumbing, Htg. Jk Air Conditioning Ce.</p>
        <p>209 E. Third St.</p>
        <p>Phone PL 2-7232 er PL 2-4633</p>
        <p>LIVE AT PINEVIEW COURT just five minutes from downtown, Port Terminal Rd., turn left Cliffs Oyster Bar, 264 East of Greenville. Large shaded lots, patio, play area, picnic tables. 10 and 12 wldes for rent. 758-3644.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR FOR RENT See our new 10 wide, 2 bedroom mobile homes for $3,295.  $295</p>
        <p>uown and $.54 per month.</p>
        <p>AZALEA MOBII.E HOMES Phone 758 4174 3012 East 10th Street</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>GOOD USED TIRES, $3.95 UP.i Also factory method recapping at Pitt Tire Service, 2205 Dickinson,</p>
        <p>7.52-3645.  '</p>
        <p>HARDWARE - ROOFING STORM WINDOWS &amp;amp; DOORS  AWNINGS</p>
        <p>C. L. LUPTON ca</p>
        <p>752-611</p>
        <p>PREPARE FOR HOT WEATHER, select Westinghouse room air con-di.ioncr to fit your requirements. Smith Electric Co. 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>OASSRD DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Available June 1 BUILDING</p>
        <p>in fast growing area  former location of Dodgetown on Memorial Dr. Suitable for many business uses. Call PL 8-1189 or PL -2557 days; PL 2-4382 nights.</p>
        <p>Male Help Wanted</p>
        <p>WANTED: WELDERS &amp;amp; STEEL workers. Good working conditions. Call 7.5,3-31.52.</p>
        <p>SHEETROCK HANGER AND finisher wanted. Perfer experience but not neces.sary if willing to learn. Call 756-00.5,3 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>REAL BARGaiNo er'</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; or you In the Claasifieu</p>
        <p>n NEW APTS.</p>
        <p>For Rent</p>
        <p>TO COLLEGE STUDENTS</p>
        <p>REASONABLE</p>
        <p>RENT</p>
        <p>FOR INFORMATION CALI</p>
        <p>752-2405</p>
        <p>STRATFORD</p>
        <p>ARMS</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1900 S. Charles St.</p>
        <p>1 and 2 bedroom apartments from. $100.00. (Includes heat, hot water and cooking.)</p>
        <p> Swimming Pool</p>
        <p># Central Air Conditioning</p>
        <p> Wail to wall carpet</p>
        <p> Fully equipped Hotpoint Kitchens</p>
        <p># Dishwasher (optional)</p>
        <p># Furnished Apartments Available</p>
        <p>Call 752-5721</p>
        <p>Ed Hedgepeth Resident Manager Apartment 8-A</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED</p>
        <p>WRITE ONE WORD IN EACH SPACE</p>
        <p>ORDER</p>
        <p>BLANK</p>
        <p>YOUR COST</p>
        <p>3 LINES</p>
        <p>3 DAYS $2.70 S DAYS $4.05 7 DAYS $5.25</p>
        <p>4 LINES</p>
        <p>3 DAYS $3.60 5 DAYS $5.40 7 DAYS $7.00</p>
        <p>5 LINES</p>
        <p>3 mys $4.50 5 DAYS $6.75 7 DAYS $8.75</p>
        <p>6 LINES</p>
        <p>INCLUDE AS MUCH OF YOUR ADDRESS AS YOU WISH TO APPEAR IN THE AD.</p>
        <p>START MY AD (date)</p>
        <p>TO RUN FOR (number of days) CLASSIFICATION REQUESTED .</p>
        <p> CASH WITH ORDER</p>
        <p>NAME  ..............</p>
        <p>STREET/ROUTE ...........</p>
        <p>CITY ..................</p>
        <p>MAIL TO:</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING</p>
        <p>P.O. BOX 408 GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p> BILL LATER</p>
        <p>PHONE</p>
        <p>3 DAYS $5.40 5 DAYS $8.10 7 DAYS $10.50</p>
        <p>7 LINES</p>
        <p>3 DAYS $6.30 5 DAYS $9.45 7 DAYS $12.25</p>
        <p>The Above Transient Rates If Paid Within 7 Days Of Insertion Decrease 10%.</p>
        <pb facs="00088454_0010" />
        <p>10Til Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. Tuesday, June 20, 1967</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Would Relax Penalty For Allowing Insurance Expire</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Nortti Carolina hog market steady, tops 22-22.50 Rocky Mount; 21.50-22, Statesville; 21.25-21.75, Bethel; 21-21.50, Hickory; 22, Salisbury; Greensboro; 21, Siler City I&amp;gt;enton.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - (NCDA)-North Carolina egg markets steady to slightly stronger. Supplies adequate. Demand fair. i FYices paid producers and hand-' lers for clean consumer grade eggs in cartons delivered to nearby outlets:  </p>
        <p>Grade A large whites: 35to' 36; medium whites; 26 to 28; small whites: 21 to 22.</p>
        <p>losses were taken by many other rails.</p>
        <p>Martin Marietta continued a vigorous rise and added more than a point as it paced the list on volume.</p>
        <p>Raytheon gained 2 as did Control Data.</p>
        <p>Child Injured In Trallic Mishap</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE-A 13-month-old child was injured in a two-car __accident on East Church Street</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (A)-The  stock  ^Xoto Police Chief Gra-</p>
        <p>market gathered a little more  3</p>
        <p>strength early this afternoon, ,,.35 injured when the ear in with gains outnumbering losses  was  riding  was  hit</p>
        <p>by a ratio of about 3-to-2. Trad-  behind bv a car driven by</p>
        <p>mg was active on the New York  jr^rl  Dupree of Route 2,</p>
        <p>Stock Exchange.  Farmville. The cliilds mother,</p>
        <p>On the American Stock E.\- Mrs. Virginia C. Everett, was change, however, trading was the driver of the car which was so heavy that the ticker tape hit.</p>
        <p>lagged 20 minutes behind trans- Taken to Pitt Memorial Hos-actions at noon.  pital. the child reportedly has</p>
        <p>Attention was  drawm  to  a  been released to his home,</p>
        <p>number of speculative favorites Damage to^ both cars was es-on the Amex which was staging  at S500.</p>
        <p>a much more vigorous advance Dupree, w h o s e autnmobile than the big board. Some big brakes allegedly failed, was blocks were traded on the small- charged with improper equip-</p>
        <p>R.ALEIGH fAP) - The penalty against North Carolina co-torists who let their auto liability insurance expire will be relaxed under a bill enacted by the Senate Monday night.</p>
        <p>The measure removes from the law a requirement that a persons driver's license be suspended for 30 days when his auto liability insurance is not in effect.</p>
        <p>Instead, the driver must surrender his car license tags for 60 days as a penalty for not having liability coverage. Under the old law the license niate had to be surrendered for 30 days.</p>
        <p>Sponsors of the bill said the old law had worked a hardship on persorLs who drive trucks</p>
        <p>and similar vehicles on their jobs.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, the Senate passed and sent to the House a bill to establish a North Carolina waiter safety committee and to empower local governments to create local water and shore-line authorities.</p>
        <p>I The Senate adopted an amendment by Sen. John Burney Jr., D-New Hanover, to remove a provision giving the Wildlife Resources Commission I authority to make certain local zoning regulations on the rec-ireational use of waters to promote safety.</p>
        <p>The bill would have given the commission authority to set the time or place for swimmers, water skiers, scuba divers, fish-</p>
        <p>i ermen and surfboards to use the , waters.</p>
        <p>! This bill tells us what time I to crank up the motor, what time to go fishing, Burney told the Senate in offering his amendment. I think were over-regulated now in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The senate also passed and sent to the House a measure to regulate the towing of water skiers. The bill prohibits the towing of water skiers unless the boat is equipped with a rear view mirror to enable the operator to see the skier without looking backward.</p>
        <p>Sen. Burney offered an amendment which was approved to exempt boats with less than 15 horsepower.</p>
        <p>ment. He plead guilty in Farm-1</p>
        <p> ,  ville  Recoder's  Court  \ebler-|</p>
        <p>Selective strensth among blue</p>
        <p>er exchange.</p>
        <p>chips w'as reflected on the New York Stock Exchange by the  ,  ,  .</p>
        <p>Dow Jones industrial average PrnCipdl .   which at noon was up 1.84 to</p>
        <p>83(; 38  (Continued  From  Page 1)</p>
        <p>The' advance was marred by 624.37. The Greenville Junmr weakness in rails.  High had a deficit of S8o0.9d.</p>
        <p>The Associated f-ress average Blh schools this year hi.werer of 60 stocks at noon was off .1 out of the red. with Elm-at 327.9 with industnals up .6, hurst showmg a &amp;gt;eai s e,i rails off 1.0 and utilities up .3.  of ?2.560.99 and the Jr^</p>
        <p>^ .p High indicating a balance of The rail component ot the AP </p>
        <p>average has been making new ^  ,</p>
        <p>yeralv highs in recent sessions,  praised  Mrs.  L o u i s c</p>
        <p>^    X  1  1  Rush citv schocls lunchroom</p>
        <p>New York Central sank more</p>
        <p>than 2 points while fractional ^  /  *u  k  ^  m</p>
        <p> ____^----------- I  consider  her  the  best  in</p>
        <p>the State. he said.</p>
        <p>FUND CONFERENCE</p>
        <p>E. Hoover Taft Jr., of Greenville, territorial chairman for tb</p>
        <p>1968 American Red Cross fund campaigns is shown at a four-state fund planning conference wiOi Frederick R. Kappel of New York, national co-chaiiman. The Red Cross must raise its money sights in 1968, mainly because of heavy commitments in Vietnam, Kappel told the conference which met in Atlanta, Ga., recently.</p>
        <p>Holding Man In'epresente County Beating Case 4-H Clubs In D.C.</p>
        <p>ship and leadership skills.</p>
        <p>NEW GREEIvTVILLE LIONS CLUB PRESIDENT . . . Reid Hooper (right) po.ses vlth Charles Horne, retiring president, and District Governor Marvin Nash at an officers installation mecling of the Lions Club held at the Moose Lodge here last night. Other officers are; Charles Price, first vice president; C. C. Cleetwood. second vice president: J. D, Wilson, third vice pre.si-dent; Henry Dunbar, tail twister; Sam Hill, lion tamer; W. W. Howell, secretary: Jolin Causey, as-sLstant secretary. Directors are: Ed Smith, Ralph Tyson. Jay Collie, Charles Waller.</p>
        <p> PACTOTTICL-A  Kp  Miss  Deborah  Hines is repre-1 Center, gives members new</p>
        <p>igro is in Pitt Countv Jaii today  Pving their citaeo-</p>
        <p>ifter an incident ye.sterriay at tlubs at the 196/4-H Citizenship I Davenports store here in v.iiicli  t-oufse June 18 - 24 m</p>
        <p>another Pactolus .\cgro wa.s  g-  g</p>
        <p>seriously beaten.  Tne  daugnter  ol Mr. .ind Mi s</p>
        <p>George S. Hines of Rt. 1, Gi een-I According to Pitt Ccuniy She- ville. Miss Hines has been a 4-H riff Ralph Tyson, the jailed man ^lub member tor four vears. is Fairfield Armstrong of Rt. 5, The short course, which is be-Greenville. Armstrong is charg- jng held at the National 4-11 ed with assault with a deadly  </p>
        <p>The board passed a resolution commending Mrs. Rush for her work.</p>
        <p>In other action, the Board also:</p>
        <p>Reviewed a jointly developed policy between Pitt C o u n ty</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Carraway</p>
        <p>Graveside services for Dee .Ann Carraway, infant laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. r'ar-</p>
        <p>Charlotte; Rav, and</p>
        <p>Community Announcements</p>
        <p>Ronald McKinley Darden is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital, room A116.</p>
        <p>rrvv,.  TTcW RaqpH nf Schools \md City Schools con- rawav of Greenville who died children; two brothers: Horace.-"^'</p>
        <p>The Senior Ushe Board  conducted  this'Stokes of Greenville and Leslie</p>
        <p>Sycamore Hill Baptist</p>
        <p>will have rehearsal Wednesd.iv  n  i  ^  n</p>
        <p>at 8 P.m. at the home of William Freedom ^hm^</p>
        <p>T ' oni HT IT  Of  The Board authorized Dr. C- C.</p>
        <p>Jones, 801 W. Fourth St.  cleetwood,  assist.int superinten-</p>
        <p>Pauline Cathey of three sons:  Dixie,</p>
        <p>Harold Smith, all of Greenville; 12 grandchildren; 3 great grand-</p>
        <p>FarmviReC-ol-C Oliicers Named</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE  Officers and</p>
        <p>weapon with intent to kill.</p>
        <p>The Sheriff said the incident occurred about 2:45 p.m. with _  ______ Armstrong  allegedly  beating  Ar</p>
        <p>thur Langley of Pactolus with a cane hook handle.</p>
        <p>GoodmanHearing Again Postponed Until June 27</p>
        <p>coming year were elected last night bv the</p>
        <p>The Community Prayer 3or-  3</p>
        <p>Vice will be held at Bell Artau.  .</p>
        <p>Holy Church tonight at 8 o'clock.  ^</p>
        <p>Heard from a delegation</p>
        <p>dent to confer with County</p>
        <p>morning at 11 oclock a, thelStokes of Portemouth. Va : and  chamberN  Com-</p>
        <p>Carraway family cemetery by; three si-sters: Mrs. Larry Davis,  </p>
        <p>Dr. Russell Cherry.  Mrs. Lela Baysden, and Mrs.</p>
        <p>In addition to her parents, she'Hunter Cox, all of Ayden.</p>
        <p>is survived by her maternal--</p>
        <p>grandparents. Mr. and .Mrs. ^^cident-PrOne</p>
        <p>Langlev was taken to Pitt Me- SiHlJNGFIhLD. Ohio,  A morial Hospital for treatment preliminary hearing for  i mt of a broken jaw and fractured recreation director Go r d n n skull. The injured man was Goodman originally set for a'unc later transferred to N. C. Me-  rescheduled for June</p>
        <p>morial Hospital in Chapel Hill. 20. has been postponed again.</p>
        <p>until June 27.</p>
        <p>Goodman, former director of recreation in Greenville and since 1964 rccieation director</p>
        <p>AllegedlyStole, Wrecked Car</p>
        <p>MISS DEBORAH HINES</p>
        <p>During the week, Miss Hine?</p>
        <p>will sliare tlie week oi e.xp</p>
        <p>here has been charged ...... .  u  ,</p>
        <p>larcenv bv trick of S8.600 from  4-11  crs  Irom  No'  .i</p>
        <p>Carolina and other slale.p. I, ' group will ai.so participate in a</p>
        <p>variety of eduealional aetivii</p>
        <p>Craig Wright of Rocky .Mount:</p>
        <p>her paternal grandparents, Mi. rountlp^ To Get and Mrs. S. D. (Mrrawav V-OURTieS lO V5CT</p>
        <p>Pinetops; her maternal great  AtGUtiori</p>
        <p>Joe Kue, owner of Kue's Pharmacy. was elected to serve as president of the Chamber of:</p>
        <p>196,-68. Elected vice-president was annrehended here earlv Ihis .. sp^^.rield sm,.ill &amp;gt;oapuc</p>
        <p>the city of Springfield.</p>
        <p>He is also charged on coLini'- of grand lareen.</p>
        <p>two</p>
        <p>one</p>
        <p>was Floyd Messer of Messer morning shortly after he al- ..pH  inv  nn i.i .  ,  v</p>
        <p>Chevrolet, Inc. Louis N. Wil- legedly stole and wrecked a  -Ar  ^907  f,.,.  ..i.,,  ..jthe 4-H Fiiundation with c^</p>
        <p>II---------------r.------ri...  ti  e  intii  01  .X.5/  ,10m  jukl  doxc.s  Federal  E.xt  1-</p>
        <p>Youth services will be held at consisting of Glenn Hardee and Rock Spring Church Sunday at Averette - Stancil - Brown pro-11 a.m. The Junior Churrh will &amp;gt;erty owners who wish to be render services Sundav at &amp;gt; n. included in the Greenville School</p>
        <p>m. at Bethel Chapel, the Roil; District. The Board approved  Formvili-    .....       lo  r    ,  i  r- </p>
        <p>Soring Junior Choir wib nave tae overture and suggested the Ben Lari away 01  itix.,.  which  have  produced  for  two  year  terms  include:  19.  of  Route  1,  iarmville. was ^lents allccedlv made o Ih-cc</p>
        <p>rehearsalThursday at 6:30 n.m nroperty owners proceed' ................ ....................... ............. .........</p>
        <p> _ through t^teir attornies to com-</p>
        <p>The Matrons Club will meet at P^^te legal and technical ar-the home of Mrs. Berlim Woo- Jangements for the move.</p>
        <p>grandmother. Mrs. R. A. ^hom-    liams  was re-elected Executive car.  p,-(,-)ertv</p>
        <p>as of Blackshear Ga.: ncr pa- ralEIGH (APi-Wake Coun-  According  to  Police  Chief  The  larceny  bv  trick otiarc</p>
        <p>pernal great granmTioJ,ner, Airs,  24  other  North  Carolina  New  directors who will serve Graham Creel, Jerome Smith, i,iy(j]y(&amp;gt;d Sfi.GlHJ in sabrv pa\-   ^</p>
        <p>ten. 1210 W. Third St., Wedncs- Heard a report from Archi-day at 8 p.m.  tect George Shoe w'ho s:&amp;gt;.id th"</p>
        <p> - Pbeming Street School projr'ct</p>
        <p>The Good^Hope Usher.s wd! 1 including demolition) and the meet Wednesday at the churcn South Greenville project is pro-at 7:30 p.m.  ("^eding on schedule. The Board</p>
        <p>  -aFo heard from Shoe on bids</p>
        <p>The pastor of St. Abitthew submitted for a maintenence Church announces the followi.og warehouse and rejected the bids services: Tonight, Rev. D. J. as be&amp;gt;ond the budget. Shoe was Smith will preach: Wedne.sday aui^'orized to rework the plans night, choir and ushers will go and negotiate new bids, to St. John Church. Kinston; Heard recommendations of Thursday night. Rev. Ha 11 i e ^ the Division of School PlanniiT^ j Mae Cobb will preach: Fridav,jn Raleigh for enlargement of night, Rev. Outlaw of Roberson- fpftain science rooms in t h c ville.  proposed new Junior High</p>
        <p>- 'School. The recommendations</p>
        <p>The Life of Light Bible (la^s were accepted with additional will meet at the home ef Fonv alternatives int-oduced to offset Spain tonight at 8 oclock. the increased cost if nece.ssary - to  stay within the construction</p>
        <p>Revival services are be ng budget, conducted this week at F-'mma Elected 12 new teachin " Chapel Church. Rev. Fred Teel staff members as recommended will preach tonight at 7..10. by Asst. Supt. C. C. Cleetwood</p>
        <p>her paternal great giandparentb  traffic accidents in the John B. Lewis Jr., FJoyd Mes- reportedly seen driving away jjepeious cmolovees on the cit.</p>
        <p>.r r im 1 f  included  in  a  State  ser,  Marvin  Speight,  C.  C. Simp- Ellis Auto Parts about 2  depiirtment  payroll.</p>
        <p>Macclesfield, her paternal great {ighy,,|y patrol drive against son and Jack Tvson.  ^  tofisy  by Farmville palrol-  _______'</p>
        <p>great granomotlicr. Mrs. Em- * 4.:  ^  i^en Allen Roland and Billv</p>
        <p>ma Webb of Macclesfield.  WaL  Co^tv is No 1 in both 77  I  Braswell.</p>
        <p>wake Lounu is .\o. 1 in noin Commerce approved Novem-</p>
        <p>x.ifh ovvH injury irom  .</p>
        <p>Bullock  -Nb  beriri967'';slheTaiefo77he</p>
        <p>.  accidents.  nmial Christmas Pande in</p>
        <p>Funeral  services  for  Johnnie state Motor  Vehicles Com-  pr.vp.-nviiip \ovpmhpr 99 and 90  owned  by  Dr,  Bert</p>
        <p>Muck Bullock. 19. will be hfld missiuner Pilston Godwin said _______ Warren  ot  Farmville.  wreck  the</p>
        <p>at the Wiikerson Chapel Wed- Mondav about half of North</p>
        <p>Charge Assault, Attempt To Kill</p>
        <p>Singleton New Bar Ass'n Prexy</p>
        <p>Louis Singleton was named president of the Pitt Countv Bor Association last week, repla' iug Eli Bloom as head of the PiU Murphy King of Rt. 1, Hooker- lawyers grouj).</p>
        <p>were selected as alternate dates.  still'wOkin ie'citv tom has been chaiRcd with as- Attorney Fred Maddox as</p>
        <p>nesday afternoon at 3:39 b&amp;gt; the Carolina's rural accidents and  ^  </p>
        <p>Rev. Jerald Owens, Free Will fatalities during 1966 occurred K6VIVal SerVICGS Baptist Minister ot Belvoi-, as- jn the 25 counties where the pa- .-i  1  1  r</p>
        <p>sisted by the Rev. Willie E. |j.q| pjgns its crackdown on I iirOUQn JUIIG J Bell Jr., Free Will Baptist min- traffic violators, islcr of Belvoir. Burial will be</p>
        <p>limits.  deadly weapon with named vi-e prc.Hui nt and Mar-</p>
        <p>i Damage to the auto was esti-  *^111 and attempted rob- yin Blount Jr. was elected scc-</p>
        <p>! mated at 125.  ^^^y  in  a Saturday incident at a retary-freasunM'.</p>
        <p>I Smith was arrested by Roland  store, according to Maddox replaced Singleton In</p>
        <p>'and Brasw'ell and was charged Fitt County Sherilf Ralph fyson. the vice prcsid(nt post wiu'e</p>
        <p>The counties in  addition to  Revival services are m pro-  with larceny of an  auto and  King is charged with assault-  Blount replaces Joe Bowen vliu</p>
        <p>in the Barrow Family  near  Bel-  wake are  Robeson  Buncombe  gness at the Calvary Pen'ecos-.careless  and reckless  driving,  ing Mrs. Editli M. Bowen and  served as secretary-treasurer 0'</p>
        <p>voir.  Cabarrus Catawoa Cumber-  tal Church. 806 W. Third St., ------- attempting to rob Bowen's store,  the association last year.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his parents. Mr.  Davidson.  Forsvth Gas- and will continue through June WHILE BACKS TURNED The 27-year-old Negro was  -------</p>
        <p>and -Mrs. Jim C. Bullock of Bel-  Guilford Mecklenburg, 25-  SAN  LOUIS (JBISP, Calif, wounded in the alleged assault-; LOTTEH\ DIRECTOR</p>
        <p>voir: a brother. James C. Bui- q^sIow. Randolph* Alamance', The Rev. J. Hubert Thomp-  ~  Cant. Patnck robbery attempt, shot in the ALBANY. N.Y. (AP) - Er-</p>
        <p>lock of Belvoir; six sisters  Goldsboro  is  the  guest  D^^sey  and  his  two firemen stomach, back and leg by Mrs. nest T. Bird, who retired rocent-</p>
        <p>Airs. Raymond M. Harris ot Halifax, Harnett, Iredell, evangelist for the services fought an apartmem house tire Eowen as she was struck. jy after 25 years as an FBI Bethel.  Mrs.  H.  L  Garris  Jr.  johnston,  Rowan,  Surry and  which begin nightly at 8 o'clock,  recently,  back at the station  , gyson said King is still listed  agent. ha.s been named direc-</p>
        <p>Mrs. Bettie Ann (oggins. and    ^  hniKP  nmphndv  .strinned their (n tipriniic:' pnnrlitinn at Pilt 4.^..  v..,  -----</p>
        <p>Mrs. Bettie Ann Coggins, duu Mrs. Chester H. Dunn, all of Greenville. Mrs. Carroll Bartlett of Tarboro. and Miss Mary Sue Bullock of the home; and his stcp-grandmother. Mrs. LG-lie Bullock of Belvoir.</p>
        <p>Gas Grenade For British Police</p>
        <p>Tho T B Rrarf^h-iw i.  somebody  stripped  theirin  serious  condition  at  Pilt  tor  nf  the  Now  York  lotterv,</p>
        <p>paltor onhe 'chm'rch</p>
        <p>-- -- ------^i=!0BaEac,'</p>
        <p>Phillini Christian Churcn is celebrating its 12th homecoming this week. The following se'-vic-es will be held each night beginning at 8 oclock:</p>
        <p>Tonight. Sycamore Hill Baptist Church; Wednesday. Rev. J. W. Wilkes: Thursday, Rev. R. I. Pceton; Friday. Rev. H. Wilson.</p>
        <p>Steak Houses In Bankruptcy Plea</p>
        <p>' R.ALEIGII I.AID - Bankrupt-cy petitions totaling almost $2.5 million have been filed b&amp;gt; a team of Rocky Mount surgeons in connection with the Fhar-ISteak House of the C.ii-olinas. Inc.</p>
        <p>Dr. Lemuel Weyher Kornegay Kornegay, partners in the Kornegay Clinic, filed the petitions Monday in U.S. Easto'-n District court at Raleigh. They helped organize the chain of steak houses.</p>
        <p>Leoion Post To Hold Installation</p>
        <p>114 WEST .'ith STREET-TIE BIG 0.\E STARTS</p>
        <p> WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>Allen</p>
        <p>Funeral services for ^Irs. Jo-</p>
        <p>Pitt County American Legion Post No. 39 will hold their re-</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP)  -  Britain's</p>
        <p>police who usually  go  unarmed,</p>
        <p>mav be issued American tear</p>
        <p>scphi'no's'.  Alien:63.'wife  of'curr grenade^^^^^^^  lo  fiu.sh out  ^uT^/'^nThlJ'meeUng'TonigS</p>
        <p>L. AHeln, will be conducted at  cnminals.  _ p .</p>
        <p>the Wilke-on Chapel Wedues-! Scotland Yard is experiment- '  '</p>
        <p>dav .Mternoon at two o'cIock byl  20  models  used  by  U.S.  Installation  ceremonies  will</p>
        <p>the Rev  W  Harvey  Morris,! Police. Fired from  a special ri-  be held for the new slate  of of-</p>
        <p>nastor of  the  First Pentecostai i fie the grenades  are  accurate  ficers during the coming  year,</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>s4heatret</p>
        <p>I&amp;gt;h(,-ae PL2-7649.</p>
        <p>ALL SE ATS: .$1.00</p>
        <p>No Oik* I'uder IS Is Admitted I'niess Aeeompank'd By A Parent:</p>
        <p>"'GEORGY GIRL IS SUPERIOR! WONDERFUL PELL-MELL ENJOYMENT, IMMENSELY ORIGINAL!"</p>
        <p>Iloiincss Church of Greenv'e, assisted by the Rev. R. B. Crawford pastor of Trinity Free Will Baotist Church. Burin! wiil be in Pinewood Memorial Park.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, Carr L. Allen; a daughter, Mrs.</p>
        <p>up to 100 yards.  Post Commander Elvy Forrest,</p>
        <p>Britain police normally do not, announced. All Legionnaire are ' carry guns. If a dangerous gun-'urged to attend^  i</p>
        <p>man is loose, selected officers may be issued revolvers, buti high-level permission must obtained.</p>
        <p>Famous Dan River Carpet SPECIAL</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>100% Nylon Carpet  Ccntinous Filament</p>
        <p>f%C</p>
        <p>PER YARD</p>
        <p>MUbPAY'S A'*?''*HNrE</p>
        <p>.118 S. EVANS ST.  TEL.  m-2:A4</p>
        <p>tm</p>
        <p>This is Geor-'v.</p>
        <p>This is Georgys roommate.</p>
        <p>COLUMBIA PICTURES f.:</p>
        <p> Boiley Crowlhar, N.Y. Ttms</p>
        <p>Ttiis is Georgy's roommate's roommate.</p>
        <p>(I Xu- '</p>
        <p>1 T-</p>
        <p>JAMES MASON  ALAN BATES  LYNN REDGRAVE</p>
        <p>:Ui.Mi.6jY':,.iPt .'rfeuaictil</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>Warner Bros* imloeks all the doors of the sensation-filled best seller.</p>
        <p>HO</p>
        <p>starring CLINT EASTWOOD I.MFOKTANT  FEATURES AT J:3ri - 4:00 - 6:2.'&amp;gt; - 8:50</p>
        <p>LAST TIMES TODAY "DON'T MAKE WAVf-S</p>
        <p>Wr [.er&amp;gt; tor the Srrwi Aid I</p>
        <p> -b.'ddh/WtMOrLLMf.YES I</p>
        <p>KB</p>
        <p>iifiwifflnwwi</p>
        <p>I TECHNICOLOR- FROM WARNER BROS.</p>
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