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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0001" />
        <p>WEATHER</p>
        <p>doidy Kb Mattered tbondenhimen and coottmed enn dmagh Wedociday.</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>INSIDi MADINO</p>
        <p>Page t-N.C. Mrtii rate decH ing</p>
        <p>Page 7Color TV tete ter kmtert Page 10-Obitnariea8^ Yent^ NO. 177  ,  GREENVILLE,  N.  C  -27834  TUESDAY  AFTERNOON,  JULY  25,  1967</p>
        <p>Soldiers' Appearance Brings Lull To Detroit Today</p>
        <p>Paratroopers Put Armored Lid On Violence-Ridden City</p>
        <p>10 Pages Today</p>
        <p>Price 10 CenM</p>
        <p>Paratrooper On Detroit Patrol</p>
        <p>By FIl ' NK JOSEPH</p>
        <p>Detroit (AP)  ordered into action by President Jdin-son, Army pi rtroopers clamped an armored 14 on Detroit today and calm reiu ne&amp;lt;i  at least for the mome it  after 48 hours of kiUinga pillaging and burning.</p>
        <p>Some new fires broke out. Sp&amp;lt;'adic sniper fire spattered against walls and sidewalks.</p>
        <p>But tte presence of the paratroopers  40 per cent of them combat tested in Vietnam appeared to have brought a lull m the wild Negro rioting that laid waste huge sections of tee dty, and claimed 23 lives.</p>
        <p>Cyrus Vance, special assistant in the Defense Department and Johnsons deputy at the</p>
        <p>scene, urged businesses and in-;and good judgment,* Vance dustries to reopen.  said.</p>
        <p>He asked citizens to comei Despite the invitation, the na-back to jotw, but tee plea went tions fifth-largest city remained</p>
        <p>largely unheeded. The center city was virtually a ghost town.</p>
        <p>Gov. George Romney, appearing with Vance and Mayw Jerome Cavanagh at a news conference, said however that a curfew and an order closing all gasoline stations, liquor stores, bars and places of entertainment would remain in force in-tefnitely.</p>
        <p>Due to an apparent improve</p>
        <p>ment in the over-all situation,'senteeism kept assembly Gov. Romney, Mayor Cavanagh at a crawL _ ir:</p>
        <p>a virtual ghost town, its main arteries all but sealed by dwindling sniper fire and destruction that has soared into the hundreds of millions of dollars.</p>
        <p>Most deliveries into the city failed to resume. Restaurants and hotels that remained open were running short of fooa. ^ The auto industry, which shut all its plants Monday, reopened most of them today. But ab-</p>
        <p>lines</p>
        <p>and I are requesting businesses, retail stores and industries to resume normal operations ^thiall citizens using caution</p>
        <p>Expressways that criss-cross the city were nearly deserted. Those abroad in cars gawked at tee vast destruction. C^t-of-state</p>
        <p>licenses were numerous.</p>
        <p>In heavily damaged areas Negroes and whites alike served coffee to weary troops. Small knots of people gathered on street corners.</p>
        <p>Reports of injuries continued to mount toward 1,000, but apparently there was no way to get an accurate count.</p>
        <p>Hundreds  possibly thou-</p>
        <p>scattered sections.</p>
        <p>They joined some 7,000 poUct and National "Guardsmen dueling with rooftop and doorway snipers.</p>
        <p>The soldiers, 40 per cent of them veterans of Vietnam, rolled into the city on buses and armored trucks, their lights dimmed in combat readiness. This sniper fire wont bother</p>
        <p>sands  had become refugees us, said one youngish-looking</p>
        <p>burned from homes or jobs.</p>
        <p>A committee set up by Cavanagh to handle refugees said many were living in tnei*' cars.</p>
        <p>The paratroopers, 1,800 from tee 101st and 82nd Airborne &amp;lt;h-visions, were ordered into action late Monday night as gunfire crackled in the streets and explosions boomed in widely</p>
        <p>corporal. Most of us have been in Vietnam. These guys here start sniping at us and theyre going to get one hell of a surprise.</p>
        <p>, Some units-I relieved beleaguered guardsmen on the East Side, with the rest deployed within striking distance of key trouble spots.</p>
        <p>Much Of 1967-68 increase Due Salary Adjustments</p>
        <p>Grssnviile Budget Given 15i Percent Boost</p>
        <p>The 1987-68 fiscal years municipal budget shows a 15.8 percent increase over tee preceding years budget, according to City Manager Harry Hagerty.</p>
        <p>The 1967-68 budget amoiits to 11,693,071.50, while the 1966-67 budget was $1,461,-009.55.</p>
        <p>Councilmen yesterday ap-^ proved the new budget with a $1.20 general fund tax rate and a 10 cents debt service rate. This represents a 10 cents per hundred dollar valuation tn increase.</p>
        <p>Mu^ of the budget increase &amp;gt; te accounted for iii additional funda for persnnel saluy adjustments. It is, in fact,</p>
        <p># ty much a personnel budget with $1,017,000 allocated for salaries.</p>
        <p>Heaviest spender for the coming year will be the Public Works Department, which has responsibility tor garbage collection, street improvements and other construction. Its budget wUl be $610,056, a 23 percent increase.</p>
        <p>The Fire Department with a $217,791 budget receives a 15.5</p>
        <p>Knockout Blow For Power Plant</p>
        <p>SAIGON (AP) - American warplanes and bontearding naval vessels delivered a coordinated knockout blow to the big power idant just outside the major North Vietnamese city of Vbte, the U.S. Command said today.</p>
        <p>It was tee first combiaed Air-Navy strike at a major Norte Vietnamese target.</p>
        <p>A rash of terrorist incidents were r^rted in South Vietnam, including Communist t forts to stop traffic on the major Mekong Delta highway and a guerrilla raid on a small hamlet where five men and a woman were shot down as police spies.</p>
        <p>While DO major ground battles were r^&amp;gt;orted, tl^re were sharp fights up and down South Vietnam, with 49 Viet Cong killed in one series of running fights in the northernmost 1st Corps area where most recent ground fighting has centered.</p>
        <p>The Vinh power plant was attacked Monday. The heavy cruiser St Paul steamed close inshore and opened up with her 8-inch guns while two destroyers darted even closer to shell Red shore batteries.</p>
        <p>percent increase and tiie Police Department budget of $314,591.80 was increased by 15 percent</p>
        <p>Recreation Department spending for the fiscal year will be $127,560 or an increase of 11.8 percent.</p>
        <p>Other budgeted categories: mayor and Qty Council, $11,-719; city managers office, $32,514.30; city clerk and tax collector, $100,191.80; budding and ^unds, $23,965.50; engineering, $21,627; municipal court, $20,806.60; rescue department $14,912; building inspector, $15,418; special ap</p>
        <p>propriations (includes libraries), $97,934.80; master contingency, $14,276.20.</p>
        <p>Property taxes will bring in the largest sum of money for the year. Current taxes will produce $783,540, a little less than half of the total spending for tee coming year. The amount increased 15.7 percent over last year.</p>
        <p>The city started tiie year off with $76,063 in cash on hand (carried ova- from the previous year). Second largest source of revenue for the municipal government is $334,211, in hirn-over from</p>
        <p>Greenville Utilities Commission. Hiis represents a 29.8 percent increase.</p>
        <p>The Powell Bill funds from the state for street improvements are set at $107,000, an increase of 7 percat.</p>
        <p>Other income sources; cash on hand (Powell Bill), $600; prior years taxes, $22,000; intangible tax, $40,000; N. C. Frmichise tax, $18,000; N. C. Sales Tax, $7,000; beier tax, $40,000; Pitt ABC funds, $17,-000; jHivilege Ucoise, $30,000; couri cost, $32,000; parking meters, ^,000; building and plumbing permits, $12,000;</p>
        <p>cemetery lot sales, $8,500; Pitt identification service, $5,300; Pitt County for rescue squad, $1,650; rents, $8,500; miscellaneous, $24,000; parking meter fin, $10,000; street improvement assesments, $18,-000; Housing Authority turnover $5,000.</p>
        <p>R. Frank Everett Joins Republican Party Ranks</p>
        <p>By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>R. Frank Everett of Hamil-  the State Legislature. A 46-year-hm, f(Tna Martin County rep-1 old Robersonville farm equip-resentative in tee State Legis-jment dealer and farmer, he is lature, announced today he has also a former member of the switched . his political party Martin County Board of Com-membership to the Republican missioners and former mayor Party  'of Hamilton.</p>
        <p>The former Democrat served | Everett said he made the an-three terms, 1955, 1957, 1959, in j nouncement of the switch at a</p>
        <p>press conference in Greenville</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>this morning because the Republican Pai^ thought it good to make some kind of a teow about this.</p>
        <p>James Holshorser of Boone, (Continued On Page 10)</p>
        <p>Budget</p>
        <p>Changes</p>
        <p>PARTY-SWITCHER . . . R. Frank IvMvtt of HMnHton wHh Slalo RopubHun Forty Choliw man Jamas Holshousar aftar announcing tea switcli.</p>
        <p>Councilmmi yaterday approved transfers of $30,378.54 in tee 1MM7 budget to round out tec fiscal year.</p>
        <p>Budgets were increased for tee foUowhig departments: mayor and City CsjpcO, $805-.32; buflteng and' grounds, $320.25; muncUpal court, $915-.53; Police Department, $801-.40; Public Waks Department, $13,341.73; Recreatem Department, $7,509.18; bnflding inspector, $105.13; special ap-propriatioas. $412.70; street improvements, $5,727.90; Pow-eU BUI, $0,373.28.</p>
        <p>The following redactions were made: city manager, $10.830.44; city clrik, $949.14; Fire Department, $18,225.08; contfogency, $0,373.28.</p>
        <p>The adjustments were made udHdd^ frmn non-tax revane.</p>
        <p>ARMY TAKES OVER  A parat roopar patrols on Weedward Avanua in troit, walking past dabris causad by rietars in city. (AP Wlrapboto)</p>
        <p>Appeals To</p>
        <p>Law-Abiding BJood Americans</p>
        <p>270 Pints Of</p>
        <p>Given Monday</p>
        <p>Here</p>
        <p>$1,025.416 Budget OK'd By Farmville</p>
        <p>F ARMVILLE  The Board of Commissioners have approved a $1,025,416.50 budget for operation of the city during tiw 1967-1968 fiscal year.</p>
        <p>The newly approved budget lucluded a general fund appropriation of $340,467.08 with a debt service fund of $71,044.84.</p>
        <p>'The utility fund, which includes wata mid light department and contributions to the general fund and debt service fund totals $613,904.58.</p>
        <p>Appropriations for the general fund include: administration, $52,747; cemeteries, $7,575; fire department, $47,465; library, $10,628; police department, $65,-805.28; recreation and parks, $17,065; street department, $124,-476.80; miscellaneous, $9,705 and contingencies, $5,000.</p>
        <p>A tax rate of $1.10 per $100 valuation was approved by the commissioners. This is the same rate in effect for tee 196667 fiscal year.</p>
        <p>The new budget is an increase over tee $967,464.76 budget last year.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)--Presi-dent Johnson pleaded to law-abiding citizens across the nation to help put down rioting and lawlessness after he sent federal troops into riot-ripped Detrmt with tee greatest r^ret.</p>
        <p>In a briel tetevism laroadcast ending idter midnight, Johnson announced his decisicm to heed Michigan Gov. George Romr neys request for federal forcea. From Cajntol Hill came political bickering and speculation in tee wake of riot developments.</p>
        <p>I am sure the American people will realize, said the ^im-faced, bespectacled President, that I teke this acti(m with the greatest regretand only because of the clear, unmistakable and undisputed evidence that Gov. Rwnn^ and the local officials have been unable to bring the dtuation under control. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark stood just behiiKl the Presidoit as he called on all of our people, in all of our cities, to join in a determined program to maintain law and order and to show tea^. riots, looting and public disorder will not be tolerated.</p>
        <p>Johnsons order and his appeal to a nationwide television audience came hours after Senate Democratic Leader hfike Mans</p>
        <p>field put administraticm weight behind a Senate Republican move to probe rioting in U. S. cities.</p>
        <p>But Mansfield struck back at Repitelican Policy Coordinating Committee charges teat tee United States is rapidly approaching a state of anarchy and teat Johnson is failing to rcA-'ognize and deal with racial violence.</p>
        <p>The GOP committee, which includes congressional lead&amp;lt;ys, governors anti former presidential candidates, suggested violence and destniotion in Detroit may be the outgrowth of &amp;lt;-ganized danning and execution on a national scale. Former President Ehvight D. Eisenhower was among members who voted unanimxisly for the statement. It demanded a congressional investigation of means to aid civH disorders.</p>
        <p>There waa speculation about thf possiMe political effects of Romneys request for federal troopsand it seemed likely to burgeon in tee wake of the Presidents television statement.</p>
        <p>A total of 270 pints oi blood were collected in yesterdays emergency visit of the Tidewater Area Bloodmobile.</p>
        <p>ChairmEui Joseph O. CHark said over 400 persons turned out for the visit. Seventy potential donors were turned down for medical reasons. The additional number of people involved were the Red (^oss staff, Dr. Charles Gilbert, tee volunteer registered nurses from tee county, the ladies of the Service League and Women oi tee Moose.</p>
        <p>The drive yesterday was an unscheduled visit arrang e d last week after Tommie Willis, chairman of the loc Red Gross chapter, received an urgent wire from the Tidewater Regional Blood Center which stated the critical shortage of blood in the bank and requested teat each chapter do evoything possible to help relieve tiie situation.</p>
        <p>Donors cune ffom all over Pitt County, many as far away</p>
        <p>Pope Paul Arrives In Turkey Today</p>
        <p>ISTANBUL (AP)-Pope Paul VI arrived in Moslem Turicey today on a two-day mission to discuss peace in the Middle East, the holy places of Jerusalem and ways to end 900 years of division between Roman Catholic and Orthodox (hristians.</p>
        <p>Withm two hours of his arrival, the Pope conferred privately with President Cevdet Sunday and oteer top officials. Informants said Pope Paul appealed to them to mediate the dispute between Israel and the Arabs.</p>
        <p>The 69-year-old Pope was the first pontiff in 12 centuries to visit tee former citadel of Eastern Christianity. The last was Pqie Constanttoe I in 711.</p>
        <p>as Griffon. Leading tbt lift of groups that helped make the drive a success were the students, faculty and staff of East Carolina University who donated 56 pints. Other groups came from Fieldcrest Mills, UmoQ Carbide, Dupont, Moose Lodge, welfare department, Greenville Utilities, Wachovia Bank, State Bank, Planters Bank, Pitt Tech, post office, Carolina * Dioy Jaycees Pitt Memorial Hospital, Carolina Sales, Garris Evans, Unit&amp;gt; ed Machine Works, highway department and Prep Shirt.</p>
        <p>I would like to express ray appreciation to everyone who made this drive the most 5ic-cessful one-day visit ever held in the county, other than ones at Dupont and on the university campus, Clark said this morning.</p>
        <p>If I had the ability to put into words the expressions of sincere and deep appreciation that were ai^arent on the fane of the father to whom I talke*J yesterday, there would be no better way to thank everyone for their efforts. This father has an eight year old son who will undergo q&amp;gt;en-heart surgcr ery Thursday at N. C. Memur&amp;gt; ial Hospital in Chapel Hill.</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Bulletin</p>
        <p>Traffic Toll</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The Motor Vehicle Department's report of lighway deaths and injuries for the 24 hours ending at 10 a.m.</p>
        <p>today:</p>
        <p>Killed-2</p>
        <p>Injured (rwal)46</p>
        <p>GASTONIA  Pitt County was eliminated from tee State Teener League Tournament here, bowing 9-0 to Gastonia.</p>
        <p>Hie win places Gastonia against Greenville in .teo Tonniamait Finals slated to begin at 9 p.m. today.</p>
        <p>'Hie tourney to a double elimination affair. Since Greenville is tens far undefeated in tee competitkm, a loss to Gastonia in todays game would mean anoteer game would be ^ayed between tiie two teams tomorrow. A win by Greenville would cimdi tee State CTiampionsliip for tiie Greenville nine.</p>
        <p>Tbe Pitt Coimty team, composed of players from Ayden, Winterville and Giifton scored no runs on three hits and committed three errors.</p>
        <p>Ctestonia scored all nine runs In the second inning and collected a total of 11 hits and eommltted four hits in post-fng tilt win.Rep. Gardner Blames Anti-Poverty Workers For Race-Rioting</p>
        <p>By MICHAEL PUTZEL</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Rep. Jim Gardner, R-N.C., today blamed anti-ovciV workers in Newark, N.J., far riots in that dty and charged the Norte (^lina Fund has been subverted from within its own ranks.</p>
        <p>The freshman amgressmso, speaking to a newt ciniference in Raleigh, said he will release a documented report next week proving teat Office of Economic Opportunity workers were agi-teting Newark Negroes and</p>
        <p>calling them out into tee streets shortly before tbe full-scale riot broke (Hit</p>
        <p>Garcbier made a tour of Newark last week.</p>
        <p>In a prepared statement on the North Carolina Fund, Gardner said, It appears that there are elements within this organization which are subverting its original intent</p>
        <p>Tbe fund is changing from an organization to help the poor help themselves into a political actiqn machine. The North Ca</p>
        <p>rolina Fund is now a political organization meddling in the affaire of local communities throughout North Carolina. The congressman said private foundations and the federal governmentboth of which, he said finance the funds activities  should suspend all money and activities of tee organization and make a complete investigation.</p>
        <p>Gardner called for the suspension of the funds director, George Esser, and one of its Durh^ staff members, How</p>
        <p>ard Fuller, as what the repre- throw of tbe established gcnrern-sentative called Corrective ment in Durham, pressure.  I  Durham  was tee scene last</p>
        <p>Hie congressmn said he is sending a report on tee funds activities to the state attorney general and secretary of state requesting a ruling on the status tee North Carolina Fund as a tax-free corporation in view of its complete political involvement.</p>
        <p>Fuller, Gardner charged, has advocated Black Power and i was actively involved in agi-</p>
        <p>week of mass demonstrations and a tari^ outbreak of violence following Negro demands that city officials provide better housing and recreati&amp;lt;m facilities.</p>
        <p>Gardner said a call-up of tbe National Guard saved the city from a full-scale riot.</p>
        <p>Poverty, he added, has existed in tee United States for more than a century, but poverty</p>
        <p>tating for the complete over- conditions are no excuse to go</p>
        <p>out and riot and bum.</p>
        <p>He charged community action programs across the state and nation with responsibility for racial inrest and said the anti-poverty agencies have been involved -in political action throughout tee country.</p>
        <p>When asked to be specific about activities in Durham, Gardner dodged a series of newsmois questions &amp;lt; saying, lets talk about Newark and Detroit.</p>
        <p>Newsmen pointed out that Fuller and other Negroes had</p>
        <p>restrained members of their own race when one marcher was struck by a bottle hurled from a crowd of white hecklers during Thursdays demonstration in Durham. Others questioned Gardna on udiat Negroes could do if they had pisaued normal channels for two years without getting action.</p>
        <p>Tbe congressman again pointed to northern cities and said sucdi chaos as ocists in Detroit could not be sanctioned.</p>
        <p>Asked for solutions to the ra-oieA lMtoB mtk tetkmr</p>
        <p>said has remdted in anarchv and rioting in Detroit, Gardner told newsmen the fe(leral government must spend large sums of money and practice constant review ef programs with a closer relationship between local governments and the federal government</p>
        <p>He called for Oongresa to take a leadership roAa in finding causes and selntians to iie riots and recommsnded teat soocese* ftd OEO pro|ecls be placed under oteir fovermncntal agan</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0002" />
        <p>N.C. Birth Rate</p>
        <p>In Sharp Decline From 1961 Peak</p>
        <p>. By ROB WOOD . RALEIGH (AP) - The birth rate in North Carolina shows a harp 16 per reiA decline from the peak year of 1961 while the death rate continues to rise gradually.</p>
        <p>Glenn A. Flinchum, chief of te Public Health Statistics Seo lion of the State Board of Health said the drop in births signals ttie end of the so-called baby boom which followed World War n.</p>
        <p>Flinchum, in a report pre-</p>
        <p>ired, for the North Carolina edical Jou. n;l, pointed out the decline is not isolated to North Carolina but is a nationwide ccurrence.</p>
        <p>Most experts agree, he contin-ed, that a future increase in ttie number of births is almost Inevitable as the large conting-Mt of postwar children reach marriageable age and begin ibeir own families. ,</p>
        <p>Marriages in North Carolina . during the past three years have increased significantly, Flinchum said, tht creating the</p>
        <p>Figures compiled by the statistics section show 111,721 births reported in 1961 followed by a steady annual decline to the 1966 total of 93,243.</p>
        <p>The rate iP 1961 was 24.2 births per 1,000 population. By 1966 this rate had dropped to 19.2.</p>
        <p>One of the most startling statistics revealed by the report Involved births out of wedlock in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>In 1966 there were 10,798 births out of wedlock, or, to better emphasize the problem, of every 100 babies bom in the state last year, almost 12 of them were illegitimate.</p>
        <p>F&amp;gt; '-um, in his repwt, said, *Births out of wedlock contini-^ to inc., 3e despite all efforts to combat the problem.</p>
        <p>He said in 1961, 9 per cent of the total births were out of wedlock, by 1965 the proportion had risen to 11 per cent and in 1966 to 11.6.</p>
        <p>The majm'ity of these births, he wrote, occur among girls under 20 years of age.</p>
        <p>In fact, he said, in 1965 there were 319 illegitimate births to girls under 15 years of age.</p>
        <p>On the other side of the statistical chart Flinchum said the gradual rise in the death rate is due primarily to the aging of the population, that is the in-increasing oportion of per-tons in the older age groups.</p>
        <p>The 1961 North Carolina death rate was 8.1 per 1,000 population. Last year the rate had climbed to 8.7. Total reported deaths last year was 42,397, compared to 37,443 in 1961.</p>
        <p>Heart disease, Flinchum reported, is the leading killer in North Carolina, accounting for more than one-third of all deaths.</p>
        <p>Although heart disease has bem the leading cause of death since 1930, the percentage of those falling victim to the disease is increasing.</p>
        <p>Center To Give Final Festival</p>
        <p>The Academic Center for Latin ^erican Studies wiU present its final festival tonight at T:30 p.m. in the Rose High Gymnasium.</p>
        <p>The festival will be presided over by Miss Nancy Ivester of Winston-Salem, who has been elected the Latin American Queen by the students.</p>
        <p>All the Latin American countries will be represented by the  students in the Academic Center.</p>
        <p>Dances and songs of die various countries will be presented along with the recitation of the poem, Mi Bandera by Mrs. Prieto.</p>
        <p>The Academic Center students will present first, the play, "Es-</p>
        <p>Eima y Amor (Fencing and &amp;gt;ve) by Sarafin y Joaquin Alvarez Quintero. These two authors are the best rejx'esenta-tives today of the popular ish tradition*in the theater.</p>
        <p>The program will terminate with the presentation of a typical Mexican Christmas.</p>
        <p>Also participating in the pro-</p>
        <p>S^am will be members of the DEA Institute for Secondary Bchobl Teachers of Spanish now fci sessiMi at East Carolina University. They win sing Christ^ piM Carols from Mexico and dance dia Bamba of Mexico.</p>
        <p>TALLEST STACK?,</p>
        <p>EL PASO, Tex. (AP)  The American ftnelting and Refining Co. bera lays claim to the talM tinokeetack in the world. It is 828 feet high and built at a eoat of about I1.S bflUon.</p>
        <p>Back in 1961, 287 of each 100,-000 population died of heart diseases. Last year, the rate had increased to 318.5.</p>
        <p>In North ^Carolina 15,496 persons died of heart diseases last year.</p>
        <p>Cancer deaths, the second leading cause, also are increasing each year. In 1966, malignant neoplasms claimed 5,656 lives in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Other causes which last year took an increasingly larger toll among the population were motor vehicle accidents, 1,757; other accidents, 1,521; suicides, 504 and homicides, 510.</p>
        <p>The rate of homicides in North Carolina showed a steady climb in both numbers and the percentage per 100,000 population. In 1961 there were 396 homicides, or a rate of 8.6. This Increased each year until 1966 when the rate had jumped too 10.5.</p>
        <p>Suicides, meanwhile, showed a 10.4 rate last year, below the 1963 high of 70.6 and the same m</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WITN - Ch. 7</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 M Squad 7;30 U.N.C.L.E. 8:30 Occ. Wif* 9:00 Movlet 11:00 News 11:15 Sports 11:25 Weather 11:30 Toniflht</p>
        <p>WIDNISDAY 8:00 Aspects 8:30 country 7:00 Today 9:00 Mr. Ed 9:30 Girl Talk 10:00 Judgment 10:35 NBC News 10:30 Concentration 11:00 Perionailty 11:30 Hollywood 12:00 Debnam</p>
        <p>12:55 1:00 1:30 1:55 2:00 2: 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:25 4:30 5:30 Music 4:80 6:15</p>
        <p>Snow</p>
        <p>6:25 6:30 7:00 7:30 9:00 10:00 Sq.11;00 11:15</p>
        <p>13:25 Eye Guess 11:30</p>
        <p>NBC News Jeopardy Make A Deal NBC News Our Lives The Doctors Another World Don't Say Match Game NBC News Funny Page Lassie News Sports Weather Hunt.-Brink. Pishing Virginian Bob Hope I Spy News Sports Tonight</p>
        <p>Quakers Seek Guidance In Silence</p>
        <p>its racial strife and the Vietnam war.</p>
        <p>What clues might come out of. the silent listening was uncertain, aird the first reaction</p>
        <p>.  .  ,  .1.    *  X  seemed somewhat .narginal, yet</p>
        <p>deepening, lengthenmg. A vast pertinent</p>
        <p>husned tTironii from muiv na- ..you can never teU what may</p>
        <p>spring up, and when it does it can change the whole tenor of Out of such quiet waiting and i the meeting, aid Clyde John-</p>
        <p>By GEORGE CORNELL AP Region Writer</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)  The silence buUt up. It hung over the big, crowded hall, lengthening. A vast hushed tTirong from many nations waited for the leading of the Lord.</p>
        <p>listening, an international gathering of Quakers today sought seme cuidance on easing the ills of the world, particularly</p>
        <p>son, a Richmond, LM., delegate to the World Conference of F^iends.</p>
        <p>That unpredictability is part</p>
        <p>of the genius of the movement, one of the most significant and exciting things about it, he added.</p>
        <p>The silent, expectant iirter-kides, a hallmark of Quaker worship, Monday nigM marked the opening of fiie 10-day assembly of about 1,200 delegates from 38 countries, the first world meeting in 15 years of the historically pacifist denomination.</p>
        <p>The presiding officer, Lewis E Waddilove of London, Eng</p>
        <p>land, cited the cnKal problems of racial upheavals, Middle East tensicms and the Viet naffl war, saying the assembly must not-evade toem.</p>
        <p>But he said the primary approach must be in personal renewal of sensitivity to CSirists guidance and concern for others. He added:</p>
        <p>What happens o each individual here is far more important than any pronouncement or any solutions we might devise. That traditional ^aker focus</p>
        <p>Final Gathering At Church In Tribute</p>
        <p>Old Mountain To Sandburg</p>
        <p>By ROB WOOD Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>FLAT ROCK, N.C. (AP) -They gathered at the pine-sheltered, century-old mountain church to pay a final, brief tribute to Carl Sandburg, who wrote of brawling cities, lonesome praries and most of all of the plale who conquered both.</p>
        <p>Relatives and a few close friends sat in the hard-backed pews of the St. Johns in the Church</p>
        <p>for the 15-minute funeral service Monday.</p>
        <p>Outside were no curiosity-seekers, no sight-seers, no one to interrupt the soft organ music of John Browns Body and All Gods Children  the two songs Sandburg has requested if there were any songs at all when he died.</p>
        <p>The church was vacant of flowers. On top of the^ white-draped casket was a single pine bough, placed there by Edward Steichen, one of the greatest of modern photographers and brother-in-law of Sandburg.</p>
        <p>In the front two pews near the organ were Mrs. Sandburg, the tiny gray-haired former Latin teacher who married the then unpublished young poet 59 years ago, and the tiiree Sandb.</p>
        <p>4aughterg^^- - -  ^  . </p>
        <p>There also were two close friends  Ralph McGill, editor of the Atlanta Constitution, and Harry Golden, author and Sandburg biographer.</p>
        <p>Farther back were two smartly-dressed teen-agers in tears and an elderly man in an open neck sportshirt.</p>
        <p>The setting seemed to be one</p>
        <p>WNa - Ch. 9</p>
        <p>TUESDAY  13:30</p>
        <p>5:00 Sugarfoot  1:00</p>
        <p>6:00 News  2:00</p>
        <p>6:10 Sports  2:30</p>
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        <p>11:30 Movie  4:15</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY  4:30</p>
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        <p>12:00 Talking  11:30</p>
        <p>0. Read Fugitiva Newlywgd Dream Girl News</p>
        <p>6. Hospital Dk. Shadows Dating Popaye Bozo</p>
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        <p>Hwy. Patrol</p>
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        <p>Joey Bishop</p>
        <p>WNBE - Ch. 12</p>
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        <p>10:00 Fugitiva  4:00</p>
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        <p>11:10 Weather  5:00</p>
        <p>11:15 Sports  6:00</p>
        <p>11:30 Joey Bishop  6:10</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY  6:25</p>
        <p>6:X Carolina  6:30</p>
        <p>8:35 News  7:00</p>
        <p>9:00 Kangaroo . 7:% 10:00 Can. Cam.  8:30</p>
        <p>10:30 Hillbillies  9:00</p>
        <p>11:00 Andy  9:30</p>
        <p>11:30 Ven Dyke  10:00</p>
        <p>12:00 News  11:00</p>
        <p>12:13 Farm Nows  11:30</p>
        <p>Weather</p>
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        <p>Guiding Light Love Life Timely Tips World Turns Password Houteperty Tell Truth News</p>
        <p>Edge of Night</p>
        <p>Secret Storm</p>
        <p>Cartoons</p>
        <p>Sugarfoot</p>
        <p>Newt</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Art. Smith Lost In Space Hillbillies Green Acres Gomer Pyle Steve Allan Flnel Report Movie</p>
        <p>Childrens TV Rules Still Apply To June</p>
        <p>By JUNE LOCKHART F Cynthia Lowry Elditors Note: After six bucolic years playing caretaker for Lassie, June Lockhart left the farmhouse to become televisions first spacecraft wife in CBS Lost in Space. It is, she reports, a whole new galaxy. But televisions childrens hour rules still apply: Kissing and hugging between adults is still off limits.</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (AP)-A few weeks ago I read in a magazine about a problem posed by a college professor to a group of students. He asked them to figure out how to disintegrate a planet on an earth course before it crashed into us.</p>
        <p>At the end of the several weeks of research, the students came up with an answer that the professor deemed 90 per cent sure of working.</p>
        <p>I wouldnt think of explaining the answer. Despite starting work for a third season of Lost in Space, I really dont know much more about space and its problems fiian I did when I was farmbound in the Lassie series for six years.</p>
        <p>Ive been a fan of science fiction through the years. I loved Jules Vernes 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. I was fascinated by Ray Bradburys The Martian C!u*onicles. I dont</p>
        <p>believe in flying saucers but I dont discount them either. But Im as much in the dark about space as the next average person.</p>
        <p>However, I am expected to be an expert on the subject. When Dick Chamberlain was Dr. Kildare and Vince Edwards was Ben Casey they received mail constantly asking for advise on how to cure certain diseases. When Raymond Burr was the winningest attorney on the air as Perry Ma&amp;gt;n,*' people wrote to him about ttieir legal problems. Naturally, they never gave the advice that was sought.</p>
        <p>They, as I, were merely playing roles. But it Is also true that one picks up odd pieces of information a^ut ones simulated professionand mine now is that of the first spacemother. It is not enough to permit one to hold forth authoritatively on the subject.</p>
        <p>Jumping from the farm to the myriad of planets has been ex-hilerating.</p>
        <p>In Lassie I was allowed to wear only gingham gowns and aprons and no one knew I had a body under those aprons. But in Lost in Space I wear form-fitting silver lame jumpsuits while I float around the wild blue yonder. Those women of the future do know how to dress.</p>
        <p>ordered by Sandburg in The Poor, a poem in which he said more than 50 years ago: Among the mountains I wandered and saw blue haze and red craig and was amazed. The blue haze was heavy Monday over the mountains of western North Carolina and the red craig was there near the church.</p>
        <p>Sandburg, the snowy-haired biographer of Lincoln, the poet, the authoTy the -tolksingery and twice Pulitzer Prise winner, died Saturday at his 240-acre goat farm a short distance from the church. He was 89.</p>
        <p>The body of Sandburg has been sent to Atlanta for cremation. His ashes will be scattered around the Remembrance Rock near his birthplace of Galesburg, .</p>
        <p>The Rev. George C. B. Tolle-son, pastor on the Unitarian Church in Charleston, S.C., conducted, the service and spoke of Sandburg as a man whose voice was our voice and whose death forces each of us to die a little with him.</p>
        <p>The young, red-bearded minister, who first heard of Sandburg while singing the authors collection of folk songs as a child, added:</p>
        <p>It would be presumptuous today to euologize Carl Sandburg. More important were the</p>
        <p>things that really mattered to him. Concrete things in a world of real people, not generalities, not abstractions, not statistical</p>
        <p>data.</p>
        <p>Sandburg wrote of death with understandhng and acceptance.</p>
        <p>Once he wrote: Death is a nurse mother with big arms; Twont hurt you at all; Its time now; You just need a long sleep, child; What have you had anyhow better tirnn sleep.</p>
        <p>And; in 1918, Sandburg, in his poem Cool Tombs wrote: When Abraham Lincoln was shoveled into the tomb, he ft*-got the Copperheads and tlM as-sasln.</p>
        <p>At this final fribute Monday,</p>
        <p>one wondered if now Carl Sandburg would forget these lines he wrote:</p>
        <p>Man is a long time coming.</p>
        <p>Man will yet win.</p>
        <p>Brother may yet .line up with brother.</p>
        <p>on the Individual, and on wait- in bringing people across tht</p>
        <p>...... ^ ' barriers of denominations and</p>
        <p>of the urgency of working for peade SidroSs tiiA barriers of nations.</p>
        <p>Interspersed with more long sUences toree others tpok brieflyi-a Young Africaii glfl, a white-haired New Yorker and a bespectacled Cuban whose Spanish was translated into English by an interpreter. He said in</p>
        <p>See how good it is for brothers to dwell topther^^Here we are brothers, ^e Lbrd must bless us truly if this assembly becomes united as one in his spirit ... responding to Its one truth for us all.</p>
        <p>The silent periods will contin-intermittantly through the</p>
        <p>ing silently for a word from anyone wiw might fed spiriual-ly moved to speak, characterized toe start of toe conference.</p>
        <p>Five minutes of uninterruptod silence preceded toe initial formalities in Dana Auditorium on the campus (rf Guilford CJollege, e Quaker institution on toe edge of Greensboro.</p>
        <p>Riere were brief welcoming talks from North Carolina Quaker toaders. Then came more silence but with no whispering, no shifting or shuffling of feet.</p>
        <p>Finally a bearded young man from Colchester, England, Brian Phillips, arose in the back of the auditorium and spoke, not specifically of assembly business but of a sight he had seen as he flew into tois country  the ^ire of Manhattens Riverside Churih  and of the story he heard about it.</p>
        <p>He spoke of the ministry there of the Rev. Dr. Harry</p>
        <p>ue</p>
        <p>assemUy aiid the unforseeable results from them would gc into the making iq) K outcome. Were open to anybodys ministry,* said Pwil Blanchard of Philadelphia, anybody who feels he has something of tfai</p>
        <p>Emerson Fosdick and his work I divine message.</p>
        <p>Power Failure For Downtown Lasted An Hour</p>
        <p>A power failure yesterday left downtown Greenville in darkness  and without air ccmdi-tioning  for more than an hour.</p>
        <p>Utilities Director Leonard Bloxam said the business district circuit was out for an hour and three minutes beginning at 2:50 p.m.</p>
        <p>He blamed the interruption on a cable failure in the transformer substation at the electric plant.</p>
        <p>Today Utilities workers were to splice the 15,000 volt cable with new cable. Rewiring of a control circuit was also required and an oil switch was to be inspected for damage.</p>
        <p>Bloxam said no interruption of service would be required while repairs are being made.</p>
        <p>Other circuits, besides toe business district circuit, were affected only momemtarUy by the power failure.</p>
        <p>VFW Aux Head Receives Award</p>
        <p>Mrs. Becky Brown, president of the Ladies Auxiliary of Charles Gray Morgan Post 7032 Veterans of Foreign Wars of Greenville, was presented the OBer-ry Hospital Award at a joint meeting of District II Veterans of Foreign Wars in Washington on July 23.</p>
        <p>The award was presented for outstanding work performed by the Greenville Auxiliary during the past year at OBerry Hospital for Retarded Children at (joldsboro.</p>
        <p>Tom Miller of Greenville received the Past District Commanders pin from District Commander Harry May of Farm-ville. May also appointed Bill l^w, Past Commander of Charles Gray Morgan Post, as District Membership Chairman of 1967-68.</p>
        <p>District II is composed of VFW Posts in Farmville, Goldsboro, Greenville, Grifton, Kinston, Mt. Olive, Pink Hill and Washington.</p>
        <p>Oide English Pub Becomes Export Item For Britain</p>
        <p>By EDDY GILMORE</p>
        <p>LONDON JAP) - One of toe hottest British export items today is a cool olde Englito pub.</p>
        <p>Its surprising, says Ralph Shafran. but an awful lot of countries are suddenly wanting English pubs, and we are making toem and supplying them. We are shipping toem complete with barmaids.</p>
        <p>With barmaids?</p>
        <p>Yes. As W*are now exporting an image, part of the British</p>
        <p>company to furnish 200 English pute worth over |5 million.</p>
        <p>If toe deal goes through, the pubs will be ^toitod across the United States.</p>
        <p>The companys first job was making and shipping the Bull Dog pub at Canadas Expo 67.</p>
        <p>We number all the parts and send them with do-it-yourself instructions for assembling, Shafran explains.</p>
        <p>This has proved so popular that we now not only supply the</p>
        <p>way trf fe, as you might say,|stoucture and toe funiiture but we have agreed to fumito the,toe appropriate decorations.</p>
        <p>barmaids as well.</p>
        <p>He and his brothers-in-law, operators of the pub factory, have 20 eiqjeri^nced girls ready to export.</p>
        <p>Its a good job for toe right girl, Shafran observes.</p>
        <p>Fares paid, living paid, and about 15 pounds ($42) a week clear.</p>
        <p>This month a pub called the</p>
        <p>You knowhorse brasses, bugles, hunting horns, qiorting prints stuffed fish, swords, suits of armor, even stuffed owls. The average do-it-yourself pub costs $22,(100-128,000.</p>
        <p>^rry of</p>
        <p>FALSETEETH</p>
        <p>Slipping or Irrltoting?</p>
        <p>Don't Do ittbMrMMd by looM</p>
        <p>John Bull, made and exported teeth siipping.drjpi^w^j^bj^ by the Shafran group, opened in  um*  mustecth  cm  your^</p>
        <p>Cascaij, not fw tom Usbon. A</p>
        <p>pair of English barmaids went &amp;gt;nd eounty by holding phttey mtyH down to staif it.  ,</p>
        <p>Hie pub makers also are heoith. set your dw^t negotiatteg wiUi an Amorican art"*""*"</p>
        <p>Easiest travel</p>
        <p>on earth</p>
        <p>(Havt yon triedlt iRlalst)</p>
        <p>RCmiSHINO Lemon Custard Pitt</p>
        <p>Diener's Bakery</p>
        <p>Smart Businessmen Speed Their Message Staight Through To Their Best Prospects With Daily Reflector Classified Ads</p>
        <p>Right this minute, some of the beat prospects your budnest bet are turning to the Classified section. These are people who hove made the decision to buyl They already want a product or service and are voluntarily seeking out offers to help them decide where te get it by reading through the Classified ads.</p>
        <p>Dont miss &amp;lt;Hit on this ready-to-buy" market. Join othor wise businessmen and speed your sales messages straight to these BEST prospects with-resuit-getting, inexpensive Daily Reflecter ClaMified Ads.</p>
        <p>SMART BUSINESSMEN</p>
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        <p>K  I  f</p>
        <p>TODAY! PICK THE CAR TO fit your purse, new or used. Big seleotton. Wagner-Waidrop Motors. W. End Circle, 752-XXXX.</p>
        <p>Telephone 752-6166</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>If ycm bavcii*t traveled &amp;lt;m Tsaihsej, yom kmm</p>
        <p>t k&amp;gt;t to kx&amp;gt;k forwapd to.</p>
        <p>The special treaUnent yoi get fro Fceerv-tiofK gais, ramp men, captains, everyone. Om ootorM new terminals. Oiir bright restaurantt.</p>
        <p>And the biees? The new 4107s and Silver Ea^ies. Sohd comfort Easy-diair seats. A restroom, of course. Air-conditioning.</p>
        <p>^ Faster schedules, too, on the new kiiersUitt and thm highways. Next trip, take a flyer with as. Last year miHions of people did.</p>
        <p>Trailways</p>
        <p>from OroonvHIo</p>
        <p> NEW YORK Thru Express via Turnpikes</p>
        <p> RALEIGH 4 CoBivenient iript daUy</p>
        <p> WILJIINGTON 22 Thru trips daily</p>
        <p> ST. PETERSBURG Only 1 change via Wilson</p>
        <p>CHAPTIRS  TOURS PACKAGK SXPRiSS</p>
        <p>UNION BUS STATION</p>
        <p>D8 W. STH ST.  PRONI  75Pim</p>
        <p>1-way</p>
        <p>*16.45</p>
        <p>*2.65</p>
        <p>*3.65</p>
        <p>*23.95</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0003" />
        <p>A</p>
        <p>agements Announced</p>
        <p>Th Daity Reflector, G reenvide, N. C.Tuefdeyr July 25, 19673</p>
        <p>Guests Disrupt Quiet Apartment</p>
        <p>By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: We are a retired couple with grown, married diildren. About a year ago we took a 3-year-lease on an expensive apartment. The main reason we took H was because they wont rent to anyone with children, and we like it nice and quiet</p>
        <p>Across the hall lives another retired couple. They have a married daughter who has two little wildcats for kids, and every time this daughter has a fight with her husband, she</p>
        <p>packs up and runs home to Mama with her wildcats. She has been at her mothers more than with her husband lately.</p>
        <p>They just left yesterday after a six-day stay, which nearly drove my poor husband crazy. Those kids started yelling and screaming at 6 a. m., and didnt stop until 10 p. m. Now my neighbor tells me her daughter and her hu^and have smoked the peace pipe and are going on a second honeymoon fw 3 weeks so she (the grandmother) is keeping the wildcats.</p>
        <p>Calendar Events</p>
        <p>MISS HARRIETT LEE PAYLOR ... Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland Monroe Paylor of Plymouth, who announce her engagement to Neill Patterson McDuffie Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. N. P. McDuffie Sr. of Columbia. The wedding will take place Aug. 5.</p>
        <p>MISS ANN JANE PARKER ... Is the daughter of Mr. Warren Aquilla Parker of Hobgood and the late Mrs. Parker, who announces her engagement to Robert Lewis Lane Jr., son of Mrs. Robert Lewis Lane of Ayden and the late Mr. Lane. The wedding will take place Aug. 13.</p>
        <p>Teen-Agers Keep Clothing, Experts Constantly Guessing</p>
        <p>Bv WALTER LOGAN NEW YORK (UPI)-The trouble with teen-agers is that nobody, especially clothing manufacturers, knows what they will think of next. Why, they may not even be wearing suits by the time school starts this Falljust sports jackets and lacks.</p>
        <p>Theyve gone through periods of wearing kooky hats. And still in vogue is the practice of wearing castoff military garb, preferably Doughboy jackets of World War I vintage. Then, of course, there was Mod, a shortlived fad but one whose Influence persists.</p>
        <p>Or take this summer. Manufacturers loaded up with the usual sports shirts which in the trade are called cut-and-sewn. So what did teen-agers buy? Striped knitted surfing shiils made popular by surfers on both the east and west coasts.</p>
        <p>Caught By Surprise *Tt caught everybody by surprise, said Jack Haber, editor of GQ Scene, which is a magazine devoted to teen-agers and some of their foibles.</p>
        <p>They bou^ them in crew and turtle necks and they virtually killed the cit-and-sewn market, said Haber.</p>
        <p>And everybody expected them to go for those wild surfing swim shortsthe flowered jans. Instead they went for plain solid colors which is what the surfers themselves changed to when other people started copying the jams.</p>
        <p>So manufacturers are looking forward to the back-to-school buying with some trepidati'^ The only thing theyre really</p>
        <p>Clothing: Fewer suits and more sports coats with more shape and more doublebreasted, more pattern including big plaids and windowpane checks, more colors including rusts and greens (pumpkin and pine its sometimes called) aiui mcxe coat-pants coordinates.</p>
        <p>Pants: The Mod influence lingers with bidder and more colorful patterns in plaids, stripes and checks. There is a jeans influence in the low-rise cut. More popular factors are hopsacks, corduroys and twills. Knits bonded to nylon tricot for tailoring qualities are new but an unknown quantity.</p>
        <p>Sweaters: Turtlenecks are in big after years of flat Shetland V and crew necks, .'he European influence is strong in thick cables, fishermens knits and marled knits. Expected to be popular is the longer length super bulky sweater since it often take the place of outerwear.</p>
        <p>Outerwear: The ski parka is suddenly back after an absence of several years. In everything else its dHible breasted.</p>
        <p>Shirts: The button down still reigns but the paisleys and polka dots of the Mod age are being replaced by regimental stripes, small heraldic patterns and tattersalls. Tattersalls are the most important, with wide track stripes in early demand.</p>
        <p>Girl Tale For Three Minutes</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLE NEWS</p>
        <p>COLOGNE, Germany (WNS) Why do married men suffer from deafness in the later sure of is that more double- years of their life? Dr. Martin</p>
        <p>breasted jackets will be sold,Weiner reported here that they than ever before and that sports suffer from the piercing voices</p>
        <p>coats will outsell suits up to 12 to 1.</p>
        <p>The National Association of Mens Sportswear Buyers (NAMSB), which tries to sort</p>
        <p>of their wives. Women should not talk incessantly to their husbands, the doctor prescribed. Three minutes of their continuous chatter is enough, imless</p>
        <p>out such problems in advance, | they keep their voices low and has cpme up with a few. quiet. observations forms of</p>
        <p>Mrs. Helen Stanley from Elizabeth City, Mr. and Mrs. John Althanes, Johnny, Jimmy and Debbie from Qiugtim Falls, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Andrews and childrra, Arden and Gay, of Raleigh left Saturday night after a two-day visit with Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Taylor.</p>
        <p>Miss Joyce Fulcher an^ her sistr. Miss Judy Fulcher, have returned from a European tour.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Muriel Mo&amp;lt;n*e accompanied by her son, Danny, of Norfolk spent 10 days with her parents, Mr. and Mra. W. Mack Wym. They went to Dansville, Va., Wilmington, Wrightsville Beach and visited Mrs. Wyms aunt Mrs. Oscar Council, in Plymouth.</p>
        <p>Miss Brooks Lee, Miss Patty Briant and Miss Joy Roberson attended the ACA Cheerleaders Camp at Pembroke State (College, Pembroke.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Barnhill visited her niece, Mrs. Phillips, and her husband in Fredericksburg enroute home from a week tour of the mountains.</p>
        <p>Sgt. Fred Matthews who com-leted a two-year tour at Lakes-eath, England, spent 20 days with his sister, Mrs. Laura Thomas, and their mother, Mrs. George Matthews, before leaving Raleigh by plane Friday for his new assignment at McCord, Wash.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Henry Archer left Thursday for her home in Houston, Tex. follow!^ a three-weeks visit with friends and relatives in Robersonville.</p>
        <p>Samuel Roebuck of Elizabeth City was the weekend guest of his mother, Mrs. Ethel Roebuck.</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. H. Scarborough and daughter, Linda, from Wisacky, S. C. spent a few days with her cousin, Mrs. Wiley B. Roger-son and family.</p>
        <p>Charles James spent last week visiting his cousin, Walter E. Briley Jr., in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Shep Roebuck of Rocky Mount spent Sunday with relatives in Robersonville.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J. Harney and two grandchildren of West Palm Beach, Fla., arrived Monday to spend 10 days with their daughter, Mrs. Eb Cara-wan and family and Mrs. Harneys mother, Mrs. Levi Creecy. Enroute home from the Uni</p>
        <p>predictions and based on various research and thinks the look will be one of ruggeo elegance; which could be anything from military to western.  I</p>
        <p>The Outlook But in general the outlook is:</p>
        <p>WIGS ON SALE</p>
        <p>100% HUMAN HAIR WIG. ALL WIGS GOING FOR THE LOW</p>
        <p>PRICE OF .V. .</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>95</p>
        <p>WIGARAAAA</p>
        <p>IM Atlantic Ato.OH DfckkiioB Ave.Nft te Imperial Toliacce Company GreeavlUe, N.C.</p>
        <p>versily of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Mrs. Esther Tyler Roberson visited Mrs, Shelby Jean Ek)uncil in Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Miss Francis Fletcher and Miss Jeanine Taylor of Laurin-burg spent a few days with Mr. and Bifrs. Clarence D. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Gayton Dowell Taylor and family were their weekend guests.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Harold Evans and their three children, Hal, Meg and Bill, of Atlanta, Ga., arrived Friday for a wi^end visit with his sister, Mrs. Wiley Burroughs Rogerson and family and attend the wedding of his niece. Miss Mat^e Rogerson and Lt. Daniel Partin.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Harry Gayton Roberson and daughter have returned to their home after a visit with her sister Mrs., (Christine Hendrick and family in Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Johnson of Martinsburg, Va., spent several days last week with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Tyler, and her mother, Mrs. WaJter Swindell. They accompanied her to Rocky Mount Sunday morning.</p>
        <p>Herbert Higbsmith and his son, Herbie, left last week for the Petham, Ga., tobacco market.</p>
        <p>Catherine, J and Celia Roberson of Wauchese and theLr parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Roberson, spent Wednesday night with the (Mdrens grandmother, Mrs. Blanche Robeson.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Harvey Lee Winberry and Miss Brenda Winberry were the Wednesday guests of their daughter and sister Mrs. Franklin Congleton, and her husband in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Taylor and their two children from New berry, N.Y., spent one week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Taylor.</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Creasy K. Proctor, Order ot DeMolay meets at Masonic Hall 8:00 p.m.  Naval Reserve meets in basement of Austin Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Withla Ck)uncil, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Gub 8:00 p.m. Pitt County Alcoholic Anonymous meets at AA Bldg. &amp;lt;m Farmville Hwy. Telephone 752-5115</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 9:00 a.m. - 4:45 p.m.  Girl Scout Day Camp at Camp Hardee. Bus leaves Rose High School at 9 a.m.</p>
        <p>1:45 p.m.  Wednesday Afternoon Duplicate Bridge Gub weekly game at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m.  Kiwanis Gub meets</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Pitt Ekiunty Al-Anon Group meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville Hwy. Telephone 758-2969 or 758-2811 THURSDAY 9:00 a.m. - 4:45 p.m.  Girl Scout Day Camp at Camp Har dee. Bus leaves Rose High School at 9 a.m.</p>
        <p>9:30 a.m.Newcomers Gub meets at Planters Bank for</p>
        <p>bridge and canasta. Telephone Mrs. Savage, 752-3966 or Mrs. Gillahan, 758-3634 6:30 p.m.  Exchange Gub meets</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.Jaycees meet at Rotary Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Chapter 1308 of the Women of the Moose 7:00 p.m.  Winterville Kiwanis Gub meets in Community Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Open meeting of Alcoholics Friendship Group at Hooker Memorial Giurch 8:00 p.m.  VFW Auxiliary meets at Post Home FRIDAY 9:00 a.m. - 4:45 p.m.  Girl Scout Day Camp at Camp Hardee. Bus leaves Rose High School at 9 a.m.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.Redmen meet 7:30 p.m. Regular session of Faculty Duplicate Gub at Planters Bank</p>
        <p>I complained to my landlord, and he said the children are guests, not tenants, so theres nothing he can do about it Please give me some advice.</p>
        <p>DEAR GOING: Talk to a lawyer and le* him lo(A over your lease. If it has a loophole large enough for two wildcats to squeeze through for an indefinite period of time, you are out of luck. Otherwise you may have a case.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I get sick to my stomach every time I look out of our window and see the little 6-year-old neighbor boy mowing their lawn with a power lawn mower. And with SNEAKERS on no less!</p>
        <p>These people would not take kindly to any warnings from well-meaning neighbors.</p>
        <p>Perhaps if you were to point out the dangers, it might get their attention, and save their child the loss of a foot. Or perhaps even his life. 'Thanks, AWy.</p>
        <p>ABBY FAN</p>
        <p>DEAR FAN: Small matter whether your neighbors would</p>
        <p>AYDEN NEWS</p>
        <p>Shower Honors, AAiss Fallowfield</p>
        <p>Miss Sandra Fallowfield was honored at a tnidal show^ on Monday evenii^;. Miss Susan Pierce was hostess at her home on Rock Spring Road.</p>
        <p>On m'ival, Miss Fallowfield was presented with a corsage of daisies.</p>
        <p>Ihe house was decorated with summer Bowers and the bridal table was centered wifii an arrangement of zinnias and kitchen gadgets.</p>
        <p>Guests included close friends of the bride-deci.</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>Haymes</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. V. W. Haymes of Virginia Beach, Va., a son, John Thomas McMullan, on Jidy 16, 1967. Mrs. Haymes is the former Ekiwina McMullan of Greenville.</p>
        <p>PERSONAL</p>
        <p>Mrs. Sam Worthington Sr. is recuperating from surgery in Duke Hospital, room 3309, Durham.</p>
        <p>Edwards</p>
        <p>Bora to Capt and Mrs. Tommy Edwards, a daughter, Sharon</p>
        <p>Elizabeth, on July 17, 1967, in I several days with his family. Texas.    Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jackson</p>
        <p>and family of Grifton, Mr. and</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Cannon and children spent tiie weekend at White Lake.</p>
        <p>Miss Nancy Langdon of Smithfield and Mr. Albert K. Harieon of Woodland were recent guests of Mrs. A. F. Rave Jr.</p>
        <p>M*. and Mrs. William E. Socks and family have returned from White Lake.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. A1 Tenpenny and children are spending several days at Wrightsville Beach.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Charles Holliday and Robin of Edent(m'spent the weed-end with Mr. and Mrs. A. L. McLawhwn.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Josephine Ross has returned to her home in Norfolk, Va., after visiting friends here.</p>
        <p>Billy Bullock of Washington spent the first of the week with Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bullock.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Murphy Heary of Arlington, Va., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wilver Heary.</p>
        <p>Wilver Heary and Mr. Foster Ried attended a family reunion I in Oxford Sunday.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Dail and family of Raleigh were local visitors &amp;amp;inday.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Cox have been visiting relatives.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Wingate Dail is a patient at Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Dot Carruth is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospitd.</p>
        <p>Boyce Harrington is spending</p>
        <p>Wilson</p>
        <p>Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dixie Wilson of Rt. 5, Greenville, a son, on July 24, 1967, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Stuart Tripp and family, Georgey Garris and Bill Gooding spent the weekend &amp;lt;m the Pungo River near Belhaven at the Hardee cottage.</p>
        <p>LAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>Diamond Setting, Remounting And Repair Done On The Premises Qreenvilles Only Registered Jeweler</p>
        <p>ftaglstered Jeweler</p>
        <p>kmem9m%odS!f</p>
        <p>WEDNESDArS</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>END-OF-BOLT SALE</p>
        <p>UP TO 3 YD. LENGTHS - 45" WIDE POPLINS - BROADCLOTH - PRINTS - SOLIDS ALL TYPES OF FABRICS - VALUES OF 1.00 TO 1.99</p>
        <p>WED.</p>
        <p>ONLY</p>
        <p>YD.</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>Mrs. Irma B. Collins has been been visiting in Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Phillips have been visiting Mrs. M. C. PhUlips.</p>
        <p>Dr. and Mrs. Horton Jolly have returned to their home in Jacksonville, Fla.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Helen D. Russell, Mrs. Allan Johnson and Mrs. P. R. Taylor are visiting in the western part of state.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hocics and family of Flca-ida are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Maurn Cox.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Alice Futrell of Hertford has been visiting relatives.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Allie J. Russell of Sea-ford, Del., is visiting relatives.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Bob Johnscm and children are visiting relatives in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Mrs. H. T. West is taking a tour of the southern states.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Marion &amp;amp;imrell have returned to their home in Rocky Mount, Va.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Billy Pierce and family have retunied to their home in Florida.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Lee of Bayboro spent the weekwid with Mr. and Mrs. Allan Suttcn.</p>
        <p>take kindly to your wa:7m?s. Warn them anyhow. And warn the boy, too.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: My husband i on the road 3 or 4 days a week, but he is always home on t ie weed-ends. We have a year c.d baby and another on the way. I have been warned by good friends that I had better travel with my husband if 1 want to save my marriage.</p>
        <p>I suppose my mother would keep my child tf I asked her to, but I dont t|iink that would b right. And if I were to go on the road with my husband, it would be hard for me in my condition to go from hotel to hotel and do all that traveling. My husband thinks I should stay close to home. I would appreciate your advice.</p>
        <p>MIXED UP</p>
        <p>DEAR MKED: I agree with your husband. I dont know what your good friends are ti7ing to tell you, but if you have to go on the road with your husband m OTder to save your marriage, that road wiU tw a blind alley.</p>
        <p>Problems? Write to Abhy, Box 69700, Los Angeles, California, For a personal r^ly, inclose a stamped, self - addresses enva-lope.</p>
        <p>FOR AERYS NEW BOOK-LET WHAT TEEN - AGERS WANT 'TO KNOW SEND $1.00 TO ABBY, BOX 09700, h09 ANGELES, CAL. 90069.</p>
        <p>EYEGLASSES</p>
        <p>CONTACT LENSES</p>
        <p>NEARM6 MD6</p>
        <p>Bring your prescrlptlaa to:</p>
        <p>r-</p>
        <p>-PTfCIANt. 6m.</p>
        <p>GREENVNAI</p>
        <p>503 Evans St PhoM TK-THI Other Office la Ralefgb. Gneoribof, daitotto</p>
        <p>r"'i .......!",LJ   a</p>
        <p>HUG^ 21.\21 Outside Dimension Size</p>
        <p>SWIMMING POOL</p>
        <p>SALE!</p>
        <p>HAVE  FUN</p>
        <p>IN YOlJf&amp;gt; VERY CHVN BACK YARD POOl</p>
        <p>regular $1495.00  SAVE</p>
        <p>Limitad Offarl May bd withdrawn at any tima.</p>
        <p>'  V  /  FrATUKFn</p>
        <p>^ Sorry/</p>
        <p>NO MONEY DOWN  Homcowncn</p>
        <p>UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY .  Only</p>
        <p>COMPLETELY INSTALLED</p>
        <p>IMPERIAL POOLS</p>
        <p>INCWDtS:</p>
        <p> Filter and Pmp</p>
        <p> Walk Around Decks</p>
        <p>Oiher Sizes    Steel Bracing</p>
        <p>Proporf'onaLely  ^  Pool Ladder</p>
        <p>Low Priced  ^  Safety Fence &amp;amp; Stairs</p>
        <p>CALL Mr. Collins TODAY CALL COLLECT</p>
        <p>919-274-4656</p>
        <p>sm</p>
        <p>IMPERIAL SWIMMING POOL COMPANY 1130 Wast Laa Straat, Graansbora, N. C. ara intaratlad in your full llna and laam-ins mora about your apaclal offar and about tlia imparlal Swimmins PoaL Wa unoaratand wa ara undar na obligatiaa a buy.</p>
        <p>FILL OUT CARD COMPLETELY . . . Wa</p>
        <p>Nama  _________________________</p>
        <p>Addrau ___....  .........</p>
        <p>Pilona Diractions Call la AM (</p>
        <p>  City</p>
        <p>} PM I 1 NH^ I 1</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0004" />
        <p>Tuasdty, July 25, 1967  .</p>
        <p>Criminal Activity Not The Answer</p>
        <p>Solutions to racial problems and the economic plight of some citizens will not be found through rioting, looting and burning stores, or shooting down innocent victims with snipers bullets.</p>
        <p>The social and economic problems which the nation faces today must be resolved through calm, forthright appraisal and determined, realistic attempts to find workable and logical answers to the most complex of questions.</p>
        <p>Disasters of Newark, Rochester, Watts and now Detroit do not bring the nation closer to solving this difficult problem. They do not hasten the day when racial tensions in the cities will ease. They do not hasten the day when inequities in job opportunities, educational achievement or economic status between racial groups will be erased. They only make bad matters worse and strained race relations more difficult to maintain without complete rupture. Lawlessness encourages lawlessness and disregard for the rights of others only encourages anarchy on a broad footing.</p>
        <p>Steps toward solutions to the enormously complex problem may be taken at the conference table, but they can never be taken in the streets. Constructive action may be taken when people of good will set about mutually to resolve a mutual problem, but it is never taken with a torch or fire bomb or brick or bullet.</p>
        <p>The long hot summer some agitators promised has exploded in full force in a few cities. In a number of others there have been threats, but hopefully cooler heads have prevailed and these threats have been ext ngui hed. This is not a time for marching or demonstrating or worse in any community, large or small. It is time for keeping the lines of communications open between the races. It is a time for seeking realistic solutions to very real problems which exist almost universally to a greater or lesser degree. It is time for carefully following the good</p>
        <p>examples of which, fortunately there are many, rather than the bad examples of which, fortunately, there are relatively few, but which grab the headlines and dominate the scene of the moment.</p>
        <p>In Death As In Life-A Beautiful Passing</p>
        <p>Had Carl Sandburg written a summation of his life, he could not have chosen more appropriate words than those chosen by his widow to describe his death: *a beautiful passing.</p>
        <p>The world and this nation are better places because of the life of Carl Sandburg. To this land he loved, he left an invaluable legacy in his free verse and other literary works. But the legacy is not just the volumes he compied. It is in the message which will be delivered to this and future generations through those writings. , .the message of the challenge of mans existence, the message of liberty and its meanings, its costs and its adversaries. Sandburgs writings carry the message in the language of the people of whom he wrote and of the problems with which people have to cope.</p>
        <p>Although in recent years he had declined to discuss politics, and although he lived quietly at his goat ranch near Flat Rock, he was never aloof from the problems of the people or the times. His writings and his public comments attest to that. They also attest to the challenge he threw out to this and future generations to live up to the high ideals of this great land, to make liberty the living spirit of the land rather than just a byword.</p>
        <p>Carl Sandburgs life, like his death, was a beautiful passing which left the world much richer than it was before.</p>
        <p>ist Blessinas</p>
        <p>And Be</p>
        <p>Bigotry Given Happy An Endorsement</p>
        <p>io Aeaaan</p>
        <p>A President Divided By JAMES KILPATRICK</p>
        <p>Himself</p>
        <p>By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)-The best exercise a man can take is to count his blessings.</p>
        <p>Unlike counting calories, it doesnt reduce ones weight. But its hard to think of a better way to cure the blues.</p>
        <p>Being the contrary creature that Iw is, man is now and then ov*whelmed by a nameless melancholy for which he finds it hard to find a reason Hes just in the dumps, and that is it.</p>
        <p>As the old saying goes, Some people can find something to cry about even when they have both arms full of bread.</p>
        <p>At such times it can help to shake off the doldrums and revive the spirit simply to sit down and list the things that do out a zing in living.</p>
        <p>For example:</p>
        <p>BAL</p>
        <p>BOYLE</p>
        <p>The courtships of pigeons, which are even mwe pompous than the coifftships of people.</p>
        <p>The easygoing singing of Andy Williams.</p>
        <p>Being told by the doctor, *Theres nothing wrong with you that a little common sense living wont cure.</p>
        <p>Giving as a tip to the taxicab driver a quarter that the passengo* before you dropped</p>
        <p>on the floor. It leaves you feeling like a philanthropist.</p>
        <p>Sitting on a country fenc? and watching the stars bloom like fireflies in the sky.</p>
        <p>The clean, sweet smell of newly ironed bedsheets and pajamas after a long, tiring day.</p>
        <p>The joy of coming home to someone youd hate ever to be without.</p>
        <p>Discovering your tomato plants escaped the cutworms that have  wrecked  every</p>
        <p>neighbors garden.</p>
        <p>Awarding a 50-cent prize to the small lad at a picnic who can spit a watermelon seed the farthest.</p>
        <p>All the  wonderful  taste</p>
        <p>boons of summerblueberries, and strawberries, milk-white corn (XI the cob, the golden flesh of cantaloupes, and the innocent refreshment of glass after tall glass of tan-gy ice tea.</p>
        <p>The startlement of plunging deep into a cold lake.</p>
        <p>Hunting for four-leaf clovers with a young lady while she chatters on about how glad she is that she weathered kindergarten and fearful she is of the perils that await her in the first grade.</p>
        <p>Seeing the fwideful patriotism in the eyes of middle-aged veterans carrying a flag in a parade.</p>
        <p>Finding out that those little insects your back porch arent termites after all.</p>
        <p>Opening your pay envelope and discovering a little more there, proving that the boss is still aware that youre in the land of the living.</p>
        <p>The memory of unexpected favors from strangers, which (Continaed On Page I)</p>
        <p>By JAMES MARLOW</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Almost 1,000 Negroes at the Black Power conference in Newark, N. J.some of them in African-type clothing, earrings and sandals wound up going beyond the kind of white prejudice which has made them bitter.</p>
        <p>They adopted a series of resolutions setting up their own brand of antiwhite prejudice as a way of life. They even approved religious bigotry. Christianity was called a white religion.</p>
        <p>And one resolution said: Every black church and all religious institutions that do not join the black revolution shall be boycotted, ostracized, criticized, publicized and rejected by the black community.</p>
        <p>The delegates called for a study of the possibility of splitting the United States into two nationsone white, one black. The basic tone of the</p>
        <p>has exactly explained it. And while the conference struggled over it he was in England preaching the Black Power gospel.</p>
        <p>One British newspaper, the London Daily Sketch, called on the government to prosecute or deport him. The paper quoted him as telling an audience in England: It is time to let the white know we are going to take over. If they dont like it, we will stamp them outusing violence and other means necessary.</p>
        <p>Not all Negro organizations for example, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peoplewere officially represented at the conference.</p>
        <p>Only a week ago at its national convention the NAACP condemned the Newark riots although blaming the city</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>ectric Car Bills Stal.</p>
        <p>The electric car bills have run out of gas on Capitol Hill, and not even the energetic promotion of Senators Magnu-son and Muskie is likely to get them back on the road. For the time being, at least, the government will keep its hands off the throttle.</p>
        <p>Several factors account for the cooling of a legislative package that was hot six months ago. Foremost among these is the strenuous opposition of spokesmen for the automobile, petroleum, and chemical industries. The last thing they want to see right now is a Federally sponsored program of research and development in the field of electric cars.</p>
        <p>The Johnson administration</p>
        <p>is almost as unenthusiastic, partly for budgetary reasons. Transportation Secretary Alan Boyd, who might have been expected to seize upon the Muskie - Magnuson proposals, if only to pursue tie customary course of empire-building, prefers to wait upon developments within the private sector. Meanwhile, a Commerce Department study committee is working on a preliminary report, expected in early fall, and it seems reasonable to delay congressional consideration until this comes along. In sum, the bills are stalled.</p>
        <p>You will hear no complamt from this corner. If the competitive forces of private industry can solve the smog</p>
        <p>conference was separatist.</p>
        <p>But there was a huge fallacy in this, which the delegates didnt face up to.</p>
        <p>Tlie conference was held to see if Negroes of varying views could decide what Black Power meant and how it could be put into action. The words were first used by Stokely Carmichael in 1966 :n Mississippi.</p>
        <p>But he wasnt any help to the conference in explaining what he meant by the phrase in the first place. He never</p>
        <p>administration for not doing enough to meet the grave social ills of the Negro com- v-^LiltU munityand called upci all law-abiding citizeiK of both races to act promptly and sternly to put down such violence.</p>
        <p>The Newark conference adopted a resolution against the Army draft of Negroes for (Continued On Page S)</p>
        <p>E(ditors Saying Teacher Strikes</p>
        <p>problem, either by cleaning up the internal combustion engine or by developing a new power source, so much the better. Government ought never to undertake what industry is capable of doing for itself.</p>
        <p>But Welfare Secretary John Gardner said a mouthful, some months ago, when he remarked that the automobile and society are on a collision course. Some 95 million automobiles and trucks are now on the roads. They are fouling the atmosphere with 125,000 tons a day of pollutants  carbon monoxide, gaseous hydrocarbons, . nitrogen oxide compounds. By actual measurement, the emissions from internal combusion engines constitute from 50 to 90 per cent of the smog that is making urban life intolerable. In time the present level of dissatisfaction will become a revolt.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED</p>
        <p>Established 1882</p>
        <p>Published AAonday Through Friday Afternoons and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Ek)ard JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers</p>
        <p>Entered at Post  GreenviUe*  N.C.</p>
        <p>as second clau mall matter</p>
        <p>#</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES Heme Dtlivtry By Carrier or Meter Reute Week 40c By Mall, Payable In Advance</p>
        <p>One Year .............................................. $18 oo</p>
        <p>Six Months ............................................ 9.50</p>
        <p>Three Months ..................  5.00</p>
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        <p>(Prices tnclnde sales (ax where applicable)</p>
        <p>MEMBER OF ASSOCUTED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publi. C9too bO news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise crsdlted to this paper and also the local news publisbed hereto. All rights o puUlcatkms o special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
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        <p>request</p>
        <p>Strength For To(day</p>
        <p>This Date-</p>
        <p>40 Years Ago Today</p>
        <p>By EARL L. DOUGLASS RISING ABOVE HANDICAP</p>
        <p>Beethoven suffered untold agony because he was deaf. When he came to the end of his life, he could not hear a single tone of the great compositions he had produced. Just a short time before the end, he sat in the orchestra pit looking up at the orchestra director and beating time for one of his compositions which was being produced. He could not hear the thunderous applause, as the piece ended, and when he was lifted by the hand and turned around to face a cheering audience, he could only stare at them vacantly, hearing not the faintest suggestion of hand-clap-ping.</p>
        <p>Protest runs through the whole of his musical compositions, It protrudes like sharp thorns thrusting themselves through soft down. Beethoven could not repress the bitterness he felt over the tragic frony of a man producing deathless melodies yet not b  ing able to hear a single tone of what he had produced.</p>
        <p>There are some things in the world we will never understand. No one could explain to Beethoven the significance of an affliction. But John Milton was also afflicted. It was blindness in his case. Christ-ain faith raised him above his affliction and caused him to sing sweetly and praise Goi even as he sat in drakness.</p>
        <p>Only Christian faith can comfort one in such straits.</p>
        <p>By FOY H. DUNCAN July 25, 1927 No Protest In Hearing On River &amp;amp;idge</p>
        <p>Members of the United States War Department met at the courthouse this morning to hear protests in connection with the proposed construction of a new bridge over the Tar River, but as no protests were presented the meeting was adjourned. The plans of the new Inidge which call for a fixed span will ,e submitted to the War Department in Washington immediately, it was stated. . . .</p>
        <p>Recovering From Mad-Dog Bite</p>
        <p>Hoyt, the little four - year -old son of Mr. and Mrs. M.C. Minges, who was bitten by a rabid dog Sunday, July 10th, is taking his treatment and getting along nicely.</p>
        <p>(Christian Science Monitor)</p>
        <p>Although a strike by teachers is still a rather rare occurrence today, support for the strike as the ultimate weapon against school boards is mounting. And 1 le trend is likely to accelerate. Hie strike may soon become a major weapon in the teachers bargaining arsenal.</p>
        <p>The 140,000 - member American Federation of Teachers led the way toward a m o r e militant approach. Now the million-member National Education A^ociation (NEA) is moving toward support of strikes undertaken by local affiliates. Its 81-member board of directors adopted a resolution tendering national sup^iort to locals when they decide to strike as a last resort.</p>
        <p>Support of a work stoppage would be forthcoming after all other good-faith efforts fail, including mediation, fact-finding, arbitration, political action and sanctions (which means that teachers are asked to boycott the system).</p>
        <p>President Johnson called for legislation to prevent strikes which would do irreparable harm to the national interest. But neither he nor Congress</p>
        <p>has acted. Not far removed from such strikes are stoppages by policemen, firemen, bus drivers, sanitation workers, social workers, teachers, and others who perform vital public services. What limitations should be imposed on their right to strike? Under what conditions should teachers' be allowed to shut down classrooms for an indefinite period of time?</p>
        <p>In choosing the lesser of several evils, perhaps the answer may have to be some form of compulsory arbitration. Some states have moved or are moving in the direction of mandatory collective bargaining, with the teachers pitted against the school boards.</p>
        <p>When school opens in September and teachers suddenly announce they will not fulfill their contracts to teach unless certain demands are met, it is the children who suffer the most. Certainly it is irresponsible of teachers to strike before exhausting all other available means. And should a strike occur, surely it is irresponsible of society to let it go on when the education of the children is the chief victim.</p>
        <p>A battery - powered, electric car may not be the answer. In the long haul, some form of hydrogen-oxygen fuel cell doubtless will be contrived. Such giants as Allis-Chal-mers, Union (Darbide, Monsanto, and General Electric have programs of fuel cell research in progress now, but no one minimizes the difficulties inherent in transferring ^ace technology to the family buggy.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, other companies are searching for a billion-dollar breakthrough in battery design. General Dynamics is working on a zinc-air cell battery. Ford is actively interested in a sodium-suKur cell. Guitn Industries and Gaieral Motors are tinkering with lith-lium-nickel and lithium-chlorine. Westinghouse is in t h e act. The Edison Electric Institute is all charged up.</p>
        <p>All this activity is bound to pay off  probably within the next five years  in the production of an electric car that would meet minimum design requirements. Such a car would travel 150 to miles without recharging; it would reach speeds of 50 miles an hour or more; it would be safe and inexpensive. Best of all, it (Continned On Page I)</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON-A shrouded, higMy significant change in Richard M. Nixons Presidential strategy since the rise of Governor Ronald Reagan ia cleaffly evident in his backstage handling of one recent development in New York Politics.</p>
        <p>The developmetot involves an obscure conservative Republican politician from the New YOTk City borough Queens named Vincent Lei-Ml. In 1964, Leibeil bucked the liberal-oriented state Republican organization bsailed by Governor Neis(m Rockefeller, was elected a delegate to the National Cnvention, and voted for Barry Goldwater instead of Rockefeller in Saa Francisco. A few weeks ago, Libell announced he would again be an anti-organization candidate for delegate, this time backing Dick Nixon for President.</p>
        <p>was no public reaction from Nixon. But his privatt reacti(m, intense and unequivocal, was relayed to the regular state party by Charles McWhorter, one of Nixons most trusted political lieutenants. What McWhorter said bolls down to this:</p>
        <p>Vincent Leibeil has no connection whatever with the Nixon &amp;lt;M*ganization. Nixon most definitely is not sponsoring raids on the state delegation (which Rockefeller now plans to throw to Romney, Nixons prindpal rival) m Queens or any other county. Indeed, Nixons Presidential strategy specifically excludes raids in Rockefeller country.</p>
        <p>Nor is this Nixon strategy twist limited to New York. It reflects a nationwide policy quietly hammered out by Dr. Gaylord Parkinson, Nir ; campaign manager, and Pai&amp;gt; kins(Mis political technician, Robert Walker. They are wil^ ling to cede Leibell-type mavericks and doctrinaire conservatives to Reagan. Or, as one Nixon insider put it to us: *Let Ronnie have the kooks.</p>
        <p>Nixons strategy shift is partly bom of necessity. The Republican right, which never really trusted Nixon, has been deserting him for Reagan over the last six months. The point is iat the desertion of the kooks is privately welcomed by the Parkinson-Walker strategy as a means of making Nixon not only more acceptable to Ibieral-to-moderaU Republicans but to party regulars gen:ally.</p>
        <p>This contraste sharply with what was happeining just a year ago, before the Parkinson-Walker team took over. Patrick Buchanan, Nixons young aide with good contacts in the conservative movement, was smoothing relations between Nixon and William F. Buckleys National Review set as well as the righ-wing Young Americans for Freedom (YAF).</p>
        <p>Now, however, Nixons contacts with the right have halt-(Continued On Page S)</p>
        <p>Quotes</p>
        <p>Love cannot be forced, love cannot be coaxed and teased. It comes out of heaven, unasked and unsought. Pearl Buck.</p>
        <p>It is hard to see how it is possible for nations to live together in peace if they can? not leara to reason together. President Johnson.</p>
        <p>Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Oscar Wilde.</p>
        <p>Many Products Leaving Market</p>
        <p>Unusual Attractions At College ms Week</p>
        <p>The director of the summer term of East Carolina Teachers College announces two unusual attractions for the week, Tuesday night, July 28, George Rossely, lyric tenor, will appear and on Thursday night, July 28, the Elena de Sayh string quartet will render a program of Slovic music . . ,</p>
        <p>Mias Gretehen Parker left for Virginia Beach where she will spend the summer.</p>
        <p>Miss Mary Mayo Savage has returned from WrighteviUe Beach where she is spending the summer.</p>
        <p>Miss Mary Lee Pittman has returned from a visit in Rocky Mount and Benson.</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER</p>
        <p>Many products will disappear from the market in the months ahead.</p>
        <p>Profits are being squeezed. Many items that were profitable last year wont be profitable in late 1967. Manufacturers and retailers will close them out.</p>
        <p>The squeeze on profits comes from many directions. The principal pressures are:</p>
        <p>Taxes: It now seems certain that personal income and corporation taxes will be raised by the federal government. Higher personal income taxes will cut buying power. Federal corporation taxes do not apply unless there is a profit, but many state and local taxes  which are also going up  are levied on sales, income, payrolls and other transac</p>
        <p>tions that exist even if a company is losing money.</p>
        <p>The Big Wage Squeeze Wages. Events of the past week in railroad, rubber, copper, auto and other industries show the strength of the broad drive for higher wages. Congress has ordered higher mnimums and higher Social Security levies for next year.</p>
        <p>BLMKR</p>
        <p>ROESSNER</p>
        <p>Materials. The commodity price index has been comparatively stable during recent</p>
        <p>years of inflation, but now the pressures are beginning to tell. Government action is pushing up the price of grains, cheese, dairy products and silver. Strike action is pushing up the costs of copper, tires and a few other commt^ties. However, new tariffs may lower the prices of some 6,000 imports, including chemicals, furniture materials, etc.</p>
        <p>Transport. Recent wage gains by Teamsters and probable substantial pay rises among railroad workers guarantee higher costs of moving goods by truck and rail, and i^at bears on the cost of practically everything. Safety legislation will force up the price of autos.</p>
        <p>What Business Must Do</p>
        <p>The first reaction by business will be to raise prices to offset these pressures. Bat</p>
        <p>that may price many things out of the market.</p>
        <p>The second will be to take something out of the product, simplifying it, using cheaper components, etc. But the intense competition of the market place today limits this.</p>
        <p>The third is to drop products from which jwofits have been squeezed.</p>
        <p>First to go will be those la which labor costs are a larger component than materials. L&amp;gt; bor has gone up further thaa materials. They will be followed by others as profits fade away.</p>
        <p>It is a safe assumption that today eve^ large oorporattoo is analyzing present and future costs of every product, preseit and prospective profit margins, and making plans accor(Mngly*</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0005" />
        <p>Goren on BRIDGE</p>
        <p>^ BT CBARUS R GOREBT</p>
        <p>' ! IHT Ir Tkt cmcm* TrttaM]</p>
        <p>Both vulnerable. Went deals. NORTH</p>
        <p>C?K</p>
        <p>OKJia</p>
        <p> QlfS3</p>
        <p>. WEST  EAST</p>
        <p>V 41ti  4AQt72</p>
        <p>- C?Jg74  C?VoM</p>
        <p>~ OtiSSZ  OAQ874</p>
        <p>S7  AJ2</p>
        <p>SOUTH</p>
        <p> KJt</p>
        <p>K?AQlAttS32</p>
        <p>O VtM</p>
        <p> K4 Hit bidding:</p>
        <p>,WeH  Nerth  Saat  Soatii</p>
        <p>Paaa  Paea  14  4^</p>
        <p>Page  Pass  Bble.  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>' Opening lead: Ten of 4 A substantial swing re-, suited when this hand was "'dealt in e recent team-of-four contest At &amp;lt;ie table Smith broi^M home a vulneratde four heart contract, however, the defense a&amp;lt;diieved an i^set at the other table as the result of a well ctHiceivcd play by Eart.</p>
        <p>- M one table, West opened 'the ten of spades and East ^put up the ece and returned the seven. South finessed the jack and udien it held the trick, he crossed over to the king of hearts-and ruffed a' diamond to get back to his hand. He played two more high trumps and claimed his contract announcing that he was conceding a tridc to the " jack of hearts, and the ace o4 clubs in additkin to the spade already lost.</p>
        <p>At the other table the opening lead was also the ten of spades, but' here the defense took a flferent course. East observed that</p>
        <p>a short bidding hi spades either a doubleton or  siqgieton-whicfa meent that the dederv held either three or four cards in that wtL masmudi aa Souti ia abort of entries to dummy to make qwde idaya tor himself. East daeidsd to' retahi control of the Sint Gambling that his partner did not have  singleton, he permitted South</p>
        <p>' his nartner was leading fnnn</p>
        <p>to win a cheap trick with the jaick by following to the opening lead with ms seven of q&amp;gt;adee.</p>
        <p>Declarer cooesed over to the king of hearts hi ordr to play a spa^ toward the king. East put tg&amp;gt; the ace mid returned the nine for his partner to ni. West crib-served that both the qimen and the deuce at spades were missing, and he paused to detem^ what message his partner was trying to convey.</p>
        <p>Assuming that East waa following the precqits of the suit prfo"ence cMwentkm, he would have returned the &amp;lt;]ueen of spades, his highest card in the suit, if his reentry was in diamond. The return ctf the deuce'spades, the lowest osrd, would have requested Wem to put him back in with a dub. Inasmuch as Eaist had kd his middle card in spades, West concluded that bis partner must have both the ace of diamonds and the ace of clubs and was leaving the dioice ig) to West.</p>
        <p>After a mental flip of the coin. West decided to c&amp;lt;ne back with the eight of chibs, which proved to be a fortuitous decisicm for the defense. East put up the ece and a fourth round of spades enabled West to score the setting trick on an overruff with tito jack of hearts.</p>
        <p>Ayden News</p>
        <p>Movie-Makeis Fear Stories On Vietnam Not Box Office</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, July 25, 1967S ^</p>
        <p>By GENE HAND8AKEH</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOC) (AP)  Why have Hdlywood tnovit makers virtisaQy Ignored toe Vietaam</p>
        <p>World War n faepired a concurrent deluge of battle dnHl-ers: Bataan, Corregidor, Guadalcanal Diary, Action in the North Atlantic. Destination Tokyo, etc. Many were tributes to flying heroes: Air Force, 30 Seconds Over Tokyo, Ffying Fortress, Dive Bontoer, God Is My Copilot, etc.</p>
        <p>Korea brought Stoel Helmet, and producen files list even such World War I titles as War Brides and War and the Woman.</p>
        <p>Americans have been dying in Vietnam tor eight years, bet so far there has been almost nothing from the muvle studios on their heroism. The studios wont officially say why, but industry insiders have tiieir opinions: Vietnam is well covered by</p>
        <p>Take'Brush-Up' Course At UNC</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL - Grover W. Everett and Donald W. Zimmerman, faculty members of Carolina University, are participating in a bmto-up deetro-nks course for sdmittots at the University of North Cardina at Chapd Hill Everett is a professor in the</p>
        <p>Marriage licenses have been * vie Jean Haddock, Rt. 2, Ay-issued to tiie iollowing white den; Charles Fearrington Ma-couples from the office of Mrs. I son, Rt. 2, Newpmt, and Susan Elvu'a Allred, Pitt County reg- Earl Mason, Atlantic; Thomas</p>
        <p>ist:r O deeds, since July 11: Bobby Gene Grubbs, Rt. 1, VriL*lile, and Joy Ann Win-gle, la. 1, GrUton; Robert</p>
        <p>Bradford Bryant and Brenda Carol Owens, both of Ayden;</p>
        <p>Daniel Wayne Wooldard, Rt 2. Washington, and Betty Jean</p>
        <p>Bruce Uail, Kt. 1, Snow Hill,' Parker, Rt 1, Washington; and Mamie Al.en Lovic, Farm- Charles Butler.and Mary John-ville; dames Hen y Lancaster 1 son, both of Greenville; Landon</p>
        <p>anu li.w x.aiia Ann Mooring, both of itoLKy Mount;</p>
        <p>James b rederick Strong, Pet- .</p>
        <p>Scott Temple Louise Ewell,</p>
        <p>Jr. and Grace both of Green-</p>
        <p>ersoUio, and Cordelia Faye Jones, Gituiville; Billy Joe Thigp.,n, btanlonburg, and Su-</p>
        <p>Cecil Jackson Langley and Arlene McKeel McDowell, both of Greenville; Raymond Tni-</p>
        <p>tan toa.y ennett, Ayden; | "'MUb, Rt. 3 GreenvUle, Jaitiea i:.&amp;gt;var(s and Mary Mar- BrCTda Faye Bibbs. Rt. 1,</p>
        <p>tin, boUi 01 Greenville;</p>
        <p>William Matthews and Eliza-</p>
        <p>Grimesland.</p>
        <p>Marriage licenses were issued</p>
        <p>beta Ixyrd. boU, of Greenvme; |</p>
        <p>Uobeit Ue Gaskins, New Bern,</p>
        <p>and Caroline Elizabetb Padgett,,  j</p>
        <p>f'iifn '*lIl'''r?^liS^*m^J^i^eenvme, and Mary Dorothy</p>
        <p>Collins III, Greenville, nnd ^^yioiYijfu nrppnviilp* fTiarli^ Sucfir</p>
        <p>Carolyn.MorriU  Jr!  BrX n Y.. aSd"S</p>
        <p>Kay Switzer, Rt. 2, Chapel Hill, ^ York N Y  Wal-and J;mice Uuise Jackson, Rt</p>
        <p>6, Greenville,  lington,  and  Gloria  Mae  White,</p>
        <p>Thomas Martin Whichard and Brenda Arline Burnette, both of Greenville; Jimmy O'Brien Williams, Rt. 3, Greenville, and El-</p>
        <p>EvanvNovak...</p>
        <p>1 Continued From Page 4) ed abruptly. In New York, for instance, Nixon has nothing to do with right-TAdng dissidents. Instead, he maintains an active, though subterranean, dialogue with the Rockefeller regulars through McWhorter and several other conduits.</p>
        <p>One of the most important of these is John A. Wells, who oUcn serves as an ^official emissary between Nixon and Rockefeller. Wells, one of Rockefellers chief political counselors, is a law partner of William P. Rogers, former Attorney General and a Nixon intimate. Significantly, it is Wells whom Rockefeller has placed in charge of safeguarding convention delegates in the New York City metropolitan area against ri^-wing raids.</p>
        <p>Kilpatrick . ..</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4) would be both smog&amp;lt;4ree and silent. By 1980 it might again be possible, in our great cities, on a clear day to see forever.</p>
        <p>More is involved in this inventive movement than mere social pirpoee. The American automobile industry knows that if it fails to produce a relatively smog - free car, ' somebody else will. Japan and '^England already are far along ihlhe race. General Electric reportedly has a model ready. As urbanization advances througfaoul the world, the con-vietiOB grows that dty dwell-va and fiaoltol engiiias cannot livt togttoar much longer. Perhaps the ofi companies and the auto makers can lick their pollutiim problem; tiiey have some promising efforts underway, But the smog grows, and toe din Inereaset; and t i m c runs ouU</p>
        <p>New Bern;</p>
        <p>Harold Moore, Mt. Vernon, N.Y., and Doristecn Staton, Bethel; Stepiien Shephard and Bernice Battle, both of Rt. 5, Greenville; Joseph Stanley Jones, Camp Lejeune, and Peggy Louise Hardee, Simpson.</p>
        <p>diemlstry department ol ECU and Zhnmarman is an associate professor of psychology at ECU,</p>
        <p>The coarse, which began Saturday and wfll conttame throng August 11, wiU introduce new devices for teaching etoctronks to students and others having no extensive background to the subject.</p>
        <p>New equipment and ai^&amp;gt;aratus for a novel system of instruction will be utilized to acquainting chemists, physicists, medical scientists, en^neers and biologists with a functional knowledge of electrcmics for research workers in the pl^sical, life and applied sciences.</p>
        <p>College and university scientists fr^ 17 states will attoid.</p>
        <p>The equipment, to be unveiled here for the first time, is called the Heath-Malmstadt-Enke Electronic Teaching System. Installation of the system has just been completed at a cost of 150,000.</p>
        <p>tkm. Way aptad tour or five mtoion doUara to make a movie when TV eovage is more reto than yoa eould make</p>
        <p>a movia</p>
        <p>IVf not boK oflloc, not that popular a war. John Wayne is going to make The Green Berets, and there are ptedicti(ms it wiU be idcketed by the anti-Vietnam peale. r-Hie majority of audiences are under 25, and they dont like the war. Nobody is gtong to produce an unpalatable subject.</p>
        <p>Vietoam is too- bkwdy dose to hmne. Almost everybody has somebody in the war. World War U was different; everybody was at a patriotic fervor. Now theres too much loddng askance, too much opinion adnst Vletam.</p>
        <p>Marshall Thompson, star of televtsons *T)totiari series, wrote, diracted and starred to A Yank to Vtotaam,* a story of a Marine haUoopter pUoi shot down and trjdng to escape.</p>
        <p>Air Forca approval to film a aereen play of Ida book, Wings of tha Tiger.</p>
        <p>In WaslBiigtoo awaiting De-partment of Defense approval is a Untied Pictures Corp. scrtyt, Nowhere Is a Nice Place to Vteit, about a cowboy stars U.S.O. trip to Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Most iM-estigious of the plans is John Waynes filming of The Green Berets, based on Ririliin MoOTes best seller about the Armys Special Forcea in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Wa)n, veteran of such war movies as They Were Expendable, and Sands of Iwo Jima, will star and codirect. Filming is scheduled to start Aug. 9 on Vietnam-like terrain at Ft. Benning, Ga.</p>
        <p>The whole film will be made there, said Waynes son, Michael, producer of the picture. An executive of a majiu: sto-</p>
        <p>Filmed to Vktaiam to 1962, it was released in 1964. The distributors oSBoe Bays box-office gross as of last month tofaled a tiny 1128,751.</p>
        <p>There are few stirrings in IMiodiiction drcles, however, to</p>
        <p>the Vietnam theme.</p>
        <p>Producer Carl Kmegv-&amp;gt;GQ-mancht, Safare Jet aid to Washington hn had prtolmintiy</p>
        <p>Has Definition For Tunk Alt</p>
        <p>BERKELEY, Calif. (UPIK Peter Selx, director of the University Art Museum at the University of Cafifonto, gives</p>
        <p>the Itotowtog definition for funk art:</p>
        <p>**Funk art to eartiiy, gntty, and sensual It is more to be ugly than handsome, ll is eccentric to tiie point of</p>
        <p>idiosyncracy . . . Like many contenqiorary novds, films, and playz, funk art looks at tngs whidi traditionalty were not meant to be looked at</p>
        <p>ID Cards For Borderline Age</p>
        <p>AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) -Maine may soon have adult</p>
        <p>Marlow</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4)</p>
        <p>service in Vietnam and one calling for a guaranteed annual income, with a threat of massive efforts to disrupt the economy if it is not granted.</p>
        <p>This is wh*e the fallacy shows up. If, instead of an Iih tcrdcpendent society, the Newark delegates want Negroes to have separate lives, how totally separate do they want them?</p>
        <p>They could hardly want it total even though they want to explore the possibility of separate nations.</p>
        <p>identification carcte for parsons 21 to 25. The Maine State Liquor Commissioa has purchased laminating macbtoe for the new cards, designed to protect liquor licensees who can have tiieir licenses revoked for selling liquor to minors.</p>
        <p>dio remarked: If this one goes over, therell probably be a deluge.</p>
        <p>Final Week For 3 Local Boys</p>
        <p>WINST0N4ALEM - Three local boys will compete the 1967 session of the Governors Ikhool of North Carolina Saturday.</p>
        <p>The boys are John dark, son of Mrs. S. E. dark, chorus; Henry Hunter, son of Mr. and hto. J. H. Hunter, English; Reginald DeVone, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Tyson, English.</p>
        <p>The final week wifl include concerts, art exhibits, and drama and dance productions and speakers.</p>
        <p>iu. wtJtnmM mmm</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>fOf^f-CASI</p>
        <p>Shew iam 7ai|iamus fxp#cted Ufitil Wedneeday Mfiitog</p>
        <p>Iseleaad eaariirfseilea  Cattmh  Ut</p>
        <p>gi;</p>
        <p>WEATHER FORECAST  Showers and thundershowers are forecast Tuesday night from southern New England through the mid-Atlantic states. Showers are also expected In the Gulf area, the southern Ohio Valley, the southern Plains and portions of the Plateau region. It will be cooler in the Dakotas through the northern Plateaus an d northern New England. (AP Wirephoto Map)</p>
        <p>Says Poor Have LosiConficbce</p>
        <p>We have a lot of poverty in understand.</p>
        <p>North Carolina, he added, and a lot of it happens to be among the Negro.</p>
        <p>Esser said, If there is to be any tolerance or forebearance. it is up to the white people tc</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) -North C^arolina Fund Director George Esser says many of North Carolinas pow have lost confidence in their community.</p>
        <p>Esser, who appeared Monday night baore a panel of newsmen on University of North Carolina educatiimal television, tied the loss of confidence to a lack of communication and said it is the failure in communication u^iicti caused recent racial unrest and violence in Diffham and other cities.</p>
        <p>The head of the privately financed organization, which has developed several poverty-fighting agencies in the state, toid newsraai, We are really co*i-cerned with the problem of community education.</p>
        <p>Stops Tbrmenting Rectal Itch</p>
        <p>Exclusive Formula Promptly Stops Itching, Burning and Relieves Pain of Piles In Most Cases</p>
        <p>New York, N.Y. (Special): The embarrassing itch caused by hemorrtoida ia most torturous. But science has found a special formula with the ability, in most cases to promptly stop the burning itch, relieve pain and actually shrink hemorrhoids. And all without nar</p>
        <p>cotics or stinging astringents of of any kind.</p>
        <p>The secret is Preparation f*. There is no other hemorrhoid formula like it. Preparation K also lubricates, soothes irritated tissues and helps prevent further infection. In ointment of suppository form.  j</p>
        <p>Boyle</p>
        <p>(Coatimied From Page 4)</p>
        <p>f emind us that most men basically still yearn to show kindness to one another.</p>
        <p>How can anyone feel low if he itemizes his blessings? One, two, three, four  the list is endless. But dont turn the job over to a computer. Do it yoiffself. Nothing enlarges the pasture of a mans soul more than to count the blessings he ban  and wonder how many of them he truly deserves.</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>Pack UP and</p>
        <p>But First Arrange for News from Home*</p>
        <p> WHEREVER yrm yam% need jwac eeen newspaper to keep you hi touch witih afl tiie exciting: and interesting haiipeoiiiigB ai bone and abroadend bring yo tiie special pag^ features, eotomns uid eomies yoa abwya eo^ each day.</p>
        <p>SO ARRANGE for this added vacatton treat ^ly arrival of your favorite newq;)aper! Just give ae your vacation address and datos, several days before you leave. We*l forward yoor nesFspaper, and reeume delivery when you return.</p>
        <p>Teiepkome us m tell yom amtier e</p>
        <p>OR YOUR earrtor wiB km year psptm ia day-to-day erder and delfvar tbiia hi ona</p>
        <p>age when yen get homefo yen an &amp;lt;9^ ^ witii al that eoeon in year ahasnto. No tin eimayt fer either vacation newa aerviee!</p>
        <p>TBIEPHONE 7S2-6166</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
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        <p>PHONE 7S2-3736</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>x</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0006" />
        <p>6~Th Daily Reflector, GreenviHe, N.  C.Tuesday, July 25, 1967</p>
        <p>Greenville And Pitt^Teeners Gain In Tourny</p>
        <p>  i-  .i.  .i,  ,.v  _</p>
        <p>GASTONIA - Greenvilles Teener League team moved into a comfortable position for grabbing the State Teener League Championship, edging Shelby 3-2 in a morning game and coming back in the afternoon clash to top Gastonia, 4-2.</p>
        <p>Pitt County, composed of players from Grifton, Winterville and Ayden, also moved towards</p>
        <p>the championship playoffs, rebounding from a morning loss of 8-0 to Gastonia to take a 3-2 win and eliminate Shelby from the double elimination affair.</p>
        <p>The win moves Pitt County into a clash with Gastonia which was to be played at 10 a.m. this morning. The winner of the Pitt County-Gastonia game</p>
        <p>will play Greenville in the finals,'villes.</p>
        <p>scheduled to be played at 6 p.m. today.</p>
        <p>Greenville is thus far undefeated in the competion. Should Greenville lose in the afternoon game, another game will be played tomorrow to decide the State Championship. Should the Greenville nine win, the State Championship will be Green-</p>
        <p>Against Shelby in the morning</p>
        <p>single by. pitcher Russ Smith. Garlt then scampered to third</p>
        <p>to score.</p>
        <p>game yesterday, Greehville took the lead in the first inning and were never headed, although</p>
        <p>Shelby threaten^ to come back errored.   ^  I  second  on  a sacrifice bunt by</p>
        <p>in the fifth inning. _ i Smith was out at second I Billy Clark and then scored on The Greenville'Teeners scor-jttie play, but Crews, who was a single by Russ Smith, ed two runs in the first inning safe at first, moved to third on| Shelbys two runs were both of the morning contest to draw i a single by Glenn Warren. War-scored in the fifth inning Ned first blood. Billy Clark walked rens rap was bobbled by the | Cash walked, then moved to se-then moved to second on a left fielder and Crews came in I cond on Rich Allens single and</p>
        <p>The Greenville  teams final   Greenvilles left fielder Glm</p>
        <p>antf  then  home after  Durwoodscore came in*the  tourtn inning  Warren. Both Cash and  Allen lat-</p>
        <p>Crews  grounder to  short  was | when Joe West singled, moved to  er scored on Junior  Wilsons</p>
        <p>grounder, which was errored.</p>
        <p>In the second game, Greenville pushed across two runs in  .....'    lird in</p>
        <p>victory</p>
        <p>Ion to third when the ball eludedi were brou^t home by Ronnit IIIfiaiHop ninn  sinule.</p>
        <p>Culp Parlays His Chicago Into New Direction</p>
        <p>By DICK COUCH  squared his 1967 record at 8-8 by</p>
        <p>Associated Press Sports Writer pitching out of a sixth-inning Ray Culp has parlayed a jam, sweating out a 51-minute</p>
        <p>rain delay and then knocking off the last nine Cardinals he faced.</p>
        <p>Working under a steady downpour in the sixth with a 3-0 lead, he was clipp^ for a run when Lou Brock singled, took second on a fly to center and scored on a double by Orlando Cepeda. After an intentional walk to Roger Maris, Culp struck out 'Tim McCarver on a change-up and got Mike Shannon to fly out nding the Cards only serious threat.</p>
        <p>The Cubs broke in front against St. Louis starter Larry Jaster in the second inning when Ron Santo singled, Ernie Banks doubled home a run and, after a walk and Clarence Jones infield hit filled the bases, reliever Jack Lamabe walked another run across.</p>
        <p>Singles by Glenn Beckert and Billy Williams plus Santos run-scoring ground out boosted the</p>
        <p>change of scenery and a change of pace into a change of direction ... for himself and the nonstop Chicago Cubs.</p>
        <p>Culp, the former Philadelphia fireballer who learned to pull the string on his fastball while sitting at Leo Durochers elbow, pitched the Cute back into a share of the National League lead Monday night with a five-hit 3-1 victory over St. Louis.</p>
        <p>The victory, ninth for the Cubs in their last 11 games, pulled them even with the Cardinals going into tonights second game of a three-game summit series at St. Louis.</p>
        <p>Houston nipped Philadelphia 2-1 in 11 innings behind the two-hit pitching of Mike Cuellar and Los Angeles shaded Pittsburgh 4-3 in Mondays only other major league action.</p>
        <p>Culp, who won seven games for the Phillies last season.</p>
        <p>Ford Motor Co: Entries in 'Group T Race Series</p>
        <p>By BLOYS BRITT</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -Ford Motor Co. is going after the fall series of six Canadian-American events for Group 7 sports racing cars in typical Dearborn fashionwith all the inen and machinery it can Inuster.</p>
        <p>The series, beginning Sept. 3 at Elkhart Lake, Wis., o. about $300,000 in prize money but vastly more in prestige. It is the biggest and richest series of professional road races in the world.</p>
        <p>r Ford will have at least eight Cqjrs in the field, some equipped with an exotic new engine. The big problem will be finding ca</p>
        <p>pable drivers to man the machines.</p>
        <p>Two of the cars will be entered directly from Dearborn, Two cars will carry the banner of Holman &amp;amp; Moody, Ford-Char-lotte-based outlet for stock car racing. IVo will come from Shelby-American^ the compa</p>
        <p>nys West Coast affiliate which handles the sports racing busi-</p>
        <p>National League</p>
        <p>W. L. Pet. G.B.</p>
        <p>St. Louis .... 56 40 Chicago .... 56 40 Cincinnati ..52 45 Atlanta ..... 49</p>
        <p>lead to 3-0 in the fifth.</p>
        <p>Cuellar, who struck out 12, including five of the first seven men he faced, gave up a bad-;By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS hop double by Cookie Rojas n the fifth inning, then held Phils hitless until Bill White singled in the 11th.</p>
        <p>The Houston southpaw also scored the winning run in the bottom of the 11th, drawing a walk and moving around to third on a sacrifice and an error before Jim Wynns single broke the 1-1 deadlock.</p>
        <p>Jim Lefebvres run-scoring single in the ninth lifted the Dodgers past the Pirates after they had wiped out a 3-0 Pittsburgh lead. Dick Schofield, who had three hits, doubled 3 run home in the fifth and scored on Willie Davis single to tie it 3-3.</p>
        <p>Ladies Softball</p>
        <p>Big Value dropped Coca-Cola, 7-3, and Pollards defeated Wachovia, 8-6, to advance in the Ladies Softball League playoffs which are now in progress.</p>
        <p>Both Coke and Wachovia were eliminated by virtue of their defeats in the single elimination tournament.</p>
        <p>In the first game, Betty Lou Ij^k rapped out four hits for Big Value to lead the victory over Coca-Cola. Katherine Oakley had three hits in four attempts.</p>
        <p>San Fran. .. Pittsburgh . Philaphia .. Los Angeles New York .. Houston ....</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>47 53</p>
        <p>.583</p>
        <p>.583</p>
        <p>.536</p>
        <p>.533</p>
        <p>.515</p>
        <p>.505</p>
        <p>.489</p>
        <p>.436</p>
        <p>.413</p>
        <p>.402</p>
        <p>4%</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>6%</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>38 54</p>
        <p>39 58 Mondays Results</p>
        <p>Houston 2, Philadelphia 1, 11 innings Chicago 3, St. Louis 1 Los Angeles, 4, Pittsburgh 3 ; Only games scheduled Todays Games Cincinnati at Atlanta, N New York at San Francisco, N Chicago at St. Louis, N Philadelphia at Houston, N Pittsburg at Los Angeles, N Wednesdays Games Cincinnati at Atlanta, 2, twi-night</p>
        <p>I'lew York at San Francisco Chicago at St. Louis, N Philadelphia at Houst(m Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, N</p>
        <p>American League</p>
        <p>the leader, collecting two hits in three attempts.</p>
        <p>In the second game, M, Harris led the winning effort, collecting three hits in four at-ness. And two will be entered by I tempts at the plate. E. Hannah,</p>
        <p>Dan Gurneys All-American rac- M. Singleton and J. Hanis each New York</p>
        <p>s.</p>
        <p>Except for Gurneys entries, the cars will use basically the same chassis and body configuration as the Mark IPs and IVs which won in 1966 and 1967 at Le Mans, France, except that theyll be the roadster, open</p>
        <p>Old Grid Star I Some will be equipped with 7-</p>
        <p>II,, J/ lAlfki# nAe  427-cubicJnch  plants of the</p>
        <p>LUa wrdy Uies type used at Le Mans and in</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA (AP) ~ wUl^a??y"toe"^new"^^</p>
        <p>James R. Lud Wray, former  A  ,  calliope</p>
        <p>standout football player at theie?^f  ^  ^%und  o</p>
        <p>University of PenAsylvania  cubic  inches  but  about</p>
        <p>a cofounder of the professional </p>
        <p>Philadelphia Eagles died</p>
        <p>day  !  As  for  the  big  problem  in  find-</p>
        <p>Wray, 73, played center  there  are reports</p>
        <p>Penn during 1914-1916 and againMario An-in 1919 after a stint as a World  t^^etti will get the two Dearborn</p>
        <p>War I pilot.</p>
        <p>cars. Carroll Shelby undoubted-</p>
        <p>Cause of death was not listed, ly Canadian-American se-After college, Wray played dan series hero Jerry Titus</p>
        <p>professionally for the Buffalo All Americans, the Fankford Yellowjackets and other pro tsams.</p>
        <p>signed for one of his. Gurney, with perhaps Skip Scott, will handle the All-American Eagles.</p>
        <p>had two hits.</p>
        <p>For Wachovia, N. Bonner, H. Avery and Lou Harris shared hitting honors,&amp;gt; each grabbing two tets.</p>
        <p>First Game</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>Coca-Cola . 000 030 03 Big Value 031 201 x-7 Second Game</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>Pollards 104 001 28 Wachovia . 001 401 x6</p>
        <p>W.</p>
        <p>L.</p>
        <p>Pet</p>
        <p>G.B.</p>
        <p>j Chicago ....</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>.570</p>
        <p>Boston</p>
        <p>52</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>.565</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>California .,</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>.546</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Detroit ,,</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>.538</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Minnesota ..</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>.533</p>
        <p>3%</p>
        <p>Washn.....</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>.479</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>Cleveland ..</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>.463</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>Baltimore ..</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>.457</p>
        <p>10%</p>
        <p>New York ..</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>.430</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Kansas City 40</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>.421</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>GrMnvill*</p>
        <p>both the second and tird innings to cement their 4-2  over Gastonia.</p>
        <p>In the second frame, Mike Harrington singled _ stole second and then moved to third on a single by Glen Warren. Both I Warren and Harrington later</p>
        <p>Former Soutliern Conference Head Dies In Florida  jWest, cf</p>
        <p>Clark, ss Smiths 1b</p>
        <p>Dr. Ray Duncan, president of Har'ton, 3b the Southern Conference when iSiett'. 2b East Carolina University be-  ^</p>
        <p>came a member, died Monday c^,p ^ at the home of his daughter in Lakeland, Fla.  i</p>
        <p>Dr. Duncan, who made sever- raiviiia al trips to Greenville and be- torn came acquainted -with many r#iviii campus and community per-1 sons, was a leading advocate of C&amp;amp; *$* East Carolina during the schools | smitiC p bid for full conference member- iJarn, ship a few years ago.  v'dSt * b</p>
        <p>He was chairman of the ath- whithu'rst. letic committee at West Virginia ToVaS"' ^ University and dean of the universitys School of Health and Physical Education.</p>
        <p>Leggetts single.</p>
        <p>In the third, Billy Clark walked, and moved to second on la bunt single by Russ Smith. Bofii Clark and Smith moved up oOs base on passed balls and scored on an error by the cati^ er.  .  </p>
        <p>One of Gastonias two runs came in the sixth inning when Mike Hoover blasted a homer 335 feet. Gastonias only other score came in the seventh. Bowen walked and Nichols, a pinch runner, moved to second and third on errors. Nichols tfiih scored on a single by Whitt.</p>
        <p>. Grttnvlllt iShDlby</p>
        <p>OMtonUl</p>
        <p>r-</p>
        <p>abrh</p>
        <p>tbyb</p>
        <p>4 0 0</p>
        <p>Glireath, n</p>
        <p>3 0 0</p>
        <p>3 1 0</p>
        <p>Hoover, 3b</p>
        <p>3 1 2</p>
        <p>3 1 1</p>
        <p>Cherry, rf</p>
        <p>3 0 0</p>
        <p>4 1 2</p>
        <p>Bowen, 1b</p>
        <p>V </p>
        <p>^0 0</p>
        <p>3 1 1</p>
        <p>Woffard, W</p>
        <p>3 0 2</p>
        <p>Dean, cf</p>
        <p>10 0</p>
        <p>2 0 0</p>
        <p>Douis, cf</p>
        <p>2 0.0</p>
        <p>2 0 0</p>
        <p>Whltf, 2b</p>
        <p>3 0 1</p>
        <p>3 0 0</p>
        <p>Jolliff, c</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;0</p>
        <p>27 6 4</p>
        <p>Clemmer</p>
        <p>2 0 0</p>
        <p>Cashatf, p</p>
        <p>0 0 0</p>
        <p>Jacobs, p</p>
        <p>2 r 0</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>?S 2 1</p>
        <p>022 000 0-4</p>
        <p>4 a</p>
        <p>00 Oil 02 SlMlby</p>
        <p>3 t</p>
        <p>ab r h</p>
        <p>ab r n</p>
        <p>4 1 2</p>
        <p>Reynolds, 3b</p>
        <p>4A0</p>
        <p>1 1 0</p>
        <p>Wilson, p, 1b</p>
        <p>3 00</p>
        <p>4 0 3</p>
        <p>Bright, lb, ts</p>
        <p>3 0.0</p>
        <p>3 1 0</p>
        <p>Cam'on, ss,p</p>
        <p>3 0.0</p>
        <p>3 0 1</p>
        <p>Heffener, c</p>
        <p>30-3</p>
        <p>3 0 0</p>
        <p>Peeler, If</p>
        <p>2j0 0</p>
        <p>3 0 0</p>
        <p>MMurray, tb</p>
        <p>3 0 0</p>
        <p>; 3 0 0</p>
        <p>Cash, cf</p>
        <p>1 1 0</p>
        <p>3 0 0</p>
        <p>Cook, cf</p>
        <p>1 0 0</p>
        <p>27 3 6</p>
        <p>Allen, rf</p>
        <p>IT 0</p>
        <p>Martin, rf</p>
        <p>21 1</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>26 7 4</p>
        <p>200 100 X^-l</p>
        <p>6 a</p>
        <p>000 020 0-2</p>
        <p>4 4</p>
        <p>TO TOUR ORIENT</p>
        <p>PROVO, Utah (AP) - The Brigham Young University basketball team was scheduled to leave today for a 50-day tour of the Orient and Australia during which they will play 25 games. They are due back Sept. 12.</p>
        <p>Mmidays Results</p>
        <p>No games scheduled Todays Games Cleveland at Chicago, 2, twi-</p>
        <p>H</p>
        <p>g qI Kansas City at Washington, 2, Q'twi-night</p>
        <p>Minnesota at New York, N California at Boston, N Detroit at Baltimore, N Wednesdays Games Clevelond at Chicago, N Kansas City at Washington, N Minnesota at New York, 2, twi-night California at Boston, N Only games sdieduled</p>
        <p>H E 13  0</p>
        <p>9  0</p>
        <p>RODE 4 WINNERS</p>
        <p>INGLEWOOD, CaUf. (AP) -Jockey Willie Shoemaker rode four winners Monday on the closing day card at Hollywood Park.</p>
        <p>ICAUCH AND CKLLAR RESTRAINEDHouston Astro pitcher Mike Cuellar &amp;lt;35) Is re-by Philadelphia Philly Infielder Chuck Hiller (18) as Houston Astro third baseman holds Philadelphia manager Gene Mauch as the two c change words in the ninth inning of Monday nights game. Hixistcm pitcher Cuellar had started towards the Philly dugout In the previous inning as both benches emptied. Cuellar approached Mauch for apparently ribbing him from the ben-cb. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>m ^</p>
        <p>Church Ball</p>
        <p>First Presbyterian walloped First Pentecostal Holiness 9-1 in Church League Saftball play last night.</p>
        <p>Fleming led the winners with four hits, all singles, while Hooks added three more singles to lead the winning effort.</p>
        <p>For Holines, Pearle was the leader, rapping out three singles in three attempts.</p>
        <p>In the second game, St. James pinned an 18-3 loss on Oakmont.</p>
        <p>P. Selliff led St. James with five hits. J. Brown and Johnson each had four hits to assist. First Game</p>
        <p>R H</p>
        <p>Presbytian 101 022 3-9 17 FPH ..  000 010 0-1  8</p>
        <p>Second Game</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>St. James 171 007 2-18 27 Oakmont . 101 000 1- 3 12</p>
        <p>VICTOR AND HIS SPOILS  Don January holds check for $25,000 and stands beside trophy emblematic of the PGA championship.</p>
        <p>(AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Don January Wins Rich PGA Playoff</p>
        <p>By FRANK PITMAN</p>
        <p>DENVER, Colo. (AP)  Don January, the new PGA champion, says he doesnt think theres any Big Three in golf.</p>
        <p>After his two-stroke victory in the PGA title playoff with Don Massengale Monday, January was asked if he felt Jack Nick-laus, Arnold Palmer and Gary Player had a stranglehold on the game.</p>
        <p>Theres no such tiling as the Big Three, January responded. There are dozens of players who are capable of winning any of our Big Three championships the Open, PGA and Masters. The lean Texan, who lost to Jerry Barber in the PGAs only other playoff in 1961, said he felt he had played good enough many times to win the Open, Masters or PGA.</p>
        <p>The 37-year-old Dallas golfer-</p>
        <p>guutl- J5 QQQ</p>
        <p>insurance businessman _ said the i_J_</p>
        <p>loss to Barber taught him a lesson and contributed to his victory over the 7,436-yard par 72 Columbine Course where he shot 69 to Massengales 71.</p>
        <p>I thought I could play Jerry</p>
        <p>head-to-head, but I lost, January haid, So when I started the playoff here I set my target on a sulHiar score.</p>
        <p>He pegged the 10th hole as the turning point. After turning the front nine in par 36, even with Massengale, January sank a 30-foot birdie putt from the fringe.</p>
        <p>January said he was intending to lay the putt up to the cup and when it rolled in, I was as surprised as anyone. Hiat seemed to release me.</p>
        <p>Massengale said his own 25-foot putt on the 10th just lipped the cup and from then on it seemed like January did everything just a little better than I did.</p>
        <p>January, who failed to qualify for Ryder C!up team this year, went to the bank today with $25,-000 first prize to soothe any hurt feelings. Massengale collected</p>
        <p>Milwaukee On Verge Of New AL Frandiise</p>
        <p>MILWAUKEE Wis. (AP) -Milwaukee and the American League, like the principals in a mail order marriage, had their first face-to-face meeting Monday night; it was love at first sight, and public announcement of the betrothal may come before the end of the year.</p>
        <p>It may come, a reliable source said today, as early as next month, but more likely after the league meetings in October, with Charles 0. Finley being given permission to take his A^letics to Oakland, and with new franchises going to Milwaukee and Kansas City.</p>
        <p>Awarding of two additional franchises to complete the junior circuits long-rumored growth to a 12-team league made up of two six-team circuits, still might await the original timetable for a 1968 statement of particulars, with full league play delayed until 1970.</p>
        <p>A year ago the air still was thick with recriminations as Milwaukee sought to reclaim its decamping Braves.</p>
        <p>But some of the best sources in baseball acknowledged that expansion was being planned, and planned very carefully, to</p>
        <p>take a number pf things into consideration, including the way baseball has looked lately.</p>
        <p>Said one, The owners an being very careful, and r-searching the pr&amp;lt;pective expansion cities very thoroughly, not only the market potential but the people who will be behind tiie new elute, and their dedication.</p>
        <p>Monday night in Milwaukees County Stadium 51,144 paid to see the Chicago White ^x-Min-nesota 'Twins exhibition. The sponsoring Milwaukee Brewers organization is the same group that already has applied for a new American League franchise. i</p>
        <p>'The Twins edged the White Sox 2-1.  *</p>
        <p>The Brewers are made up of a gp-oup of Wisconsin industrialists and bcsinessmen, a number of them millionaires.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY SPORT SHOP</p>
        <p>By Pass, Greeoville $100.00 Off Campiog Trailers 30% All Reels Open Fri.-Sat. 5 am- 10 pm Sunday 5 am-9pm Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Thurs.</p>
        <p>8 am - 10 pm</p>
        <p>Tiger Stadium Is Idled By Detroit Rioters</p>
        <p>DETROIT (AP)  Detroits spreading riots have surrounded Tiger Stadium and forced the club to play outside the city.</p>
        <p>Instead of opening a three-game series with the Baltimore Orioles in Detroit tonight, the Tigers are in Baltimore to play the night game at Memorial Stadium.</p>
        <p>'The clubs will meet again in Baltimore Thursday night.</p>
        <p>The third Baltimore game scheduled for Detroit this week has been re-scheduled as a twi-night doubleheader at Tiger Stadium Aug. 11.</p>
        <p>Two Tigers-Orioles games scheduled for Baltimore Sept. 12 and 13 will be played in Detroit giving the Tigers a full home schedule.</p>
        <p>Mondays Stars</p>
        <p>BATTING-Jim Lefebvre, Dodgers, drove in the winning run with a two-out single in the E ninth inning for a 4-3 victory 0 over Pittsburgh.</p>
        <p>0 PITCHING-Mike CueUar, Astros, allowed only two hits H E and struck out 12 in a 2-1 11-in-0 ning verdict over Philadelphia. 0 _</p>
        <p>About 90 colleges have played in major bowl games since the 1902 Rose Bowl clash started post-season football.</p>
        <p>^ Happen, and If  They Happen .</p>
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        <p>F.-ompt Expert Service All Work Guaranteed Service While You WaH</p>
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        <pb facs="00088484_0007" />
        <p>\</p>
        <p>'. ,;A-  %  .</p>
        <p>'    :,  -:&amp;gt;Mcw  .?-</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;y9PW9W^^^ </p>
        <p>. ALL P^Y AND NO WORK  A young girl with crutches an d a cast on her leg picks up what she can from a store previously hroken open in East Harlems night of violence. A smiling couple walk past another resident, background, as he locrfcs for loot in mainiv Puerto Rican section of the city. (AP Wirephoto)  ,</p>
        <p>Detroit's Second</p>
        <p> 0 4-</p>
        <p>Aimed At Color</p>
        <p>Day Of Violence Television Sets</p>
        <p>By AUSTIN SCOTT DETROIT (AP) - The large sigii chalked on a white scrawl across the chaired doorway read Black Power, but Detroits second day of violence was aimed not so much at skin color as at color television sets.</p>
        <p>In no other riot-sacked city has there been ^ch wholesale</p>
        <p>ily looting a furniture store politely asked permission from a white homeownw across the street before dragging their stolen plunder throi^ his yard.</p>
        <p>White reporters risked beatings to enter Tampas Central Park Housing Project, but they walked Detroits streets all day, even without their customary</p>
        <p>oeoperation between Negroes j^aj-d helmets, and ran into only and whites queuing up like happy locusts for a running grab at Jj/es luxuries.</p>
        <p>Shiny Cadillacs, some 1967 models, some driven by Negroes and some by ^^ites, lined ,14P along Grand River Avenue Monday morning to be stowed with everything from stuffed pandas to dining room tables.</p>
        <p>A red-haired white man directed operations as dozens of *^Negroes disappeared into the murky depths of a furniture store basement, emerging with two portable television sets jCIutched in each hand. r^pDate Sunday night a happy ' mob of Negroes and whites bus-</p>
        <p>mild derision.</p>
        <p>Newsmen who met only hostile stares in Chicago or violence in Watts, found Detroit residents eager to talk about their own problems witii the violence.</p>
        <p>Unlike Qeveland or San Francisco, or even Harlem in 1964,</p>
        <p>Authority Limit</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-Local air-&amp;gt;rport authorities in North Caro-^Una must win approval from the voters before pledging public funds for construction purposes.</p>
        <p>. 'The State SujMreme Court, in JTunanimous decision handed down Monday, ruled ttiat a Henderson airport project was im[Mroperly established; and Vance County had no right to condemn property for the facility.</p>
        <p>Thomas S. Royster, owner of 3.3 acres of land which was 4tondemned for transfer to the 'dirport authority, brought the qfiginal suit.</p>
        <p>;;^The case could affeci other local authorities in die state and any which may be set up under a new airport bond law passed by the 1967 General Assembly.</p>
        <p>The court held public funds may be spent on airport facilities, but the public must approve such expenditures.</p>
        <p>Walter Jones To Visit Ocracoke</p>
        <p>Filing Protest OverDukePlant</p>
        <p>STATESVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Eleven cities which want to share in the benefits of a nuclear reactor power facility to be built in South Carolina were to file a protest today against Duke Power Co.s license to build the plant.</p>
        <p>The cities, all of which buy power from Duke and then resell it to consumers, claim in the protest to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission that Dukes sole license to build tiie power plant violates antitrust laws.</p>
        <p>Jack Harris, Statesville city attorney, is filing the action with the AEC. Other municipalities joining Statesville in the protest are High Point, Lexington, Monroe, Shelby, Cornelius, Drexel, Granite Falls, Newton, Lincolnton and Albemarle.</p>
        <p>Harris said the cities believe they should help finance the 350 million project by the sale of bonds and then could rec: the electrical power at cost. He said they could expect to save $25 million annually if they are able to share in the faciUty.</p>
        <p>The Federal Power CJommis-sion recently certified Dukes application to build tiie Keowee-Toxoway nuclear power plant in northwestern South Carolina. It OCRACOKE  Congressman would service both Carolinao Walter B. Jones will be a guest with power, for two special occasions here Thursday, July 27.</p>
        <p>He will, attend formal dedicatory ceremonia for the new Ocracoke Post Office at 2 p.m.</p>
        <p>At 5 p.m. he will be a special  *  hm  -kn</p>
        <p>guest at a Shriners fish fry.  M,''*-  Beatrice  Maye.  to.</p>
        <p>iponsored by the Sudan Temple I  Lawrence, ^ Patbe</p>
        <p>as a benefit for the crippled Giaaes  and Mrs. Clotee  Gm-</p>
        <p>childrens hospital supported by "a hostesses at the</p>
        <p>almost as many people over 25 as under saw a piece of the action. Matrwis in tiieir fifties leaped nimbly over show windowsills to grab a lamp, an end table or a ligfitweigk chair, then scurried down the street with faces as impish as those produced by successful girlish pranks.</p>
        <p>Negro leaders were puzzled by the lack of demands upon the city that usually come quickly after the first outbreak of violence.</p>
        <p>The leaders approved a statement blaming the violence on</p>
        <p>small groups of whites  and occasional large ones  slipped into the Negro neighborhoods.</p>
        <p>This isnt a race riot, a weary police sergeant commented Monday as he watched the passing parade of looters. Its a riot of thieves. '</p>
        <p>Will Speak At Poverty Session</p>
        <p>WILUAMSTON  John E. Murray, a native of Roanoke Rapids and former Presbyterian ,,    ,  r  minister, will hold a question-</p>
        <p>a small number &amp;lt;h hoodlums  answer  period  on  anti-poverty</p>
        <p>and hatemongers. But no one Wednesday  at  10  a.m.  in  the</p>
        <p>said Why the festive atmosphere in the streets Monday was so radically changed from hateful stares and smping Sunday night.</p>
        <p>The odd racial checkerboard of Detroits slums supplies a partial answer.</p>
        <p>Except along 12tti Street, an almost entirely Negro neighborhood, tiie areas where Detroits violence was born are integrated on a patdiwork basis with</p>
        <p>Town Hall assembly room in Williamston.</p>
        <p>Murray is a graduate of Davidson College, Union Theological Seminary in Richmond, and recipient of a Masters Degree in Theology from Princeton Universitys Seminary.</p>
        <p>The Martin County Community Action, Inc., has been informed that Murray wiU be the guest speaker at three civic clubs in Williamston this week.</p>
        <p>Review Books At Club Meetings</p>
        <p>iners of Eastern-North Caro-</p>
        <p>meetings of the I.iOrraine Hans-berry Book Club during the months of June and July.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Pattie Grimes and Mrs. Inez D. Ellison presented the program. The books reviewed included The Gospel According . IX .  1  f D * to St. Matthew, Raisin in the</p>
        <p>Leonard Lamson, 21, of Route  Life of Lorraine</p>
        <p>1, Randleman, was charged</p>
        <p>w.th failinf! to stop for a stop  August  17 meeting will</p>
        <p>syn following an myestigation</p>
        <p>of a 12:05 p.m collision yester- ^  805  Lincoln  Dr.</p>
        <p>day at the intersection of Wil-   </p>
        <p>CSarre Driver In f.'ffmri*' Accif'ant</p>
        <p>DeGaulle Makes Visit A Headache To Canada</p>
        <p>fh Daffy Raftadoi*, &amp;lt;lrMivfftt, N. C.TuMdi^ Mf 19'</p>
        <p>WOUNDEDH. Rapp Brown, naUonal chairman of the Student NonvloiteQt Ckxinhnatkiff Committee, was shot and slightr ly wounded after delivering a volatile talk to "BladE Power* rally in Cambridge, Md. The states Attorney General has charged Brown with kiciting to riot. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I-</p>
        <p>HELP YOURSELF  Wkh no police in alffht these pecvde had no trouUe helping themselves to a stock of liquor by merely reaching throug h the window which had been smashed. Scene wa on Detroits 12th Street. Some fires still bum in the area and looting was wideai;%ad in te dii^lot where violence erupted, burning many buildings. (AP Wirephoto)  </p>
        <p>East Harlem Still Violent</p>
        <p>By JOHN VINOCUR NEW YORK (AP) - Riong Puerto Ricans, dodging their own rooftop snipers and police bullets, charged again early today through the slum streets of Spanish Harlem, setting fires with t&amp;lt;Ksed cans of stolen oil and looting neighbors tiny shops and grocery stores. Two persons died in the violence.</p>
        <p>For the first time since they began early Sunday, the disorders jumped the Harlem River from Ma^attah and spread to a largely Puerto Rican section of the Bronx. Looting broke out and a youth was shot in the arm.</p>
        <p>More than 1,0(K) policemen in helmets and steel vests chased roving bands of 2,000 youths through a 125-square block area of Manhattan^ taking cover to empty their revolvers at snipers hidden in tenement windows.</p>
        <p>then thrashing rioters with their nightsticks.</p>
        <p>It was full-scale rioting and the worst of three straight nights of lesser disturbances in El Barrio  the neighborhood, in Spanish  cramped, steamy home to a large segment of the citys 850,000 Puerto Ricans.</p>
        <p>It took a heavy rain at 3 a.m. to do what police found so difficult  get the unruly mobs off the streets and indoors.</p>
        <p>A 44-year-old Puerto Rican woman, hit by what officers said was a .22-caliber bullet, died shortly after a young Puerto Rican man was found fatally injured with a broken neck. Dozens were injured, including five policemen.</p>
        <p>The rioting again stopped short of the unmarked frontiers that separate Spanish or East Harlem from the luxury apartments of the upper East Side</p>
        <p>and the squalor of eentral Harlems Negro masses.</p>
        <p>Gleaming paths of shattered glass showed the progress of the riot as it spread from 95th Street to 121st Street along Third Avenue, bulging in some spots to Second and First avenues on the east anj Lexington, Park and Madison avenues on the west.</p>
        <p>Fire flashtti from trash cans on almost every comer, burst from flying gasoline-Ied bot</p>
        <p>tles and consumed an ABC television mobile unit. From a gas station, rioters took cans of oil and de-icer and turned them Into flaming missiles.</p>
        <p>Firemen answering calls throughout the area stretched out their hoses while skipping away from bottles and rocks thrown from roofs and windows. A policeman was struck flush te the face by &amp;lt;me oi tiie lxi(^batS.</p>
        <p>LOWEST PRICES ON</p>
        <p>DRUGS</p>
        <p>WTT HAZA SHOPPING CfNTffR</p>
        <p>MONTREAL (AP) - President diaries de Gaulle touched off a storm of protest across Cicada today with a speech climaxed by an outburst of support for ihe French-Canadian separatist movement in Quebec Province.</p>
        <p>The Frendi presidents speech made before wildly cheering separatists in Montreal Monday provoked a flood of angry telegrams and scores of irate telephone calls to radio stations. prime Minister Lester B. Pearson was reported profoundly concerned.</p>
        <p>The climax came when Gaulle shouted the separatist slogan Vive le Quebec libre! Long live&amp;gt; free Quebec! from the balcony of Montreals City Hall to thousands in the square below. The sl&amp;lt;^an is a rallying cry to French Canadians who claim Quebec should</p>
        <p>secede from the English-speaking rest of Canada.</p>
        <p>Pearson watched the 76-year-old Freach president on television in Ottawa and asked for a transcript of his ^eech.</p>
        <p>A government spokesman said he knew of no changes in plans for De Gaulles visit to the Canadian capital Wednesday.</p>
        <p>De Gaulles Quebec comments were termed an inexcusable intrusion in Canadas domestic affairs by opposition lead-John Diefenbaker.</p>
        <p>De Gaulles schedule today ) included a visit to Expo 67 where France Day was being observed.</p>
        <p>Monday, the second day of his five-day Canadian visit, De Gaulle made seven stops in rural towns and hamlets (Wing a motor tour from Quebec City to Montreal.</p>
        <p>son and Chestnut Streets.</p>
        <p>Police said the Harrison ve-</p>
        <p>KILLED IN ACTION</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>l^le (collided w^ith a car^iven jjgfgggg Department says 1st t- ElizabeRii &amp;amp;awford Forbes n. pder R. Sims of Fayette-qf 2115 South Village Dr. caus-  killed  in  action</p>
        <p>no an estimated $150 damage Vietnam.</p>
        <p>to the Forbes auto.</p>
        <p>Officers reported no damage resulted to the Harrison vehicle, and no injuries were reported,</p>
        <p>$10 MBLUON IN TOLLS</p>
        <p>Frankfort, Ky. (ap)^ -</p>
        <p>Kentucky collected nearly $10 million last year from its four toll roadsa 81 per cent gain over 1965 collections.</p>
        <p>Ascension Island in the South Atlantic is so named because it was fight sighted on Ascension Day, 1501.</p>
        <p>ROACHES?</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>Ivey Coward</p>
        <p>CO., INC. YOUR COWAR-DEX MAN</p>
        <p>TEL 752-5175</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>The Following Building Supply Firms !</p>
        <p>WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY</p>
        <p>Beginning Saturday August'5,1967</p>
        <p> DUNN READY MIXED CONCRETE AND SUPPLY COMPANY</p>
        <p> GARRIS-EVANS LUMBER CO.</p>
        <p> HOME BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.</p>
        <p> NORTH SIDE LUMBER CO..</p>
        <p>On 67 OMsmobiles</p>
        <p>Clever you! You held off on a youthful new Olds till you could get the biggest savings of the year. And theyre hereat your Olds Dealers annual Year End Sale! So check him today. Hes saying Y.E.S. to your kind of jnrice. Y.E.S. to your kind of trade-in. Take your pick of beautifully engineered Oldsmobiles: Toronado, Ninety-Eight, 88, Cutlass, Vista-Cruiscr, 4-4-2 or F-85 the extra-value cars that are priced for extta savings right now.</p>
        <p>Go Oldsmobile at your ijearest ^ ^ transportatjon center</p>
        <p>Stafford Oldsmobile Co., Inc.</p>
        <p>Phona TSA'JIIS</p>
        <p>Hooker Rd. &amp;amp; DidkinsonAve.</p>
        <p>N. C. Daalar Licensa No. 01  Graanvilla,  N.  C</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0008" />
        <p>"iTIm^ Daffy ffefleefor, GraanvIa, C.--Tuasday, Jufy'25, 1967</p>
        <p>THERE OUGHTA BE A LAWl</p>
        <p>^PHE&amp;gt;/6R GUE$6 rr, BUT MIPPEH IM THEBAC^VARD nmoss MA5 LAMI&amp;gt;SCAPIMG' ttVKeAILLES IM MIUIATRE**</p>
        <p>^ rlILE i:j T4E PROMT VARP. VMEREALL TME TDWM CAM SEE-VEC!i; im msifPssT) P16MALSV/AMP/</p>
        <p>tXACK RE3HAH BA6T HAl^FTiM/ AC/.</p>
        <p>Tax Boost Offers Big</p>
        <p>Plan</p>
        <p>Test</p>
        <p>ByJOHNCUNNIFF ^ AP Basiwess Asalj'st NEW YORK (AP) - The propasad iiK3ese in iticCNne taxes, which Presient Johasoii said he hoped 0)ngress would consider next moMh, will be the biggest test of the New Economics since 1964.</p>
        <p>meni is trying to buy more than it can immediately pay for. This waters down the value of money. It sends too many dollars chasing goods. And how? By raising taxes. This brings in the revenue while draining off the excess dollars.</p>
        <p>The critical factor in this rea-</p>
        <p>It wi have a catalytic effect  ^ validity of the fore-</p>
        <p>on the chemistry ^ tie econo-1 strong ecwwmic ex-my, and its success or failure</p>
        <p>may be measured in political false the assun^ti^ui tiiat we terms also. If it is based on a false hte assumption that we miscalculation, it could damage j are on tie edge of a boom. The ,both the economv and the future fact is that the resurgence has of Lvndon B. Johnson.  |not  yet  begun, and there is no</p>
        <p>ShouM the tax dosa^ be  evidence that H will</p>
        <p>timed &amp;lt; of an impropert amount, it could deiess the</p>
        <p>economy at a political sensitive</p>
        <p>come. Forecasts have a tendency to be ?m)ng.</p>
        <p>Any faii that the present</p>
        <p>time, just before the 1968 elec- forecasts are corr^ is lessened</p>
        <p>! tions.</p>
        <p>a bit by past misreadings. In</p>
        <p>DEEDS</p>
        <p>W.</p>
        <p>Mollie Rollins to James Lee $10.00 Greenville Development Co. to Robert W. Dean, al $10.00 Berline Cox, al to Berline Cox (children) $1.00 Frank M. Wooten, Tr. to State Bank &amp;amp; Trust Co., Tr., al</p>
        <p>The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Economic Truth For Americans Of Today</p>
        <p>Louis Zahn is the type of Warren B. Outterbridge, al to! American who has made this</p>
        <p>Council K. C. Marshmond $10.001 country the torchbearer Shelten D. Whitehurst, al to the entire world. But he</p>
        <p>corporate and personal income taxes were lowered. The move was controversial and even contradictory, for it sought to raise revtnue by lowering taxes.</p>
        <p>They never have operated a But it seemed to work. At newspaper route &amp;lt; a popcorn least the New Economists ior stand, a farm or a retail store, claimed credit for prolonging</p>
        <p>It would also discredit the '*- ^  most  econo-</p>
        <p>contention of the New Econom-*&amp;gt;'17^ me ac ion ics that the economic cycle is,os  but the administra-</p>
        <p>manageable, that Umough gov-j fo fai'ed o propose one. ernment spending and taxing i Now tiiat it has decided to act, the ripples of expansion-reces- The consensus may not be as Sion can be flattened out strong. The consequences, how-</p>
        <p>The New Ekionomics claimed a notable victory in 1964 when miKh, much larger in the pobb-</p>
        <p>cal sphere.</p>
        <p>AFTER REHEARSAL Luong Truyen, 16, left, and Nguyen Van Truong, 20. a foriMr</p>
        <p>militiaman, sit on cot in Due Pho, Vietnam, after telling their story of being beaten ana starved by their Viet Cong captors. They were among people freed from jungle prison camp aboui, ^ miles north of Saigon by U.S. paratroopers Thursday. The freed men and women told of lo mates being beaten to death in public executions to frighten other prisoners into submission.</p>
        <p>(AP Wlrephotol</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>Marjorie N. Whitehurst $1.00 N. L. Stott, al to Thomas L. Scoopmire, al $10.00 Shirley Taylor Godwin to J. Preston Corey, al $10.00 Myrtle Skinner Manning, al to Charles Tucker Wall. al $10.00 Myrtle Skinner Manning, al to Wilbur Ray Nichols, al $10.00 Lynndale Development Co. to John D. Fletcher, al $10.00 William R. Sanderson, al to James Edward Tripp, Sr. $19 00 Garence Earl Atkiosoii to Adi Atkinson $1.00 James Ivey Coward, al to Ivey Coward Co., Inc. $10.00 D. G. Nichols, al to William P. West, al $10.00 D. G. Nichols, al to Steve Van Every &amp;amp; Associates $10.00 Willie P. Gardner to Irene Gardner Gark $10.00 Herbert H. Forrest, al to Sue M. Moore $10.00 A. Tyson Bilbro, al to S. Lindsay Wilkerson, al $10.00 John H. Brookshire, al to Donald K. Taylor, al $10.00.</p>
        <p>Lynndale Development Co. to Sammie R. Hodges $10.00 Leon W. Andrews, al to Rob-*t Hill Construction Co. $10.00 Patricia W. Fitzpatrick, al to Jane H. Swindell $10.00 Mark D. Case, al to Carl G. Adler, Jr., al $10.00 Greenville Development Co. to John R. Farley, al $10.00 Calvert R. Dixoh, al to Byrcm B. Brown, Jr., al $10.00 Ray M. Spears, al to H. N. Hardy $10.00 L. C. Powell, Jr. to Greenville Utilities Comm. $10.00 A. T. Moore, al to Salem K. Fadel, al $10.00 Jesse D. Whidimrd, M to Ly-mon S. Smith $10.00 Charles A. Craft, al to Rhode-rkk Dail Sumrell $10.00</p>
        <p>woefully in the minority, for the usual college graduate is | merchandise and seU.</p>
        <p>a doctors office or any other venture where they had to buy,</p>
        <p>ignorant of the difference between gross vs. net. Thats why many clergymen are even espousing Socialism and why the average American overestimated by 600 pe*cent the profits of industry!</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph. D., M. D.</p>
        <p>CASE D-607: Louis Zahn. aged 58, is now head of a tremendous drug business in Chicago, grossing over $25 million per year.</p>
        <p>But be started out as a so-</p>
        <p>the economic expansion. And seemingly in proof of their theory, more rather than less reve-</p>
        <p>Instead, they take their paynue was obtained because the check home each week and thus  tax base broadened.</p>
        <p>have no grasp of the 3-part components of our free enterprise system.</p>
        <p>Hiese involve production, merchandising and credit.</p>
        <p>The bulk of American wage earners are merely drawing their pay each week from a job in one or another of those 3 divisions of free enterprise.</p>
        <p>This was considered a stunning victory for Walter Heller, then the administrations chief economist, who defied the conventional theiry that the need for higher revenue could bei met only by raising taxes, not lowering them.</p>
        <p>The present situation is unlike | 1964 in several ways, the most!</p>
        <p>Thats why they falsely accuse | pronounced difference being the management of excess profits,intent. The Johnson economists for they assume the merchant wish not only to raise revenue just empties the entire con-hut also to control rather than</p>
        <p>called underprivileged boy tents of the cash register into</p>
        <p>on our near South Side.</p>
        <p>But Louis had the ambition and firee enterprise zeal</p>
        <p>his pocket each night, to take home and spend as he likes. For dont most other Ameri-</p>
        <p>that has made America great.'cans thus take their pay check For example, vriien he was ^^c^^c in that same manner? only 7 years old, he found that! Many clergymen thus malign</p>
        <p>stimulate the economy.</p>
        <p>This makes the job even tougher than in 1964. As Gardner Ackley, now the chief administration economist, views the situation, taxes cannot be lowered because this would fuel</p>
        <p>he could buy a box of chewing our capitalistic system, yet theyi^ inflationary boom.</p>
        <p>gum from a wholesale candy are often as ignorant as the  ___</p>
        <p>dealer for 40 cents.  kinrfpnrprfpnpr  ^hnnt'  The  admimstration  s  theory</p>
        <p>FEWER HOLIDAYS</p>
        <p>FRANKFORT, Ky. ( A P ) -Some Republicans will recommend to the 1968 Legislature that the state eliminate some birthday holidays. They have complained about people finding Capitol doors closed on such days as Robert E. Lees and Franklin D. Roosevelts anniversaries.</p>
        <p>Then he peddled the gum on Michigan Avenue and got $1 for the contents of that 40-cent box.</p>
        <p>For variety, he also handled peanuts, both plain and chocolate-covered.</p>
        <p>Little Louis would buy them'   </p>
        <p>at 1 cent per bag in wholesale lots; then sack them and sell the final bag at 5 cents.</p>
        <p>From this practical experience in buying, merchandising and collecting, he acquired a keen sense of net {wofit vs.</p>
        <p>gross.</p>
        <p>This is something that most Americans, even after adulthood, still hardly understand.</p>
        <p>For the average American has never bought anything at wholesale; then merchandised it and finally cmputed the difference between what he paid and what he obtained from the final retail sales price.</p>
        <p>Except for rare cases like that of Louis, plus about 1,000,-000 sturdy American newspaper boys in Canada and the U.S.A., our youth are growing up as kisiness weaklings. .</p>
        <p>Even our college majors In economics are thus braintrust-ers.</p>
        <p>average kindergartener about</p>
        <p>jthat the nation is once again on</p>
        <p>At their seminaries, I have'^ often asked young clergymen j f'f- P^sion expected, ^ how much they think it costs I  7'':-.  O</p>
        <p>the average business  firm forjT''; &amp;lt;PI ^</p>
        <p>,  _  - rri^x trniiiA r\  i  </p>
        <p>each one-page, typed  personal</p>
        <p>CROSSWOi IZZ</p>
        <p>ACROSS LMigiatma 6. CcpBtcr</p>
        <p>10. Tropiodi tre*</p>
        <p>11. Esteem</p>
        <p>13. Tolerates</p>
        <p>14. Bird of jrey</p>
        <p>15. Negative</p>
        <p>16. Ed^ of  pitcher</p>
        <p>18. Famous Scottie</p>
        <p>19.Wc*iy 21. Cotlon-</p>
        <p>seeder</p>
        <p>23. Ship chisp nel</p>
        <p>24. Eternity</p>
        <p>as. Mesfci Auras</p>
        <p>28. Bearded^ as</p>
        <p>3L Be indebted 82. By say of 33. Diamond holder 35. 160oquara rods 39. Temites</p>
        <p>41. Taste SOLUTION OF YiSTfRDAY'S PUZZLi</p>
        <p>43. Narrow aalet</p>
        <p>\n</p>
        <p>Q</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>44. Frosting 46. Majestic</p>
        <p>48. Dike</p>
        <p>49. IVofesaions</p>
        <p>50. Think</p>
        <p>51. C3iurch officer</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Frill on a blouse</p>
        <p>2. Gmdiine</p>
        <p>3. Performed</p>
        <p>4. Celt</p>
        <p>5. Naval of-</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>ft</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>\i</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Si</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>sr</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>4i</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>4*</p>
        <p>k</p>
        <p>5i</p>
        <p>ficer</p>
        <p>6. 'Dirt girl</p>
        <p>7. Ma.Hs of Iread</p>
        <p>8. Hire</p>
        <p>9. Folding money</p>
        <p>10. Forbids 12. Lariat 17. Jumbled type 20. Tiny 22. This minuta 25. Exxentrio</p>
        <p>27. Legume</p>
        <p>28. Profit</p>
        <p>29. Flinched</p>
        <p>30. Home-spia</p>
        <p>31. Sedative 34. Bone</p>
        <p>30. l^finished</p>
        <p>37. Part of a atairwav</p>
        <p>38. Takes di ner</p>
        <p>40. Dirk 42. l^htiog stitch 45. Treasuea 47. Mining chisel</p>
        <p>the value of currency.</p>
        <p>A huge budget deficit height-The guesses range from 10 ens the dangers of inflation, for cents to 30 cents.  a deficit means that the govern-</p>
        <p>Yet Dartnell, famous cost analysis firm, showed that the</p>
        <p>cost is $2.44 per letter!</p>
        <p>It costs 9 cents just to file the carbon copy of each such letter!</p>
        <p>Most business firms are asked to mail a statement or bill, yet the overhead costs of simply typing off such a state-</p>
        <p>$2.50 on</p>
        <p>ment run from ward.</p>
        <p>It is this woeful ignorance by the white collar class regarding gross vs. net which makes them demand more handouts from Uncle Sam, as if Uncle Sam can magically produce money at will!</p>
        <p>HANDS IN THE DOUGH</p>
        <p>Agent A. B. Wentz, of</p>
        <p>the U.S. Secret Service, holds up part of the $250,000 in counterfeit $20 bills confiscated Saturday near Atlanta. Pour mrai were arrested. Wentz said identical bills have appeared to New Jersey, the Carolinas, Florida, Alabama and Xenoessee.</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0009" />
        <p>fh* Daily Raflaetor, Oraanvilla, N. C.Tulay, July 25, 1W79</p>
        <p>Sll HOW lASY h h IS mch buysrt for Csmpsn and Racraatienal Vehiclat wilii Claodiad Ada.</p>
        <p>Dial PL 2-6166SEE HOW EASY it is to reach hot prospects for something new... something old with Classified Ads.</p>
        <p>f 0e~-</p>
        <p>'H99T</p>
        <p>WitnwssM Plan 3-Day Sassion In Dorton Arana</p>
        <p> lU'.</p>
        <p>^ HAL&amp;amp;IK2H  A thrNlty session for Jehovahs Witnesses irom Uw Carolinas and Virginia will toe held at Dorton Arena toe-ginning Aug. 3.</p>
        <p>The course will end Aug. 6 wWith Information of Rescuing :  Great C^owd Out of Armagei</p>
        <p>-  The family of C. L. Corey,</p>
        <p> UkeenvlUe, will be attending. :.Some from Greenville have re-:jceived assignments to work in *;one of the more than 20 departments during the convention and</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVI Autos Per Sale</p>
        <p>FORD  1966 Custom 500. V - 0. automatic, two-tone color. $2095. B. T. Rowe Chevrolet, Ayden, N.C, 746-3141.</p>
        <p>mustang - 1966 two dr. hdtp. 389 engine, straight shift. $1866. $145. down with approved credit or wlU take older car for equity. CaU 747-5141, Snow HIU, after 6 P.m.  /</p>
        <p>IMPIOYMMT</p>
        <p>Malod^alo Help Wanffod</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN--1666 Fastbaok 22,000 actual miles exceptionally clean. $1995. CaU 752-8029 after 6.</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN ~ Only 2 sold In 1949 - 8.000 in 1986. Are you one of these? If not, see Joe Fe-</p>
        <p>cheles Motors, dial 756-1186.</p>
        <p>Duke U. Loyalty Fund Drive Ends</p>
        <p> DURHAM, N.C. - Duk* Uni-; v: sity closed its 1966-67 Loyal-; ty Fund campaign with $801,718</p>
        <p> in pledges and contributions, it was annoipiced here Monday.</p>
        <p>The total for the year ending June' 80 was $122,992 higher ~ than that railed in th* IMfrM  -  kStoa.  N.  C.</p>
        <p>TURN BUSINESS TRIPS INTO pleasure trips I Trade your old</p>
        <p> ____________________ oven**  for  a  Wagner-Waldrop</p>
        <p>will be Uking part in a  speciaii 7524525.</p>
        <p>city-wide house to house visit with sermonettes.</p>
        <p>According to Corey, Witnesses within a sO-mile radius af Ra-Mei^h are driving in daily to as-aist in a search for rooms in ^.private homes. More than 3,500 &amp;lt;or rooms have been</p>
        <p>*TC'''ived.</p>
        <p>^ Approximately 6,000 Witnesses ai e expected for the convention.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Third In New Car Sales. Now b Seventh Straight Yearl DtMsnver The Many Reasans Why. CaU Billy Brown. Dick Greene. Jfanmy</p>
        <p>Pace, Robert Tugwen. Or Jimmy Robarda.</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD INC.</p>
        <p>1805 DICKINSON PL t-7111</p>
        <p>OODOi</p>
        <p>CARS A TRUCKS Sales A Senrkt We Hava A Good SelectliNi</p>
        <p>ROUSi DODGIy INC. Dealer Ne. 81</p>
        <p>WANTED: RS8PON8IBLB MAN or woman for sales of lune fumldiings and ti^Uanoes. Apply 1^ once. FarmvUle Furniture Company, FarmvUle, North Carolina.</p>
        <p>ESTABLISHED RAWLEIOH businesa Juat toeoome availatole. Dependable man wanted. No capital Moeaaary. Write Rawleigh Dept. NCO-740-882, Riohmond, Va.</p>
        <p>fOR tAU</p>
        <p>Houeeheld Pumithlngt</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER CLEANING. TO keep c&amp;lt;gors gleaming, use Blue Lustre carpet cleaner. Rent electric ahanopooer $1. Waters Carpet Center.</p>
        <p>ROR lALI</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD OOODS</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT. EFFICIENT AND economical, that's Blue Lustre carpet and upholstery cleaner. Rent electric shampooer $1. Mary Carters.</p>
        <p>CORNER GROUP, 2 STUDIO lounges which cmvcrt to single beds. Green twe^. End table included. $80. CaU 752-3596.</p>
        <p>PUBLIC RELATIONS</p>
        <p>DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE</p>
        <p>Opportunity with statewide organ!-aatlon promottnf desirable voca-ti&amp;lt;ms for high school tad eoUege students. Public speaking, counsel and coordination involvod. OKloe in GreeaviUe provided with pei&amp;gt; sonal secretary and car. Starting salary $8650. Some college trahi-ing, age 8048 desirable. Write to John T. Kerr, Box 10987, Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Mai# Hlp WtPtMl</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED AUTO MECHANIC needed. Good aalary, exoeUent company benefits. M&amp;gt;ply in person at Penney's, Pitt Plam, Auto Center. An Equal Opportunity Employer.</p>
        <p>MAKE ME SHOW YOU HOW you can earn more mwiey. Write Manager, P.O. Box. 736, CHeen-viUe, N.C.</p>
        <p>GOOD YOUNG MAN TQ WORK at grain elevator. $1.40 per hr. Plenty of overtime. CaU .Fred Webb. 758-2141.</p>
        <p>efforts, representing an 18 percent increase.</p>
        <p>Ray J. Tysor of Greensboro, immediate past president of the Duke National Council, released the 1966-67 figures which top the goal of $800,000. The, 1967-68 campaign now under way Is seeking to meet a |1 miUion goal_.</p>
        <p>CARD OR TMANKI</p>
        <p>THE FAMILY OF THE LATE Nutrida Perkins acknowledge* wi'h sincere appreciation aU the deeds of aympatby and kindness</p>
        <p>of friends during the iUness and , d?-th of our daughter and sister.</p>
        <p>We pi-ay Gods blesstags upon ,-yOu. Lula Perkins and Children.</p>
        <p>Tel. 527-4121</p>
        <p>Cyclat Per Sale</p>
        <p>80S SUPER HAWK - 1966. For sale by owner. Very good condition. low mileage. If interested. caU 758-3047 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>FCm THE FINEST IN CARPET . . . Waters Carpet Center, your only exclusive Mohawk Carpet eenter in Pitt County. WlntervQla N.C.</p>
        <p>Mlacellaneeua Per Sale</p>
        <p>ARMSTRONG FLOORS ON TIME-check with us about this new payment plan. Whitehurst Floors, 758-3189.</p>
        <p>Spertifig Oeedt</p>
        <p>GOLF CLUBS, LEFT HANDED Bobby Jones. Used, in good oon-dithxi. 8 Irons, 4 woods. Make me an offer. 752-4067.</p>
        <p>Pin CAMPINO CENTER, INC</p>
        <p>483 GREENVHXB BLVD. (UNITED RENT-ALL)</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATR</p>
        <p>Heuaea Per Sale</p>
        <p>8 BDRM. BRICK HOUSE Located on By-Pass 264. baths. buUt-in appliances, large family room. Priced right for quick sale. Call E. M. Gibbs Real Estate Agency, PL 6-1650 day or night.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER: 507 PINE ST., NEW home on rolling lot. Only $17,500. Easy financing. David Evans, Jr. PL 2.2106, nights 752-4224.</p>
        <p>403 EASTERN. 3 BR. DR. LR. family room, 2 baths, basement, large aereened-ln back porch. BiU WllUama Real Estate. 762-2616.</p>
        <p>ELECTRIC GUITAR. KENT,</p>
        <p>With Kalamazoo model two amp. New. $65. CaU 756-0400.</p>
        <p>SONY TAPE DECK 464-D. RE-cords and plays stereo jdus sound on sound. $55. 766-0400.</p>
        <p>SINGER:  SEWING  MACHINE</p>
        <p>cabinet model. ZIO-ZAOER, but-tonholer, etc. Local person can finish payments $10 monthly or cash balance $38.90. See locally write National's Financing Dept.." Adjuster Nichols. Drawer 280, Asheboro, N.C.</p>
        <p>LAWN MOWERS 22" CUT PRICE 49.50 A UP</p>
        <p>HENDRIX-BARNHILL</p>
        <p>STEREO AMPLIFIER, X-IOUB and stereo FM 50-B tuner by Fisher. Comb, for $100. 756-0400.</p>
        <p>SALESMAN WANTED</p>
        <p>Age 85^ to work to Greenville cOLOR TV, MOTOROLA, RECTT.</p>
        <p>"'".."J?* *5,'* ** T** as- .crera, table model.</p>
        <p>Tk   Multmirect.  not  rtenna,  S50.</p>
        <p>pid advancement to this job with eamittgs well above average Write Sateimaa". Box 469 GreeaviUe, N. C.</p>
        <p>HONDA  1966 Sport 65. Good condition, 6500 miles. Phone 752-5381 or 756-1150.</p>
        <p>HONDA SUMMER SALES HAP-pentag. Would you beUeve a 1967 305 Super Hawk for only $625 or a 1967 Honda Sport 65 for $245. Stans Cyde Center. 758-3613.</p>
        <p>YAMAHA  YL-1, 1966, 100 00. 2 cyl., 2 cycle, 1,000 miles, "auto-lube." $250. CaU 756.3580.</p>
        <p>AUT0M0TIV9</p>
        <p>AutomothfU Loans</p>
        <p>QUICK, EASY, CONFIDENTIAL! At'.antic Discount makes buying a new car pleasant, paying off easy. 752-4112.</p>
        <p>Autos Per Salo</p>
        <p>BUICK - 1963 Electra 2^ 4 - dr h^' p. Fully loaded with air con-di on. Silver grey with grey 1 terior. Vic PezzuUa, 756-3128.</p>
        <p>c mLAC1065 Coupe deVlUe.</p>
        <p>C' - '.ct W. H. Woolard. 105 Lake-wr-i Dr., City._____</p>
        <p>CIIUVELL * 1965 Mailbu sta wre. 4 dr., automatic, V-8, heater. ' $l7n5. Phelps CUtevrolet. 756.^150.</p>
        <p>'cVlEVROLET ^19M Impala 4 Mr.. 6 passenger station wagon. Radio, heater, automatic. Power steering and brakes. $1295. Phelps Chevrolet, 756-2150.</p>
        <p>CORVAIR  1965 Corsa 2 dr. hdlp. Red with white interior, 4 speed transmission, good condition. Going in service. $1100. CaU 752-6529.</p>
        <p>CORVAIR  1964 Monza, red with red bucket seats, R/H, 4 speed trans. Just like new Stafford Olds, 756-3115.</p>
        <p>DOGS ft PETS</p>
        <p>MALE BOOKKEEPER. PAY commensurate to experience. Fred Webb Grain Elevator PL 8-2141.</p>
        <p>SALESMENI</p>
        <p>CaU 756-0400.</p>
        <p>SEWING MACHINE: PORTABLE, 1966 Kenmore Model 85. Automatic, zig zag, dtachments. Used once. $85. CaU 756-0400.</p>
        <p>RIOT-DAMAGED TRUCK LOAD Sale. ZIG ZAG sewing machines.</p>
        <p>Makes button holes, embros., sews Wm ^  rrnrfrnf  nm  bUttonS,  aU  WlttlOUt attach-</p>
        <p>BELOW WHOLESALE, in a fleW where there Is practl-  complete.  Terms with</p>
        <p>approved credit. Can be tried out</p>
        <p>cally BO competitk for a very demanded product. (Mike located here to OreenviUe. This it one of the highest paytog tales post tions avallnble to this area. Write "Saksmen", P. O. Box 179, giving past expertence.</p>
        <p>1 sheetrock hanger and</p>
        <p>AKC PKpjGNESE &amp;amp; WESTIE, finisher wanted. Prefer experience</p>
        <p>not neoenuy U UUuk to edhealthy. MU-Ay Kennels.  call 756^)06. after &amp;lt; pm</p>
        <p>3790.</p>
        <p>locaUy. Write District Office, P.O. Box 882, Dunn, N. C. 28334.</p>
        <p>COLLIE PUPPIES, PUREBRED and dewormed, Tekphone 752-5216.</p>
        <p>REGISTERED SIAMESE CAT and 1 kitten. Females. Excellent pets. CaU 758-2322 between 8 am. and 5 p. m.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Famala Halp Wantad</p>
        <p>HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN. Age, race, religion of no concern. Capable of complete management of home. Contact Mrs. Humphrey, BeU Arthur or FarmvUle 753-4.339.</p>
        <p>MAIDS, NY TO $75 WK TOP JOBS, BEST HOMES</p>
        <p>In N.Y. City, New Jersey. Brtog your friends. Fare sent, rush refs. Free gift. Miss Dtxk Agency, 300 W. 40 St., N.Y.C. Dept. 10.</p>
        <p>PERMANENT JOB FOR VWHra lady dotog houseke^ing and chUd care. 5 day week. CaU 758-3943.</p>
        <p>FORD -- 1961 four dr. Galaxle R/8. automatic, power stee^ extra clean. $695. F &amp;amp; D -"JbiMotors, PL 8-4406.</p>
        <p>s (</p>
        <p>. ^</p>
        <p>41*</p>
        <p>A x'jr</p>
        <p>1 A</p>
        <p>I;. M</p>
        <p>DIAL PL 2-6166</p>
        <p>Tto Plaaa Your Dally flactor Claeslflad Ad. lit sart for 7 Days, Tha CoM It Lots.</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>I Uaa Mtotmnm</p>
        <p>1 Daywgge Par Ll^ Per Day 4 Dayi-&amp;gt;ne Per Uas Per Day 7 Daya-tSe Par Ltee Per Day Cfidmct Rates Avnltobto</p>
        <p>ClABSiniD DISPUY $1.56 Par Cetoma Inch Ceairact Ratea Avafiable</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>Ne lew a4a, kiili er certectteae acceyiei after U:il pja. the</p>
        <p>day before publlcaOhm, except Soaiay and Mraday editisas. Sunday deadhae li 18 aaeo</p>
        <p>Friday- and Monday deadltoe</p>
        <p>is Fric^ny 4 p. m.</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>Errors roust be reperted toa mediately. The Dally Refke^ can net make BitowanoM for errors after 1st ittQ'</p>
        <p>MRS.</p>
        <p>HOMEMAKER</p>
        <p>Looking for a new career? Take a look at your present Job. Is It drab? dull? dreary? It doesnt have to be. Begin a new, exciting career with one of the largest companks to the nation.</p>
        <p>Outside work with an &amp;lt;H&amp;gt;portanity to meet the public. No selling involved. Must he over SO yrs. of age and have use a car. Dont stay trapped. You owe it to yourself to investigate. Write Personnel Manager, P.O. Box 736, Greenville for interview.</p>
        <p>EXPBIT SIRVICB</p>
        <p>INSTANT COPY SERVICE</p>
        <p>Copying White Yon Watt</p>
        <p>STEVE VAN EVERY k ASSO.</p>
        <p>115 West Fourth Street 758-5135</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>TOBACCO SHEETS</p>
        <p>for your untied tobacco.</p>
        <p>Greenville Tobacco Curing Co.</p>
        <p>Kool's Warehouse 752.2161</p>
        <p>CAMPINO TRAILERS SAILBOATS SALES ft RENTALS</p>
        <p>WEEKLY RENTAlft $35 UP</p>
        <p>Phone 756-3862</p>
        <p>MOBILI HOMES</p>
        <p>NO MATTER WHERE YOU roam, youU have your home if its a mobUe home from Circle M. Homes, Inc. See the new 12 widesi! East 10th Street, Oreen-vUle.</p>
        <p>Mobil# Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>HOUSETRAILER FOR Telephone 7524993.</p>
        <p>RENT.</p>
        <p>PINEVIEW COURT  NOW HAS several 10 and 12 wide mobile homes for rent. Large shaded lots, patio, play area, picnic tables. Come Inspect this pleasing homeslte, just 5 mtn. from downtown, Port Terminal Rd., turn left cuffs Oyster Bar, 264 East of OreenvUle. 758-3644.</p>
        <p>3 BDRM. TRAILER. 10 BY 57 air conditioned. AvaUable Aug. 2. CaU 752-2953 or 752-7921.</p>
        <p>TWO 2 BEDROOM TRAILERS f&amp;lt;w rent. Telephone 752-5362.</p>
        <p>TERRIFIC</p>
        <p>Loan AssumpfionI Only $4,300 Down</p>
        <p>assume loan on beauUfuUy decorated 4.hedroom Iwme with carport and professioaally landscaped kt. Larga kttchea and separate dining area. Living room has new wall-to-wall carpet. Large attractive den has sliding glass doors and fireplace. 8 full baths, plenty of storage space and separate utlUty area. Make this a cmivenient home for a large family. 4th. Bedroom has its own entrance and bath, and would make an excellent otfke. Located near college, Elmhurst Sctoml. and Pitt Plan Shopping. A real buy! And you nve closing costs, too!</p>
        <p>CALL 75B-2931</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>NO GUESS-WORK ABOUT TEN-ants, taxes, repairs, other problems. when Grier Rental supei&amp;gt; vises your Inctmie prcwerty. 752-</p>
        <p>5700.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Apartiiwim For Rant</p>
        <p>PARKVIEW MANOR</p>
        <p>1 and t bedroom hunished apta. Features: earpet, air condttkntog, walk-in cksets, teundry rooms, swimmtog pool. Call M.E. 8ut&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>ton or C.L. Thigpen, 752-6128.</p>
        <p>RBNTAU Roaifit Pur ftuut</p>
        <p>MEN STUDENTS: IF YOU NEED a room for faU qinrter, call PL 6-8515.</p>
        <p>SPiCIAL Noncis</p>
        <p>FURN. 2 BR APT. 704 EAST 3RD</p>
        <p>St. Air conditioned. Married couple. $90. PL 2-4717.</p>
        <p>GREENSPRINGS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom Town House apartments. Fumbhed and onftm nished. Featiirea: earpet, akr ce ditkntof and wnto-to cesete. Call M. E. Sutton or C. L. Thigpaa. 758-6121.</p>
        <p>RIVERPRONT APTS. ONE 3 RM.</p>
        <p>completely furnished apt. * QJl 758-2773 or 752-5807.</p>
        <p>THE CARRIAGE HOUSE</p>
        <p>8 bedrooms  Ktogaberry Homn Town Houae, baths, bniit4a Ketpotot Kttchena, central ak condition, tally carpeted, 19 x 10 concrete patio with redwood fence, swimming po(d. Dtol 756-8450 or see residnt mnnater. New Bern Highway.</p>
        <p>' ZIP CODE DIRECTORY</p>
        <p>for yonr mail. Over 8S,(KW list* togs, tHmvenient 8H** x 11" sise. Only $1.</p>
        <p>Phone 756-2037 after</p>
        <p>FROM WALL TO WALL. NO SOIL at all &amp;lt;m carpets cleaned with Blue Lustre. Rent tectric shampooer $1. Belk TylM^g.</p>
        <p>FUNDS AVAIUBU .</p>
        <p>for first aad second mortgagn kant on commerctol. Indnttrlai. income prodnctog property. $,-6 to 0,000,000. Restdentia] (FHA-VA-CoBveBtmiaD. Ate# ft* aancing. ivc accounts reeeivabiei tovaatory, work in mooaes, time depeaite, etc.</p>
        <p>P. I. CAMPBELL P.O. Box 888, Sanford, N.C. Phone TTUdSU</p>
        <p>reduce SAFE, SIMPLE. FAST and easy with famous X-11 Plan. Only $2.98. 2-week guaranteed trial. Blsseties Drug Store,</p>
        <p>Housm Por Runt</p>
        <p>S ROOM FRAldE HOME IN Colored section. Greenfield Terrace, $50 per month. Octotact Jimmy Lee, H. A. White k Sons, 758-2149.</p>
        <p>7 BDRM., 3 BATHS FURN. rooming house to college-approved housemother. 7 blocks from campus. CaU 756-8515.</p>
        <p>I WILL HAUL YOUR.. TOBACCO TO GEORGIA</p>
        <p>For toformatkn, cafl* Harry Robnrte Washtogtea, 4f-88n</p>
        <p>WANTB)</p>
        <p>Wniilud Tu ftuy</p>
        <p>ONE 3 BR HOUSE. $65. ONE 2 BR house, $50. Newly decorated.</p>
        <p>Call 756-1900.</p>
        <p>2 BR. AIR. COND. MOBILE home. $65 mo. Meadowbrook TraUer Pk. PL 8-1108.</p>
        <p>WE RENT MOST EVERYTHING FOR YOUR DAILY NEEDS</p>
        <p>PARTY NEEDS</p>
        <p>U Tabks</p>
        <p>U Glasses U Flatware U Silver Servlcet</p>
        <p>UNITED RENT ALL</p>
        <p>OPEN 8 AM . 8 PM 483 GreenviUe Blvd. 758-3888</p>
        <p>Ruiort Por Runt</p>
        <p>3 BR TRAILER ON PAMLIOO River. WaterfrmA lot. Phone PL 6-1901.</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH COTTAGE on East AtlanUo Blvd. 6 BR. Call Bruce Ganla. GriftoD, N.C. 5244916.</p>
        <p>10 AND 12 WIDE TWO BED-room, air conditioned trailers on 264 By-Pass. Phone PL6-3515.</p>
        <p>KELVINATOR WASHER IN good condition. See Joseph Har- _75841801 rlfl, 1404 Allen St. In Meadow-</p>
        <p>H &amp;amp; M RADIO-TVS HOSPITAL i ___</p>
        <p>2 A 8 BEDROOM MOBILB</p>
        <p>homes. Good tecatlon. Alao lot spaces for rent. PL 242M.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR FOR RENT See onr new 10* wide, 2 bedroom mobik homes for ,885.  $895</p>
        <p>down and $54 per month.</p>
        <p>AZALEA MOBILE HOMES phone 758 4174 8018 East 10th Street</p>
        <p>MONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>PLAY NOW, PAY LATER. WITH a Great Southern vacation loan. Visit 405 Evans today. 752-7117.</p>
        <p>Is looking patients! D^l 758-2436! WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERA-for our TV "ambulance." Low | tor for sale. Freezer door broken.</p>
        <p>fees for a speedy cure.</p>
        <p>AIRPLANE CROP SPRAYING</p>
        <p>Tobacco, Beans,</p>
        <p>Call FarmvUle: 753-3268.</p>
        <p>Cottou, Com. 753-3152 or</p>
        <p>$65. Call 752-4823.</p>
        <p>CRAFT SPRAYING, INC.</p>
        <p>Fnrmville, N. C.</p>
        <p>A NEW DIMENSION IN VACUUM cleaners: Sunbeam 1% HP unmatched combination of power, performance, eye appeal. Smith Electric Co., 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>RADIATOR EQUIPMENT ~F^ sale. Can be seen at Statona Mill.</p>
        <p>CaU 758-3690.</p>
        <p>FHA St VA MORE AVAILABLE NOW</p>
        <p>HOME LOANS</p>
        <p>Mortgagu Loan Departmunt</p>
        <p>WACHOVIA BANK</p>
        <p>AND TRUST CO. PLAZA 8-2151</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>YOURE WISE TO HAVE AIR conditioning installed by Coastal Refrigeration. York makes summer Uving pleasant. 756-2104.</p>
        <p>SIDING</p>
        <p>Vinyl</p>
        <p>Akmlnum  Asbestos</p>
        <p>GOODSON</p>
        <p>ROOFING SERVICE</p>
        <p>7S^8148</p>
        <p>COLORED LADIES WANTED. Earn $25 to $100 per week. SeU quality cosmetics on InstaUment accounts. No investment in stock. High commission on coUection. Write R. L. Lang. P. O. Box 274, GreenviUe.</p>
        <p>NO MORE SUMMER DISCOM-fort! Let General Heating, Inc., inataU air ccnditi(Ung in your home, business. Dial 752-4187 today for free estimates on low cart comfort. Room or central units. Easy terms. 1100 Evans.</p>
        <p>AIRPLANE CROP SPRAYING</p>
        <p>U Tobacco MH 30 U Cotton  Beans  Cora</p>
        <p>R.F. McLawhom ft Sons</p>
        <p>752-3286</p>
        <p>PRACTICALLY NEW HOUSETOP television aerial. CaU 758-2952.</p>
        <p>SUPER STUFF, SURE NUP! Thats Blue Lustre for cleaning rugs and upholstery. Rent electric shampooer $1. GUddens.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY</p>
        <p>Automotive concern has &amp;lt;H&amp;gt;entog for high school graduate with at kast 1 yr. work experience. Minimum 50 wpm on electric typewriter and use 10-key ekctrk adding machine. Work week: Monday  Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Must hav dMvers license. Send resume of educatkn and work background to Mr. Frank Johnson, P.O. Box 818, Greenvilk, N. C.</p>
        <p>WILSON</p>
        <p>RHODES</p>
        <p>IkciriMl ContTMlOr</p>
        <p>1501 Hooker Rd.</p>
        <p>758-4365</p>
        <p>TROUBLE STARTING YOUR car? Carr AUen Texaco wiU give it a check-up today. Super service at modest cost. 752-4838.</p>
        <p>MAIDS NEEDED NOW. LIVE-IN jobs New York. Boston. Conn., and Norfolk, Salary up to $65 per wk. CcMitact by phone 399-4031 or Mr. Hayes 622-5184 or write Anderson Agency, 469 Green St., Portsmouth, Va.</p>
        <p>Male-Female Help Wanted</p>
        <p>SPARE TIME INCOME</p>
        <p>Excellent monthly income  refilling and collecting money from NEW TYPE HIGH QUALITY coin operated dispensers in this area. No selling. To quattty you mat have a car, references, $500 to $1900 cash. Six to ten hours per week can net excelknt tocouM. For personal interview write; P.O. Box 144. Gknshaw, Pa. 15116  Please include phone number.</p>
        <p>GET A JOB with work "wanted ads In Claaslllea.</p>
        <p>SUNSHINE CLEANERS West End Shopping Center "Quality First"</p>
        <p>Free Mothprooftog Free Storage 1Hmir Cleaning 3Hour Shirt Servlet</p>
        <p>GROUND SNAP CORN. MIXED, to your specifications, $47.00  ton. Ayden MobUe Milling, 756-2016</p>
        <p>RUG AND FURNITURE SHAM pooing. Floors cleaned, waxed, and polished. Jacksons Tire 8t Upholstery, day 758-3276, nighte 758-1505.</p>
        <p>USED 15 TIRES. CLOTHES-line posts. Used life jackets, $1.25. I960 Ford pick up. GreenviUe Parts k Metal Co., N. Greene St.</p>
        <p>ONLY. CHOICE SELECT GRAIN is used in the manufacture of Abbitts Corn Meal. Always ask for Abbitts.</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD GOODS</p>
        <p>OE AIR CONDmON FOR sale. 8.000 BTU, 1 yr. old. Phone PL 2-5842.</p>
        <p>TWIN NEEDLE ZIG-ZAG SEW-ing machine to cabinet like new, buttonholes, darns, decorative stitches, etc., without attachments. Someone in this area may assume payments of $10.83 per</p>
        <p>mo. or pay complete balance ot $39.83. Can be seen and tried out locaUy without obligation. For complete details, write to Mrs. Floyd, Sendee Credit Dept,, P.O. Box 241, Home Office, Asheboro, N.C.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS IN</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>CALL OR Sia</p>
        <p>E. H. Williford</p>
        <p>Lilt Yr Prvptrty WHli Us ns x. M St. PL S-W11. Ni0ht PL</p>
        <p>Housm For Sal#</p>
        <p>BY OWNER: 8 BDRM. BRICK home in Harringt(i and Williams Subd. Large den and kitcben. many extras. Recently constructed recreatkxi room, ideal for shop or office use. Fay smaU equity and assume loan. 752-8995.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE AT SACRIFICE: Real nice 4 bdrm. home located 1^ Patrkdc St., Orifton, N. C. 100% financing arrangementa. Price $12,950. See Tarheel Hmnes k Realty, Inc., Ayden. N. C.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Ront</p>
        <p>BEVERLY MANOR APTS. 2 bdrms., central air condition, drapes, carpeting, stove and re-frigator. Grier Ratal Agency, 752-5700.</p>
        <p>1 BLOCK FROM OCEAN, AT-latic Beach. $75 weely. Sam Pollard Plumbing Co.. 75^88el. nighte 7-S84i.</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH COTTAGK near Pavilion. Call Van D. Hatch coUect 527-8110, lOnston, W.C.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>WANTED: GENTLE PLEASURE horse. Call PL 8-1141 days. PL 2-4686 nighte.</p>
        <p>HOUSE WANTED TO BUY: 4 OR more bdnns., to univorsity area Older home aceeptaUe. Write giving details to Box 65. Piyeho-logy Dept., ECU, City.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIN) DISPUY</p>
        <p>THE MAONOLIAS-418 WEST 5th Street. Availability: 3 bdrm. apt. with carpeted livtog and dining room. Air caditioned. Rent Includes heat, water, stove and refrigerator. Mosely Bros., 752-3070.</p>
        <p>HARDWARE - ROOPING STORM WINDOWS ft DOORS , AWNINGS</p>
        <p>C. L LUPTON ca</p>
        <p>7U4U0</p>
        <p>1 BDRM. FURNISHED Telephone PL 6-1821.</p>
        <p>APT.</p>
        <p>VILUGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>800 HEATH 752-5100</p>
        <p>PLEASANT QUIET 3 RM. APT. in desirable neighborhood. Fum. or unf. Air oonditioned. Ctouple or mature adult. Dial PL 6-0861.</p>
        <p>FURN. APT. $47.50 PER MO. For married couple or sober working man. 756-4897 or 752-6165.</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA: 2 BR FURN. APT. Carpeted, water, heat, air conditioning furn. Also 1 BR furn. apt. AvaUaUe SrtA. 1. Couplea</p>
        <p>CaU 752-3376.</p>
        <p>CUSSIPIB) DISPUY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Clogii ColltMi Rggt Prog Of ButtoiM</p>
        <p>THE DAILY RBPLBaOR</p>
        <p>STRATFORD</p>
        <p>ARMS</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1900 S. Charlea 8$.</p>
        <p>1 and 2 bedroom apartments from $100.06.  (1</p>
        <p>eludes heat, hot water aai</p>
        <p>cooking.)</p>
        <p># Swimming Pool G Central Air</p>
        <p>Conditiening</p>
        <p># Wall to wan carpet G Fully equipped</p>
        <p>Hotpeint Kitchent</p>
        <p># Dishwasher (optional)</p>
        <p>G ^mishod Apartmanto Avallabla</p>
        <p>Call 752-5721</p>
        <p>id Hodgopeth Rasident Manager Apartment sJl</p>
        <p>STOPI</p>
        <p>ASK...</p>
        <p>YOURSELF</p>
        <p>''Where will I be ami what will I ba doing S years from today, if I continua what I am doing newt"</p>
        <p>W have 3 posmofis to fill In</p>
        <p>orMRvma M. c. wti&amp;lt;eii mr</p>
        <p>|R*R nMHMstmmt fpr MM rlihf maR.</p>
        <p>Vaa caa immadiattly axpaet *li AVERAGE OVER $156 PER WEEK COMMISSION</p>
        <p> AtfwiS 1 watin a( seSooiiRf W RaMfli, N. C axpamas imM.</p>
        <p> a# fiHiraRMai mw par maaUi a start.</p>
        <p> Doriva m% ar feaiMr af yaar a&amp;gt; cama fram aatabHshaS accavRta.</p>
        <p> Sa gfvan tlia aaaartunlty ta atf&amp;gt; vanea rapMiy tRta manafamaat</p>
        <p> Na Iwaia ta liaaM cattvattiRf.</p>
        <p>Ta CHMlify:</p>
        <p>Must ba spartt&amp;gt;mliMlai Aa ar avar AmMttaaa DapaiKabla Nigb Sebaal sraSwata ar battar Own faai car</p>
        <p>POR THI RIOHT MAN THIS It A LIPKTIMI CARRIR OPPORTUNITY WITH AN INTIRNATIONAL OROUP OP SOMPANint</p>
        <p>CrH far Appotntmest Now!</p>
        <p>PhaRt m-toi SARNia AVIRRTTi'**-f tM am ta 4tM pm  Joly II A M</p>
        <p>ASSUME PRESENT VA LOAN for only $9(X) down payment to be appUed toward purchase price of $14,3(X). Monthly payments $97.30. Rouse located in Ayden on New Circle Drive. Apply at Toitieel Homes k Realty, Inc.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>REESE FURNITURE CO.</p>
        <p>SELLING OUT</p>
        <p>TO THE BARE WALLS</p>
        <p>Onr entire stock of fnmttiini will be sold at drastic re-dnctions. Come to ad look it over.</p>
        <p>509 West 14th St.</p>
        <p>FOR SALI</p>
        <p>Household Furnishings</p>
        <p>USED REFRIGERATOR. WASH-ing machine and 1 ton air conditioner. Call 756-1900.</p>
        <p>MORE BORROWERS TURN TO you when you advertise your loan service in Classified Dia? PL 2-6166 today.</p>
        <p>ANNOUNCEMENT</p>
        <p>WESTERN UNION Is pleased to announce Its entry tote the TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE. If you are an average husinen or professional man, your offke door is closed almost seventy-five percent of the time during a year  and ywi may he frequently faced with the problem of "staffing" daring hmch hours or coffee breaks. Service will be provided dniing the open hours of our Greenvilk Western Unkm Office. TELEPHONE PL 2-3161, Greenvilk, Mr. E. R. ALLEN FOR DETAILS REGARDING THIS SERVICE.</p>
        <p>WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO.</p>
        <p>SUNO^</p>
        <p>SERVICE</p>
        <p>STATION</p>
        <p>1200 DICKINSON AVE., GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>For Rent</p>
        <p>1. VERY REASONABLE RENT</p>
        <p>2. SALARY AND EXPENSES DURING TRAINING</p>
        <p>3. HIGH INCOME PRODUCING LOCATION</p>
        <p>CALL TODAY</p>
        <p>SUNOCO</p>
        <p>752-7589</p>
        <p>WRITE P.O. BOX 2627, ORISNVILUl</p>
        <pb facs="00088484_0010" />
        <p>SCMfct DaHy Raflecter, Graanvilla, N. C.-Tuasday, July 25, 1967</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - (NCDA)-</p>
        <p>Nortti Carolina egg markets generally steady. Suppl es le-quate demand fair. Prices paid ^odiKers and handlers for consumer grade eggs in cartons de-kvered nearby outlets:</p>
        <p>Grade A large whites: 42 to 43: medicm, whites: 32 to 3r, small, whites: 20^ to 23 mostly 22 to 23.</p>
        <p>: RALEIGH (AP) ~ (NCDA)-North Carolina bog markets today are steady to 50 cents low-3C, mostly steady. Tops of 21.75-22,2$ Rocky Mount; 21.00-22.00 Wilson, - Bethel; 22.00 Rich</p>
        <p>seccHid-quarter earnings were 72</p>
        <p>per cent below a yem* earlier.</p>
        <p>Polaroid snapped back about 3 points. Outboard Marine was active and up about 2.</p>
        <p>Among savings-and loans. Great Western Financial was the most active and up about a point.</p>
        <p>Everett</p>
        <p>(Ck)ntinued from page 1) Republican State chairman, termed the switch a truly significant event for the party. The Republican leader said the Democrats have used Eastern</p>
        <p>^uare; 21.75  ^1^  Sal-  North  Carolina  to  elect  their</p>
        <p>isbury, Greensboro; City and Denton.</p>
        <p>21.00 Siler</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  The stock market put on anotiier ir-cegular showing early ttiis afternoon as it continued to consolidate recent gains.</p>
        <p>Advances outnumbered declines from the start but weakness in some key stocks depressed the averages.</p>
        <p>^^ading was active.</p>
        <p>^The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was down 2.43 to 902.10.</p>
        <p>^^astman Kodak, off about 3</p>
        <p>points, continued to react from the news on its first drop in earnings in a decade. Owens Illinois lost more than a point. These and other losses depressed the Dow industrials.</p>
        <p>On the other hand, savings-and-loan holding companies re-dOShed tiieir rally and there was 4 considerable showing of ^hength among selected stocks. The Associated Press average 60 stocks at noon was off .2 dt 338.0 with industrials off .8,</p>
        <p>governor candidates time after time . . . then chose to forget the east, time after time.</p>
        <p>Everett is a Marine Corj;^ veteran who saw service in the Pacific during World War II and the Korean conflict and received battlefield promotions from the rank of private to captain. He said, I know that we must change parties in order to save our great nation.</p>
        <p>I look at the news eadi night and find it is now permissible to riot, loot, kill and destroy personal property in this count^ . . . when farmers in this section need extra labor and are told by the laborers that they do not have to work, the Great Society is taking care of them . . .</p>
        <p>When I find that our great State is at the bottom of the list on such things as teachers, salaries, average income . . . caused by 60 years of control by the Democratic party, I say we must unshackle ourselves</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Sutton</p>
        <p>Mrs. Nannie Ormond Sutton, 76, widow of King David Sutton, died sudttenly Monday afternoon at 1:30 at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Wes Nelson, near Greenville.  j  ^</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted at the Wilkerson Chapel Wednesday afternoon at 3:30 by the Rev. Gurney Sauls, pastor of Grindle Creek Church of God. Burial will be in the Ayden Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Sutton spent most of her life in Pitt Chunty and was a member of Pleasant Hill Free Will Baptist Church. She had made her home with her daughter. Mrs. Nelson, for 25 years. Her husband died in 1940.</p>
        <p>Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Wes Nelson of near Green</p>
        <p>ville and Mrs. Louis Hedgepeth of Ayden; a son, Ben D. (Joe) Sutton of Greenville; eight grandchildren; two great grandchildren; three half-sisters, Mrs. Charlie Woolard of near Wash-inton, Mrs. Gray Bland of Greenville, and Mrs. Claude Woolard of near Washington; and g half-brother, Marvin Ormond of Washington.</p>
        <p>Gnrst</p>
        <p>Mrs. Annie L. Gurst died Sunday at 6:00 p.m., in Lumberton Hospital</p>
        <p>Funeral seryices will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 p.m. in Fairmont.</p>
        <p>She is the sister of Mrs. Ocoma Wils(m of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Everett read . .</p>
        <p>continued: When I that Chairman Joe</p>
        <p>(nils off .1 and utilities up .1.  * * u* u ^ .DMXnuieU Douglas gained</p>
        <p>J pointsM It paced  that</p>
        <p>list on volume. iSimiley, however, was jolted ft a S-point loss following a Gntement by Loriards chair-ihdn that the proposed merger iBust be resolved no later than j|^."2 or the merger talks wo^ end.</p>
        <p>Lorillard fell about 2 points.</p>
        <p>Pennsylvania Railroad was down about a point as it continued to react to news that its</p>
        <p>Railway Society Meet Wednesday</p>
        <p>- The East Carolina Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society will hold its mcmthly meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday, in room 1ft of Rawl Bldg. JT iNTOgram will include sev-tkJ abort cdor films, color afides taken during a recent trip hbind Southern Railway steam locomotive 4501.</p>
        <p>Planning for restm-ation and piaintenance of rolling stock re-eently donated to the chapter frill M discussed.</p>
        <p>' P:a(ms who are interested in toflroacHng or the railfan hobby ire invited to attend the meet-tng.</p>
        <p>i:'Community Announcements</p>
        <p>The St Paul Disciple Choir wffi meet Friday at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>'The Christian Education De-partmoit of the Washington District AME Zion Church will hold Its tMrd workshop of the year it'Easnoca Beach, Saturday from 9:30 a.m. until 1 p.m.</p>
        <p>covered dish luncheon will ilB held at 1 p.m.</p>
        <p>Easnoca Beach is located 6 miles from Aurora, turn left at 8. W. Snowden School</p>
        <p>have a tendency to go Republican get a larger share of our highway dollar . . . when the Democratic party of this county fails to endorse separate university status for East Carolina . . . this is just a small list of reasons that I had for switching.</p>
        <p>It is my honest opinion that with suitable candidates, we will carry Eastern North Carolina by a landslide, in 1968, Everett predicted. The Republican I party will have suitable and capable candidates for all state wide offices in 1968 ... he continued.</p>
        <p>To the people of Eastern North Carolina, let me bring to your attention the fact that we have a university here in Green-vUie due to one reason, that being the Democratic party was afraid they were going to lose your vote, Everett explained.</p>
        <p>*This alone should bring to your attention the advantage of a true two-party system in our state.</p>
        <p>I intend to devote my energy and resources toward making this a better place to live. I cannot do it by remaining a Democuat, Everett said, must join the Republican party and I invite you to do so.</p>
        <p>Holshouser, pointing to the switch by Everett, said it represents the changing mood he has observed in the East</p>
        <p>Now, Holshouser said, people are thinking of their grandchildren and are not concerned with what their grandfathers would think about them voting Republican.</p>
        <p>Hemby</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Marion (Best) Hemby will be conducted Wednesday at 3:00 p. m. at Mt Calvary FWB Church. Rev. W. L. Jones will officiate and burial will follow in Brown Hill C!e-metery.</p>
        <p>The funeral was previously announced for 2:00 p. m.</p>
        <p>TO MARKET, TO MARKET  Tobacco farmer Calvin Smith of Ochlochnee, Ga., surveys his crop of tobacco which will go to market Wednesday when auction sales begin on Georgias t(^acco maritets. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Today In Washington</p>
        <p>..Prayer meeting for St John Paptist Church, Falkland, will be hrid at the home of Edward Rodgers tonight in Greenville at tAdock.</p>
        <p>The Senior Choir of Selvia Chapel FWB Church will have rehearsal Friday at 8 p.m. at the church.</p>
        <p>SIMPSON  The Simpson 4-H Qub win meet in the education building of Simpson fkriiool tonight at 8 oclodc.</p>
        <p>pmt SALS  AUTOMOSIUi</p>
        <p>..TIU  IMS MmM RM W/Btock Tb. /m tMm. RMM. mm wMMwatt ^MrRk 't wctra tmmm Rrw. Om mtnm M MMRttaik R. . May, ParuivIM^ *11. C. SIMM MCS4IM r TSMSIS.</p>
        <p>Cherry</p>
        <p>Mrs. Rena Cherry of Grei-ville died in Pitt Memorial Hospital after a brief illness. Funeral services will be Wednesday at 3:00 p. m., at St. Peter Baptist Church. Rev. Nahum Harris officiating. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, Charlie Cherry of the home; a daughter, Mrs. Ella Louise Holton of Greenville; three sons, Arthur Cherry and Charlie Cherry Jr. both of Asheville and Jesse James Chemr of Petersburg,  Mrs.</p>
        <p>Sarah Staton of Greenville, Miss Martha Ann Staton of Newark, N.J., Miss Ella Staton of Cleveland, Ohio, Mrs. Emma Cox of Washington, D. C. and Mrs, Se-lestine Boyd of Greenville, RFD; 3 brothers, James Wesley Staton and David Heniy Staton, both of Greenville, Julious Staton of Ayden; eight grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The body will remain at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>Winterville Team In Area Playoffs</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE-A Wintervil-le team will be participating in area playoffs for Little Tar Heel League which will be staged here at 8 p.m. Wednesday.</p>
        <p>The double elimination tournament will feature three teams including Winterville, Farmville and Ayden-Grifton.</p>
        <p>The winner f the toumamait will participate in thetrict tournament which will be held in Ayden at a date to be announced.</p>
        <p>The district playoffs will feature, in addition the winner of the Area Tournament, teams from Kinston, Jacksonville, North Lenior or South Lenior and Warsaw.</p>
        <p>Edmond Nobles and Blaney Moye are coaches of the Winter-vUle team.</p>
        <p>More than one out of every nine persons were receiving Social Security benefits at the end of 1966.</p>
        <p>Famous Dan River Carpet SPECIAL</p>
        <p>100% Wyl Caipwl  Conrinowt PilanMnl</p>
        <p>MURRAY'S APPLIANCE</p>
        <p>YMO</p>
        <p>m ft SPANS sr.</p>
        <p>TEL. mmt</p>
        <p>Dixon</p>
        <p>Dixon, 44, of Farmville, died Sunday. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 3 p.m. from the Farmville Funeral Home. Interment will follow in Hollywood Cemetery in Farmville.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Dessie Wainwright Dixon of Newport News, Va.; one daughter, Vivian Dixon of the home; two sons. Ivy Vane Dixon of Newport News, Va., and Randy Dixon of the home; three sisters, Mrs. K. D. Britt of Magnolia, Mrs. Lawrence Greene of Greenville, and Mrs. Rachel Cartwright of Elizabeth City; three brothers, Joe Dixon of Montana, Harry Dixon of Farmville, and George Dixon of Daytona Beach, Fla.</p>
        <p>Rev. Earl W. Holmes will of ficiate at the service.</p>
        <p>BAN ON TRAFFIC EASED WINDSOR, Ont. (AP) - U.S. and Canadian border officials</p>
        <p>today cautiously lifted a ban on traffic between Windsor and Detroit, but commuters and tour-ises were being carefully screened.</p>
        <p>The Danube River carries an annual cargo of 28 million tons, says the Nati&amp;lt;Mial Geographic.</p>
        <p>famous for good food</p>
        <p>CAROLINA</p>
        <p>GRILL</p>
        <p>ANY ORDER FOR TAKE OUT</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal panel says one way to clean up slumswhidi it calls a prime breeding ground for crime and racial violencemay be to give tenants more power.</p>
        <p>The panel says laws on private property tend to favor landlords and block efforts at slum rehabilitation. Courts also tend to take the property owners side, the panel cwicluded.</p>
        <p>Asst. Atty. Gen. Frank Woz-encraft headed tiie group that prepared a 40-page report, released Monday. It grew out of a conference last December sponsored by the Justice and Housing and Urban Development departmwits and the Office of Economic C^portunity.</p>
        <p>Among suggestions by the panel for giving tenants greater rights:</p>
        <p>Suspend tenants obligations to pay rents if a landlord fails to meet his obligations over a prolonged period.</p>
        <p>Allow tenants to sue landlords and collect damages in cases of willful disregard of building maintenance.</p>
        <p>Grant tenants^ the right to make repairs and deduct the cost from their rent.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - If youre the proverbial average American, you had $31 more to spend during the second three months of this year than you did during the first three.</p>
        <p>But that $31 bought only what $14 would have in 1958.</p>
        <p>Inflation was responsible for the cut in buying power. And inflation continues to curb the U.S. economy, although the after-tax avwage income of every American man, woman and child climbed to $2,717 during the April-June period.</p>
        <p>CAPITAL FOOTNOTES By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Burial services were scheduled for later today at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington for John T. McNaughton, secretary of the Navy-designate, his wife Sarah and their son, Theodore II. They died last Wednesday in a North Carolina plane crash.</p>
        <p>The Navy will name its second nuclear-powered attack aircraft carrier after the late Fleet</p>
        <p>Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, who headed U.S. forces in the Pacific in World War II. Construction of the $427.5-million ship has not begun.</p>
        <p>International Telephone &amp;amp; Telegraph Corp. and American Broadcasting Companies, Inc., have agreed to delay them planned $2.8-billion merger pro-</p>
        <p>Legislator Kills Young Looter</p>
        <p>PONTIAC, Mich. (AP)  Racial violence broke loose in Pontiac with two Negroes shot and killed today, one by a white state legislator who declared This is the price you have to pay for making a living.</p>
        <p>A snipers shotgun also wounded a policeman as firebombings</p>
        <p>Firemen Couldn't Put</p>
        <p>Out Blaze In Shooting</p>
        <p>By FRANK S. JOSEPH</p>
        <p>DETROIT (AP)  The fire that broke out at Unwood and Vicksburg at 2:15 a.m. today may still bum as you read these words.</p>
        <p>The firemen were supposed to put it out, but they couldnt. They were caught in a crossfire of bullets. They never got past Virginia Park Avenue, a block away.</p>
        <p>Three Detroit policemen were shot during the exchange of gunfire, whidi went on for more than an hour. One is in critical condition, two are in serious conditioiL</p>
        <p>The fire broke out in a half-block stretch of sUmek and apartments.</p>
        <p>The snipes started firing when the firemen arrived, so the police and the National Guard were called in. Then everybody started firmg at everybody and its hard to teU just who i^ot whom.</p>
        <p>Two firemen and a newsman sat huddled against tiie side of a fire engine, breathing tear gas and watching the Guardsmen shoot. The three werent armed, so they just crouched against the truck and med tear-gas tears.</p>
        <p>Here we are in the middle of a war, said the first firemiui, with no weapons, no way out and our thumbs stodc iq&amp;gt; our noses.</p>
        <p>The newsmmi said hed Itice to get to a phone so he could toll his office about all tiiis. He started for Ids car, some three blocks back, but he was greeted by sniper fire.</p>
        <p>I think it would be unwise of you to leave, (me of the firemen told him.</p>
        <p>at DiocKing me amalgamation is  ^  northwest  of</p>
        <p>set for court hearing by the week of Oct. 16,</p>
        <p>COLOR by HE LHE</p>
        <p>Bob Hope . Phyllis DiUer Jonathaa Wintm - Jill SL John Shows At 1 - 8 - 5 - 7 - 9 P.M.</p>
        <p>Coltrane Warns Critical Weeks Ahead In N.C.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - David S.</p>
        <p>Coltrane, chairman of the North Carolina Good Neighbor Council, warned Monday that the, _  .</p>
        <p>neit few weeks and months  f''P^'ties</p>
        <p>riot-torn Detroit.</p>
        <p>State Rep. Arthur J. Law, a Pontiac Democrat, said he fired his .12-gauge stotgun at a half dozen Negro youths after they hurled a trash can through the plate glass window of a food market he has owned since 1948 in a heavily Negro area. Pontiac has 15,000 Negro residents.</p>
        <p>I knew I hit one, said Law, 61, a veteran legislator who has</p>
        <p>may be critical for North Carolina cities in determining if they will be scenes of new racial strife.</p>
        <p>The situation in North Carolina is serious enough to demand that local leadership in every community give racial problems top priority, Coltrane told a civic club meeting.</p>
        <p>Coltrane urged state leaders to consider the needs for an equal employment policy, adoption of on-the-job training programs and the need for personnel managers to become acquainted with the Negro community.</p>
        <p>Fell Off Moving Car, And Dies</p>
        <p>against violent crimes. Killed was 17-year-old Alfred Taylor of Pontiac. Two of the youths companions were injured.</p>
        <p>Law said he was protecting his market after it was damaged earlier in a firebombing.</p>
        <p>Shotgun in hand, he appeared at police headquarters to make a statement on the shooting.</p>
        <p>He said the idea of looting spread from Detroit to Pontiac like a prairie fire. He sr Republican Gov. George Rom-ney should declare the whole state under martial law and give orders to shoot to kill.</p>
        <p>If he had done this, 1 wouldnt have somebodys life on my hands right now, Law said.</p>
        <p>NEW BERN, N.C. (AP) -James W. Rhodes Jr., 19, of Bridgeton, N.C. was killed Monday night when he fell from the back of a convertible.</p>
        <p>New Bern police said Rhodes was standing on the back of the automobile as it moved along a rural paved road at a slow rate of speed. He fell from the back and struck his head.</p>
        <p>CENSURE FAILED LONDON (AP)  A Conser-</p>
        <p>$41.6 Million For N.C. Bases</p>
        <p>vative motion to censure Britains Labor government for its economic policies was roundly defeated in the House of Commons Monday night 333-240.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTTN (AP) - Military Construction Authorization lina would be allotted $44,587,-000 under the $2.32 billion Military Construction Acthprization Bill approved today by the House Armed Services CJommit-tee.</p>
        <p>The bul authorizes toese</p>
        <p>funds:</p>
        <p>Army</p>
        <p>Ft. Braggoperational, training, maintenance, supply and adininistrative facilities, troop housing, utilities: $17 million.</p>
        <p>Sunny Point  utilities: $70,-000.</p>
        <p>Navy</p>
        <p>Naval H(X5pital, Camp Le-jeunetroop housing: $267,000.</p>
        <p>Naval FaciUty, Cape Hatteras troop housing: $92,000.</p>
        <p>Marine Corps Air Station Cheipf Point  operational training, maintenance and supply facilities, troop housing: $5,-349,000.</p>
        <p>Marine Corps Air Facility New Riveroperational facili ties, troop housing: $2,866,000.</p>
        <p>Marine Corps Base, Camp Le-jeune: medical faciUties, troop housing utilities: $12,507,000.</p>
        <p>Air Force</p>
        <p>Pope Air Force Base, Ft. Bragg  operational, maintenance, medical and administrative facilities troop housing, utilities: $5,023,000.</p>
        <p>Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, Goldsborotraining, administrative and commumty facilities: $613,000.</p>
        <p>After a whUe, tiiough,an ar* mored personnel carrier, which looks like a 20-foot-long, oTiva drab gravy boat on wheels, lumbered past going in the rig^ direction. So the newsman said goodbye to the firemen and ran  tehind it</p>
        <p>The pers(Hmel carrier only^ went as far as a group of N* tional Guardsmen and polica" who were croudiing behind several Jeeps near Linwood and Philadelphia avenues. They were pointing tiieir weapims at a second-floor window acrosa , the steeet  -</p>
        <p>Somebody fired at them, or it seemed. They crouched be* hind the Jeeps and began firing back. The newsman crouched too.</p>
        <p>Soon the fkefight turned into^ a constant roar of the lead. TlM^ newsman sprawled flat. Cai^ bridge casings hit Mm on the* head.  ^</p>
        <p>After a while, the Guardsmen* decided to sbop firing. They did and nobody snipted badL So they ^ got into tiieir Je^ and carriers and drove on.</p>
        <p>The newsman, who wasnt^ sure the waper was tired of ths^ game, ran the half-Mock to his.' car at a low crouch.</p>
        <p>He foimd that somebody had shot away tiie reju* window, but the engine started when hs turned the key.</p>
        <p>Summer Theatre Dark For Two</p>
        <p>Week-Nighls</p>
        <p>For ttie lint tkM is M tMBk</p>
        <p>Carolina</p>
        <p>More than 1 million tons of octopuses and squids are caught annually for foo(l.</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>JOIN THE lUJd CROWD</p>
        <p>Pizza IM</p>
        <p>CARRY OUT OR EAT IN</p>
        <p>ORDER BT PHONE</p>
        <p>FOR FASTER SERVICB PHONE 756-9991 HI Ortanvlllt Btvd.(264 By-PaiM NIAR PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>DRIVE-IN</p>
        <p>THEATRE</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>- 2flttCBITl)W-F01( mm</p>
        <p>lint adventare.^</p>
        <p>OIIEMASIM-C*(li)DeIini</p>
        <p>MR. CO-E-CO</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>GROWING</p>
        <p>Our New Location Beginning July 24th</p>
        <p>320 Evans St.</p>
        <p>(5 Stores South Of Our Old Location)</p>
        <p>Our New Number Telephone 758-1148</p>
        <p>year history the East University Sommer Theatre wiQ' be dark on two weekidghls thia week as the prodoetion changes from  Musk Man ta</p>
        <p>South Pacifie.</p>
        <p>Usually the theatre ends s production on Saturday night, then goes dark Sunday iti^t and opens a new show Monday night.</p>
        <p>This week, however, The Music Man ends a nine-day rua tonight. There will be no performances  Wednesday  and</p>
        <p>Thursday. Then South Paci.  opens a mnoKlay run Friday night.</p>
        <p>This seasons new arrangement for The Music Man and South Pacific also brings the tiieatres &amp;amp;:st Sunday perform-uices. %&amp;gt;ecial rates  $3 for adults, $1.50 for diildren were in dieot for last Sundays performance of South Pacific* and are offered for tiie performance of South Pacific next next Sundcty, Jtdy 30.</p>
        <p>EC Grad On Guilford Faculty</p>
        <p>William GniMis, a graduate of East Carolina, has been appointed a faculty member at Guilford College.</p>
        <p>Grubbs will be an instructor in Business Administration.</p>
        <p>A native d Burlington, Grubbs received ids A. B. D^ee from East Carolina College and an M.B.A. Degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hffl.</p>
        <p>He was previously associated with G^ierM Electiric Company as Financial Management Trdnee.</p>
        <p>FREE GUITAR</p>
        <p>A bnmd new ToitaM Gvi. tar wfll be sfrea mwmr Wed* aesday Jnly M at 7:00, Coortesy of Jones Potti Muk Co. Guitar is bow ea display at .toaes Potts Mn&amp;gt; Ic Co. Refister either at the State Theatre or Joaes Potta Music Co. for Ctaritarl Ton do not hnvs ft bo fm-ent to win. . </p>
        <p>MIKSOBkllUn!</p>
        <p>StMvtog North Garettuas own Sammy Jackam</p>
        <p>Now I r:;;</p>
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