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        <date>2012</date>
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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0001" />
        <p>\</p>
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        <p>^ WEATHER '</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;a^Ofv^ state tonlrht end-^ Tlmrfdaj foraioon. A little Wanner tftwiyht. '</p>
        <p>81st Year No 27Q mbikb or</p>
        <p>INU.  THE  ABBOOUTIP  PBMB</p>
        <p>Pilot Bailed Out, Picked Up</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE. N. C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. NOV. 21. 19 fi 2</p>
        <p>TELEPHONE</p>
        <p>PLaza 2-6166</p>
        <p>All Departmento</p>
        <p>10 Pages Today Price 5 Cents</p>
        <p>Blockade Of Cuba Is Ended, But Kennedy Says Problems Remain</p>
        <p>PILOT BAILED OOT . . . First Lt. Robert P. Zembraskl, 23 of Hlcksville N Y elected aircraft following an engine flameout while on a routine training mission The</p>
        <p>''2 fightelroersald^t Zembaski decided to crash the ship in an uninhabitated area six miles south-west of Goldsboro when he saw he could not bring it back to ba^e. The pilot was picked up by helicopters</p>
        <p>Find Few Leaks In Annual Survey Of City Gas Lines</p>
        <p>By ALVIN TAYLOR Reflector City Editor</p>
        <p>Relatively few gas leaks were turned up in Greenville Utilities annual survey of its gas lines,</p>
        <p>Diiector Leonard Bloxam reported to- the commission last night.</p>
        <p>He said the gas line survey, conducted by a private firm,  i  *</p>
        <p>showed 65 leaks in various loca-  plant.</p>
        <p>Last month Bloxam told the outside the city limits who tan</p>
        <p>^  i__  JT___s  A  ..  .  __  r</p>
        <p>commission that a firm in Mexico was Interested in purchasing the boiler and had offered $5,000 for it.</p>
        <p>If the sale is negotiated, the purchaser would be required to furnish insurance against any damage .that might be incurred in moving the boiler from the</p>
        <p>WASIHNGTON (AP)President Kennedy, saying there is reasixi for gratitude In this Thanksgiving week, has called off the U.S. blockade of Cuba in return for promised removal of Soviet bombers from the island.</p>
        <p>Serious problems remain, Kennedy emphasized Tuesday night at his first news conference since the Cuban crisis spread jitters around the world.</p>
        <p>UntU arrangements are made to verify the withdrawal of Soviet missiles and planes, preferably by Inspecticm on the spot, he said the United States will do its own checking on military activity in Cuba.</p>
        <p>He clearly meant that among other measures this country would continue to send out reconnaissance planes to guard against another buildup In Cuba, despite Prime Minister Fidel Castros threat to shoot them down.</p>
        <p>Yet, with the manner of a man reporting the worst Is over, Kennedy said real progress has been madeand a complete settlement could open the door to soluti(xi of other east-west Issues.</p>
        <p>Philosophically, he added: In this week of Thanksgiving, there Is much for which we can be grateful as we look back to where we stood only four weeks agothe unity of this hemisphere, the support of our allies and the calm determination of the American people. These qualities may be tested many more times In this decade, but we have increased reason to be confident that those qualities wiD craitinue to serve the cause of- freed(n with distinction in the years to come.</p>
        <p>The news conference, his first in nearly 10 weeks, was carried by national radio and television networks.</p>
        <p>Kennedy opened the session with the dramatic announcement that Soviet Premier Khrushchev had just promised in a personal message to pull out all jet bombers within 30 days, Khrushchev reportedly had placed 30-odd EL28s in Cuba. He also agreed to permit the planes</p>
        <p>they go. Authorities indicated the Russians would need 30 days in which to dismantle the planes, crate them and get ships to Cuba to haul them home.</p>
        <p>Inasmuch as this goes a long way towards reducing the danger which faced this hemisphere four weeks ago, Kennedy said, I have this afternoon Instructed the secretary of defense to lift our naval quarantine.</p>
        <p>As expected, Cuba and thorns still sticking out of the crisis dominated the half-hour in a room crowded with correspondents. But the President made other significant news.</p>
        <p>He announced he had signed the long-awaited order to ban discrimination in federally aided housing.</p>
        <p>He said a team headed by W. Averell Harriman, assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern</p>
        <p>affairs, was leaving for New Delhi to determine Indias needs in its undeclared frontier war with Communist China.</p>
        <p>Responding to criticism of ad-mlnistratiHi Information practices, he said the government would clamp down on sensitive matters, especially In the intelligence field, but otherw'ise would</p>
        <p>Hemisphere Is to continue to be protected against offensive weapons. this government has no choice but to pursue its own meMs of checking on military activities in Cuba, Kennedy asserted.</p>
        <p>Sion of the island.</p>
        <p>The chief executive avoided predictions about whether the rift between the Soviet Union and Red China is helpful or harmful, for instance. He called this a rather climactic period Mid said the coming months will reveal</p>
        <p>He would not say directly    .......... ....</p>
        <p>whether the United States would more precisely what is gotng'ra Ufi onx,  , refuse to give a  formal pledge  in the world  beyond  this  herala-</p>
        <p>11ft any restraints from the  free i against invading  Cuba without  Phere.</p>
        <p>now of news.  u.N. inspection, but hinted this; After four nerve-jarring weeks.</p>
        <p>On the main question of  the was the case. And while striving  Kennedy was  able  to  size  up  the</p>
        <p>day, Kennedy said important for peace in the  Caribbean, he  future with hope.</p>
        <p>parts of his understanding with Khrushchev on Cuba have not been carried out. Castro has not allowed the United Nations to confirm the removal of all offensive weapons, he said, and no real safeguards have been established against the return of such wessons to Cuba.</p>
        <p>Consequently, If the Western</p>
        <p>said We will not, of course, abandon the political, economic and other efforts of this hemisphere to - halt subversion from Cuba nor our purpose and hope that the Cuban people shall some day be truly free.</p>
        <p>He commented that these policies are very different from any intent to launch a military inva-</p>
        <p>Human nature is the same on both sides, fortunately, on both sides of the Iron Curtain, he said. Which is why I am optimistic about the ultimate outcome of this struggle.</p>
        <p>He was able to laugh. He hopes to spend Christmas with his'tatnl-ly In Palm Beach, the Preaddent said.</p>
        <p>Racial Discrimination Barred In Fsderally Aided, Owned Housing</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)President Kennedys order banning racial discrimination in federally owned and aided housing was termed today a sizable first bite which may be broadened later.</p>
        <p>Kennedy made good a 1960 campaign pledge by announcing at his news conference Tuesday night that builders and mortgage lenders who bar Negroes wcmt get federal financial backing.</p>
        <p>The order will affect about 50 per cent of all future suburban home buUding, officials estimated, and a substantial partaround 20 to 25 per cent^-of homes and apartments built within city limits.</p>
        <p>But it was far less sweeping than many administration aides had urged, and seemed certain to provoke</p>
        <p>,  .  ,  -  -  -----------^ outcries of disappoint-</p>
        <p>to be observed and counted as ment from some civU rights</p>
        <p>groups and Negro organizations which have been pushing Kennedy for action.</p>
        <p>However, there was no criticism from the Congress of Racial Equality. Its national director, James Parmer, said in New York: The federal government has at last recognized that It has a prime responsibility In ending discrimination In housing. It is a first step.</p>
        <p>Sen. A. Willis Robertson, D-Va., charged that the order will hurt real estate values all over the nationnot just in the South.</p>
        <p>I dont think there is any constitutional authority for the order, said Robertson, who heads the Senate Banking Committee.</p>
        <p>Before the order was Issued the National Association of Home Builders Issued a survey Indicating that builders across the coun-</p>
        <p>tion.s. Only two of these were classed as major and 12 were considered medium leaks. All of these have since been repaired. The remainder were classed as minor leaks and approximately</p>
        <p>The commission also approved approaching the county commissioners concerning a ground water survey for Pitt County. They proposed that the Utilities pay a proportionate share of the</p>
        <p>60 percent of these have been survey which would be useful in repaired.  i  determining  well  capacities.</p>
        <p>Bloxam also reported that gas Chairman Charles Horne said</p>
        <p>Installations within 56 commercial buildings on Evans Street and Dickinson Avenue were inspected this year. This is a new program for the Utilities and it involves inspection of gas</p>
        <p>such a survey, to be done by the U. S. Geological Service, would cost $104,000 over a four-year period. The federal gov-er^ent would pay $52,000 of  this and the state would pay lines from the meters to the!$17,000.</p>
        <p>apnliances.  i  The  countys share would be</p>
        <p>Tw'enty leaks were discovered In this phase of the Inspection with one being major and two medium leaks.</p>
        <p>Commissioners discussed a policy for requiring property owners to pay a proportionate share of water and sewer lines extending through undeveloped areas. They called for a written recommendation.</p>
        <p>Under discussion was the water line to be constructed along Memorial Drive to Belvedere and other developments south of U. S. 264 bypass.</p>
        <p>The line to serve the developing areas for which utilities will be provided under the subdivision policy will pass through other areas.</p>
        <p>The commission has no policy to cover a proportionate cost of this line as tap-ons are made. A written policy is to be drafted, checked by the city attorney and submitted for the commissions consideration.</p>
        <p>Commissioners gave the power to negotiate for the sale of an unused boiler to Commissioner E. Hoover Taft and Director Bloxam.</p>
        <p>Bloxam had reported that he advertised for bids on the boiler and none were received.</p>
        <p>$35,000 over the four-year period.</p>
        <p>Bloxam told the commission such a study was proposed to</p>
        <p>on to city water lines.</p>
        <p>Hagerty reported that 135 of these beyond the city limit customers he had checked had property assessed for tax purposes at $871,798. This would represent taxes of $14,123.13 to the city if they were in the city limits, he said.</p>
        <p>Bloxam reported the following bids were received for concrete piling under the water tank to be constructed on Greenville Blvd.: T. A. Loving, $24,345:  Guild Construction</p>
        <p>Co., $25,886; Washington Iron and Metal, $27,438.75; Kitchen Construction Co., $27,706 50.</p>
        <p>The director said the bids involved 2,655 lineal feet of piling and 72 yards of concrete.</p>
        <p>Bloxam sug^sted that the commission call for new bids or negotiate with the low bidder for wooden piles rather than concrete. This should reduce the cost by several thousand dollars, he predicted.</p>
        <p>The commissions boiler and machinery insurance was renewed with Maryland Casualty</p>
        <p>Chinese Plunge Through Feeble Indian Defense</p>
        <p>try expected It to cause a sharp decline in home building, which has been a shaky segment of the economy most of this year.</p>
        <p>But Kennedy said he believed such forecasts were exaggerated. Housing officials said residential constructiiHi has not suffered significantly in any of the 17 states and more than 20 cities which have their own anti-bias laws.</p>
        <p>The White House order declares it to be the governments policy to assure equal housing opportunities without regard to race, creed, color or nrtional origin. But it carries no enforcement machinery to prevent dis-</p>
        <p>the commissioners several years bids for the insurance were ago but was not accepted He  reported  Mary-</p>
        <p>said Greenvilles wells have I  Casualty  bid  $16,206.55</p>
        <p>proven to be good sources of water. However, the Utilities cannot continue drilling wells without a study of the water supply.</p>
        <p>Chairman Horne described the underground water supply as the greatest natural resource Eastern North Carolina has, bar none.</p>
        <p>Horne also suggested a written policy of procedures for commission employes in case of a Civil Defense emergency.</p>
        <p>He suggested considering shelters at the two well sites and emergency generators. The wells could furnish a non-contaminat-ed water supply In case of fallout.</p>
        <p>City Manager Harry Hagerty reported that 175 utilities water customers live outside the city limits and they pay monthly water bills totalling $560.82.</p>
        <p>Hagerty was named to work on water rates beyond the city limits. Many cities charge a double water bill for customers</p>
        <p>while Hartford bid $16,207. Some itms will be eliminated from the policy and the adjusted cost of the three-year policy will be approximately $14,000.</p>
        <p>Commissioners agreed to continue sponsoring a news program on radio station WGTC but decided to look into the matter of retaining a firm to handle Its advertising.</p>
        <p>Bloxam reported that a one-half ton pickup truck was purchased from Jenkins Motor Co. which bid $1,678.27 plus trade-in of a wrecked 1957 truck. The $600 insurance claim from the wrecked truck will be applied to the purchase. White Chevrolet bid $1,729.17.</p>
        <p>The commission purchased an</p>
        <p>By HENRY S. BRADSHER</p>
        <p>NEW DELHI, India (AP) -Sweeping toward a cease-fire deadline set by their own high command. Red Chinas troops scored spectacular gains today In twin drives from the Himalayas toward the flat, open country k)f North Assam.</p>
        <p>The deadline was midnight Peking time (11 a.m. EST).</p>
        <p>That was 10:30 p.m. by watches of the Indians, whose leadership viewed suspiciously and in effect rejected Pekings one-sided decision to break off the shooting for a general withdrawal.</p>
        <p>There was no immediate word |as to whether Chinese guns were truly silenced, or whether battered Indian combat units accepted the respite.</p>
        <p>A Defense Ministry spokesman told of sharp Indian reverses at a news conference less than 12 hours before the deadline.</p>
        <p>Chinese troops pouring across the conquered Se Pass sector of the Himalayas have broken through Indian defenses south of</p>
        <p>Legion Aproves mOM Pledge</p>
        <p>American Legion Post 39 Tuesday night voted to pledge $30,000 as the Legionnaires share in maximum cost  of  $150,000  for</p>
        <p>Greenvilles proposed civic center.</p>
        <p>^^AAAAAAAo^iyju puiciiasca an I Local civir  rtii-  prune  mmiscer  saiQ  It</p>
        <p>w"  m  e  examtaed  when  It</p>
        <p>With trade-in. The truck will  been planning  such  a  facUity</p>
        <p>to be erected  on  the</p>
        <p>Bomdila and are plunging toward the Assam plains, he said.</p>
        <p>The peril to the Assam city of Tezpur, a tea and rice center 60 air miles southeast of Bomdila, forced its evacuation.</p>
        <p>The Indian army corps headquarters based in a hazardous spot there, on the north bank of the sacred Brahmaputra River, pulled back to an undisclosed new site and 660 WesternersBritish and American men, women and childrenjoined thousands of Indians in flight.</p>
        <p>At the eastern end of the front tre Chinese pushed about 65 miles farther down the Luhit River Valley toward the Brahmaputra. This was a drive which, linked with that from Bomdila, could form a pincers on the plains.</p>
        <p>The announcement of these actions came only a few hours before the Wednesday midnight deadline11 a.m. ESTat which Red China said it had ordered its victory-flushed Himalayan divisions to silence their guns.</p>
        <p>Indian Prime Minister Nehru had in effect rejected Pekings terms.</p>
        <p>The Defense spokesman refused to say what would be the Indian army reaction to the Red Chinese declaration of a cease-fire.</p>
        <p>He left the impression at his daily briefing that the Indians would continue shooting at invaders.</p>
        <p>Nehru told Parliament earlier that the,Chpese declaration for the cease-fir and a withdrawal had not been officially received here.</p>
        <p>The prime minister said it</p>
        <p>Sept. 8. The Chinese statement would bar Indian troops from returning to some border areas the Chinese have captured, even though the Chinese withdrew from those areas.</p>
        <p>Red Chinas statementbroad c^t earlier today by radio Pe kingSaid it was ordering the cease-fire and would start pulling back Its troops Dec. l in an effort to bring about a settle ment of the long frontier dispute</p>
        <p>replace a 1947 vehicle which carries a propane tank.</p>
        <p>Other bids were:  Jenkins</p>
        <p>Motor Co., $2,806.30; White Chevrolet Co., $2,775; Stafford Oldsmoblle, $2,985.</p>
        <p>Master Plan' Of Recreation Dept. To Be Presented Council</p>
        <p>The Greenville Recreation Commission has voted to present its Master Plan for the development of recreational facilities in Greenville to the City Council for their approval at the groups December 6 meeting.</p>
        <p>'The plan, prepared by the Charles M. Graves organization of Atlanta. Ga., following study of present facilities and prn-</p>
        <p>the city pro^am up to the State used in the comparison.</p>
        <p>average of other cities of comparable sizeas a new building and swimming pool at Elm Street Park; an addition to the present building at South Greenville Park and the construction of a swimming pool there; construction of two small buildings at other parks and the acquisition of 60 acres of land</p>
        <p>jected growth of Greenville, Ls for present and future develop-</p>
        <p>intended to serve as a guide to the orderly development of existing areas and as a guide bo selection and development m new areas to meet existing and future needs of the citys recreation program.</p>
        <p>In Graves report is a section listing immediate needs -those things needed now to bring</p>
        <p>ment.</p>
        <p>J. S. Stevens, assistant director of the North Carolina Recreation Commission, has supported figures contained in Graves report, showing Greenville Is behind other comparable cities in the amount spent for recreation.</p>
        <p>The average of 15 cities in the</p>
        <p>on the Heath property adjacent to the south side of Green Springs Park.</p>
        <p>The Legionnaires had previously endorsed the idea that called for financing of the center through support of the participating civic organizations.</p>
        <p>Commander Norman Wilker-son presided at the business meeting of the Legion that also Included appropriations for the Pitt County Tuberculosis Association during its annual Christmas seal sale and to the local</p>
        <p>which Included Kinston. Rocky Mount, Wilson, New Bern, and others showed $3.27 was being spent per capita. Greenvilles expenditure is $2.11 per capita.</p>
        <p>Also discussed was the establishment of a hobby shop each week at the Recreation Com-i missions shop at Guy Smith Stadium. The program would oe available once each week for elementary woodworking and related programs.</p>
        <p>It was announced at the meeting that</p>
        <p>American Legion Auxiliary for its program to help at the local hospital this Christmas.</p>
        <p>Wllkerson reported membership in the local post now stands at 371.</p>
        <p>comes.</p>
        <p>He said India still insists upon a return to the positions both sides held before the Chinese launched their latest attacks last</p>
        <p>Nol Prossed</p>
        <p>Charges of selling barbiturates to Pitt County Prison Unit inmates against a former State Highway Commission truck driver were nol prossed Tuesday In Pitt County Superior Court.</p>
        <p>The ex-truck driver, Willi-am OIus White, 52, of Route 3, Greenville, was not prosecuted, according to Solicitor Robert D. Rouse Jr., because the evidence gathered by the state appeared insufficient to mak a case.</p>
        <p>White had been charged last summer with helping prison inmates secure a barbiturate called Seconal, described as a drug which induces sleep but is not habit-fmming.</p>
        <p>The case was designated nol pros with leave, which means it can be reopened.</p>
        <p>crimination in conventiwial home sales  those in which the mortgage is not backed up by federal insurance or guarantees.</p>
        <p>Housing officials said further action may be taken. For the present it seemed wise, they said, to go at It as prudently and sensibly as possible while acquiring experience and legal precedent.</p>
        <p>Even the announcement was played down, to the extent possible on a nationwide television and radio broadcast. Kennedy tucked In five sentences on housing following his blockbuster announcement that the Soviet Union will take home its jet bombers from Cuba and the United States will lift its naval arms blockade.</p>
        <p>The President said his order directs all federal agencies to take</p>
        <p>all action necessary and appropriate to prevent discrimination because of race, color, creed or national origin in the sale, lease, rental and use of housing which is:</p>
        <p>Owned or operated by the federal government.</p>
        <p>BuUt or bought with the help o loans, grants or contributions made hereafter by the federal government. This would Include GI home loans made by the Vrt* erans Administration.</p>
        <p>Built or purchased with mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration, guaranteed by the Veterans Administration or otherwise backed by the security of the government.</p>
        <p>Erected in federally aided de-velopment and redevelopment projects for slum clearance and urban renewal.</p>
        <p>Thus the order covers the federal programs for college housing, housing for the elderly, housing for the families of military personnel built under the Capeharl At, and the thousands of dweU-Ings taken over by FHA because of the default of buyers.</p>
        <p>But It provides no sanctions against discrimination In the sale or rental of existing housing, even that which was built with federal help, except for an Instructlim to the housing agencies to use their good offices and to take other appropriate acticm permitted by law.</p>
        <p>Psychiatrist Favors WaUier Examination</p>
        <p>OXFORD, Miss. (AP)A psychiatrist said today he considered that former Army Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker had shown signs of grandiosity.</p>
        <p>Dr. Manfred S. Guttmacher of Baltimore testified as a hearing resumed into the effort of Walkers attorneys to erase a federal court order for a mental examination.</p>
        <p>Dr. Guttmacher said his study!</p>
        <p>dered the examination. That waa the day after Walker was arrested (Ml charges of seditious ccmspiracy and inciting insurrection in ccm-nection with a bloody Integration riot on the University of Mississippi campus. Two men died and scores were injured.</p>
        <p>The riot occurred when .S, marshals ringed the Ole Miss administration building shortly after</p>
        <p>^  ,  ------ bringing Negro  James H. Mere-</p>
        <p>of Walker s records also had  dis-  dith to the campus for enrollment</p>
        <p>closed confusion and examples of in the all-white university, defective judgment.  University PoUce Chief Bums</p>
        <p>There  is a possibility  that  Tatum testified  he was about 10</p>
        <p>there has  been a deterioration in  to 15 feet from  Walker when the</p>
        <p>Reflector WiU Publish Thursday</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector will publish a Thanksgiving Day edition tomorrow.</p>
        <p>Business and advertising offlc-</p>
        <p>ob-Uhots h"rd</p>
        <p>Goodman had been elected vice-chairman of the Municipal Division of the North Carolina Recreation Society at the organizations annual meeting at Durham last week.</p>
        <p>Coroner Rules Death A Suicide</p>
        <p>A 22-year-old GreenvIUe man took his own life last night at his home.</p>
        <p>Detectives said George Albert Crawford Jr., of 804 West Fifth St., reportedly came home last night and wnt to his room.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Cra Vord was quoted as saying In a short time she heard three shots and, going to her sons room, found him shot to death.</p>
        <p>Coroner E. W. Harvey said cause of death was a .22 caliber bullet which entered the right side of his head. He ruled the death suicide.</p>
        <p>Officers said the first two</p>
        <p>Many Close For Thanksgiving</p>
        <p>Thanksgiving Day will see almost all stores and businesses I closed in Greenville.</p>
        <p>It is one of the holidays generally accepted and observed by the businessmen of Greenville. City, county, state and federai offices wiU be closed also, thougn all but some state offices are expected to be open on Friday as usual.</p>
        <p>the mental processes of Gen. Walker in the last year or two, Dr. Guttmacher said.</p>
        <p>Dr. Guttmacher said he felt that Walker, 53, needed a full examination for his own good.</p>
        <p>Walkers attorneys contended Tuesday the circumstances under which the order was issued violated his constitutiwial rights. They said Walker had not been indicted by a federal grand jury nor had a U.S. attorney presented a bill of Information when the test was ordered.</p>
        <p>The government denied any infringement of rights.</p>
        <p>A federal judge on Oct. 2 or- pus area.</p>
        <p>former major general addressed a group of students in front of the Lyceum Building, the universitits administration building and sceee of the heaviest fighting.</p>
        <p>Tatum said he was standing with a group of students, one of whom pointed out Walker to him.</p>
        <p>He said he heard Wadker, who held a paper cup in his hand, tell the students:</p>
        <p>Col. (T.B.) Birdsong has lei you down. Gov. (Ross) Barnetl Is your guard. Charge! Birdsong Is head of the Mississippi Highway Patrol which had many units stationed in the cam-</p>
        <p>news room will be open from 8:30 until 12 noon.</p>
        <p>All department will resume regular schedules Friday morn-ilng  ^</p>
        <p>) '</p>
        <p>shot was fired Into Crawfords head. Crawfords father was in bed at the time.</p>
        <p>The fatal incident was reported at 11 p.nx</p>
        <p>Some local state offices will receive Thursday and Friday off this year for a long weekend.</p>
        <p>City and county schools closed today and will reopen on Monday.</p>
        <p>The Post Office will be closed on Thursday with no rural or city delivery. Postmaster J. Knott Proctor announced. Special delivery mail will bt delivered as usual. ^</p>
        <p>A stamp vending machine is located in the Post Office lobby for patrons desiring stamps. A citywide collection from street letter boxes will begin at 5 p.m. Thursday, connecting with all outgoing dispatches.</p>
        <p>Pitt Man Indicted For Manslaughter</p>
        <p>A 40-year-old Pitt County man was indicted Monday on man-slaughter and hit-and-run charges in connection with the highway death of Jack Carr, 54-year-old GreenviUe Negro, earlier this month.</p>
        <p>The Pitt grand jury returned both Indictments against James Curtis Perkins, Negro, of Rt. 4, Box 33, Greenville.</p>
        <p>Perkins faces charges of striking Carr on the Belvolr Highway near Greenville the night of Nov. 3 while Carr's brother, J. D., watched. He is also charged with failing to stop.</p>
        <p>Carr was kiUed instantly and Perkins was taken Into custody at his home about two hours later. His trial in Superior Court will probably be heard during the Dec. 10 term.</p>
        <p>In returning the indictment against Perkln.s. the grand jur-ora pyised Highwajr Patrolman</p>
        <p>Luther B. Long and other officers for their handling of the case.</p>
        <p>Other true bills returned Monday, in summary form, were:</p>
        <p>Clarence Allen Ball, 35, Route 1, Washington, breaking, entering and larceny (four counts),</p>
        <p>Joseph Elliott Vick, 25, Grlmesland, breaking, entering and larceny (four counts).</p>
        <p>Eugene Carlton Hudson, Rt, 3, Box 275, Greenville, no operators license and no liability insurance.</p>
        <p>Johnny Reavee. alias Johnny Cox, 17, Negro, 1207 W. Thlr* St., no operators license, auto larceny, careless and reckleaa driving and failure to stop for a siren.</p>
        <p>William Lacy Fomes, 32, loo Cemetery Road, GreenvIUe, drunken driving (second offenae) and no operatofa licenan</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0002" />
        <p>1The Daily Refleclor, Greenville, N. C.^Wednesday, November 21, 1962</p>
        <p>Grand 'Matron Visits Area Chaoters</p>
        <p>The Monlc Temple in Oreen- netive greenery. To cerry out</p>
        <p>WORTHY ORAND ICATRON . . . Grand Chapter of North Carolina Mrs. Mary Smith Carter (center) was honored last night at the Masonic Temple here. Hosts at the Joint meeting were the Greenville, FarmvUle and Orifton chapters, Order of the Eastern Star. Mrs. Jennie Stokes, Worthy Matron from the Greenville chapter and Clifton Stokes, Worthy ^ Patron, Greenville Chaptm* took part in the program.</p>
        <p>ville was the scene last night of a joint meeting of Greenville Chapter No. 149, Parmville Chapter No. 146 and Orifton Chapter No. 134. Order of the Eastern Star, honoring Mrs. Mary Smith Carter, Worthy Grand Matron, and Robert Franklin Spence, Worthy Grand Patrcm, Grand Chapter of North Carolina, Order of the Eastern Star.</p>
        <p>Present for the official visit of the Grand Officers were 124 members and visitors from Eastern Star Chapters throughout Eastern North Carolina. Distinguished guests included Mrs. Lila Duke, past grand matron, and Dr. Frank Duke, past grand patron, of Washington; Mrs. Janie Mashbum, grand marshal; Mrs. Margaret TUlett, grand warder; Mrs. Eva Vann and Mrs. Leta Shouiars, grand representatives; Mrs. Edna Whl-chard, district deputy grand matron, and Joe Melton, district deputy grand patrmi. Eleven Grand Chapter Committee members also attended the meeting.</p>
        <p>The chapter Room was decorated with flowers of yellow and shades of purple, backed by</p>
        <p>the worthy Grand Matrons theme for the year, The Art of Living, artists pallets were used to highlight tiie decorations.</p>
        <p>Presiding over the meeting were Mrs. Jennie Stokes, Worthy Matron, and Clifton Stokes, Worthy Patron, of Greenville Chapter No. 140.</p>
        <p>The Worthy Grand Matrons message was on Thanks-Livlng for Thanksgiving. The Worthy Grand Patron reminded all East-em &amp;lt;6tars of their first obligation and the responsibility for supporting , the Masonic and Eastern Star Home, and suggested this means of expressing thanks at this season of the year.</p>
        <p>Preceding the meeting, a banquet was held at the Womans Club, where 80 members were entertained with the favorite songs of the Grand Officers, rendered by Mrs. Myrtice Hawley. soloist, accompanied by Mrs. Ethel Tucker.</p>
        <p>Following the meeting, a social hour was held in the Fred Stokes dining room o the Masonic Temple.</p>
        <p>Color Of Walls Affect Complexion, Hair Color</p>
        <p>Calendar Events</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Adult Dancing Class at Elm St. Recreation Center.</p>
        <p>THURSDAY</p>
        <p>12:30-2:00 p. m.Thanksgiving Dinner at the Oreen-vlUe Country Club. Make reservations.*</p>
        <p>7:00 p. m.Clvitan Club meets at Silo Restaurant.</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.WInterviUe Kl-wanis Club meets In Community Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Chapter 1308 of the Women of the Moose.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.-10:00 pm.-Arts and Crafts Classes at Elm St Park.  .  ,</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>10:00-12:00 N.  Plajr School, Elm St. Park,</p>
        <p>3:30 p. m.Salem Alumnae will entertain at a tea for Interested high school girls and their mothers at the home of Mrs. J. J. Perkins. West Rock Spring Rd.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.Kiwanls Club</p>
        <p>:S0 pnExchange Club-7:30 p.m.Regular session of the Pkculty Duplicat Club meets at Planters Bank. 7:30 p.m.Redmen meet. 7:30 p.m.Troc^ No. 33 meets at Scout Hut, Eighth St. Christian Church. *</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.-10:00 p.m.Jr. High Teenage Chib meets at Park.</p>
        <p>8:00 p. m.  Alcoholics Anonymous meets at their bldg. on Parmville Hwy.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY 8:00 p. m.Mrs. DouglaSj Parker, Mrs. J. O. Teel; Miss Patsy Jo Teel, and Mrs. Randolph Fleming will entertain at a social hour for Miss Ann Valnright at the Fleming home.</p>
        <p>8:00 pjn.-ll:00 pm.Br. High Teenage Club meets at Elm St. Park.</p>
        <p>SUNDAY 12:30-2:00 p. m.  Buffet for members of Greenville Country Club. Make reservations.</p>
        <p>Exercise Program  Given At Faculty Wives Club</p>
        <p>EASTERN STAR CHAPTERS . . . throughout Eastern North Carolina attended the Joint meeting last night. Present for the official visit of the Grand Officers were 124 persons.</p>
        <p>News And Notes From Fountain</p>
        <p> T-Sgt. and .Mrs. David M. Mrs. Thad Everett.</p>
        <p>^Morgan and daughter, Terri, ar- Mrs. Tommy Everett of Jack-rlved from Texas to visit their scmville visited her sister, Mrs. ^parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Lena Cobb, Sunday through ^Morgan and Mr. and Mrs. Alton Wednesday.</p>
        <p>-Cox of Walstonburf. Mrs. Mor-| Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Everett ^gan and Terri will spend next,of Walstonburg and Mrs. BiUy year at home while Sgt. Morgan'Brann and children. Dale and ^ stationed on St. Laurence Is- Sandra, of Farmville were Sun-</p>
        <p>^land, Alaska.</p>
        <p> Mrs. Johnny Young of Eliza -beth City is spending the week</p>
        <p>Bessie Goff, Mrs. David Hob-good, Mrs. Lovelace Gardner, Mrs. J. H. Owens, and to the following visitors, Mrs. Jewel Williams, Miss Nancy Smith, Miss Brenda Goff, and Miss Cindy Williams.</p>
        <p>By CATHARINE BREWSTER</p>
        <p>NEW YORK  (WNS)  We had hardly done a story on using lighting in the home to enhance womens good looks, when we had a letter from a representative for K A. Eckart Jr., vice president of Sapolin,</p>
        <p>All very well to light, but what about the paint on the walls in the first place? And did we know that Mr. Eckart was a pioneer In researching paint colors to blend with complexions and hair colors? So, of course, we got right over to Mr. Bckarts office to hear about house painting for beauty.</p>
        <p>It's a complex subject, said Mr. Eckart, a tall, pleasantly assured man who gave off an air of knowing more about what pleases women than most men do.</p>
        <p>Women will  leave lighting up to an expert, but theyre sure they know how to pick colors. And theyre more likely to think of what they like to look at than what theyll look like themselves in the room.</p>
        <p>Mr. Eckart isnt dogmatic about colors. He once saw a yellow and violent orange kitchen which the customer loved.</p>
        <p>deep aqua walls. They cast a ghastly Wuish light.</p>
        <p>Mr. Eckart has been interested for some time in paint shades to pick up hair colors, but he admits to some despair Jn the face of the many changes lots of women make in their hair color to^ay,</p>
        <p>Weve come up with some champagnes, pinks and peach tones whicn we feel come as close as possible to flattering the blondes and brunettes, but the red hair colors are tougher If the woman has already chosen pink walls.</p>
        <p>What should she do? Change her walls or her hair? Mr. Eckart felt she should change the walls.</p>
        <p>M(^em paints, easy to mix, sometimes needing no mixing, go on with rollers, dry in a couple of hours. Changing wall colors is about the cheapest and easiest decorator alteration a woman can make nowadays, and she can do It herself.</p>
        <p>Mr. Eckart's company has been making do - It - yourself paints for a long .time. He showed me ads of 80 years ago which showed women doing their own painting.</p>
        <p>He didnt spoil her pleasure by _</p>
        <p>varnishing</p>
        <p>In the absence of President Mrs. Bernard Jackson, the meeting of the Faculty Wives Club was conducted by Mrs. George Martin, vice president.</p>
        <p>Reports from various committees were made with action being taken on the report of the Scholarship Committee. Mrs. Leo Jenkins, reporting for that committee, read the recommendations that a yearly $100 scholarship be established to be given to an incoming freshman with a B scholastic average and a good character reference. Pref-crentee  will be  given on  the</p>
        <p>degree of nbed.  ,</p>
        <p>After the business^ meeting, Mrs. Martin* introduced Mrs. Wiley Forbes and her daughter, Donna  Forbes,  *  who were  in</p>
        <p>charge  of the  program. Mrs.</p>
        <p>Forbes  (Kitty  Forbes) is  ex</p>
        <p>perienced in teaching dancing, other social graces, and calisthenics. The members were advised to set up a regular program of bodily exercises and not to have a haphazard schedule. Thirty minutes of exercises per day is preferable and will contribute to good health and to a trim figure. Mrs. F'orbes and Donna gave a demonstration on the minimum test that every-</p>
        <p>chair. Many exercises were</p>
        <p>demcmstrated and the purpose and end result of each action explained.</p>
        <p>Mrs. James Mallory and Mrs. Wellizigton Gray, co-chairmen of the Hostess Committee, invited the group to the refreshment table which was laden with a big turkey. The turkey, oma-mMital rather than edible, was constructed of gold and white paper and nestled among fall leaves which encircled It. Five yellow tapers centered the table and'a Puritan couple at the opposite end of the table balanced the arrangement. Brown ceramic containers were filled with nuts and candy corn. Guests were served individual pumpkin pies and coffee after which the meting</p>
        <p>was adjourned.  ,</p>
        <p>Book Club Organized</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLEA newly-organized book club in Wintervilie met at the home of Mrs. Ronald Carroll Monday night with 11 one present should attempt to members present.</p>
        <p>Pass. This test consisted of a  -..jc  .-j.</p>
        <p>series of exercises designed to 'f</p>
        <p>pull end tighten abdominal, leg,   er year In the Philip-</p>
        <p>and other muscles. She suggest-</p>
        <p>ed that a good exercising pro-</p>
        <p>AAUW Meet</p>
        <p>'The Greenville Branch of the American Association of</p>
        <p>guests of Mrs. Mary Everett. Alumni House. The hostesses for</p>
        <p>the evening were Mrs. Anne,</p>
        <p>day  afternoon  guests  of  Mrs.</p>
        <p>Mary Everett Mrs. Wilton  Windham  and</p>
        <p>^with her parents, Mf. and Mrs. | children. Dennis and Wesley,</p>
        <p>Vesper Morgan.  jwere Saturday guests of Mr. and</p>
        <p>^ Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Mrs. Herman Windham.  a  .    .</p>
        <p>Jefferson and children. Bill and Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Everett f met at x o-JSheron, were  Sunday  dinner  Elm  City were  Sunday  evening  -t</p>
        <p>-guests of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ned</p>
        <p>Cauley of Tarboro.</p>
        <p>* James Heath of Norfolk, Va..</p>
        <p>-was a weekend guest of Mr.</p>
        <p>"yLnd Mrs. Jim Corbett.</p>
        <p>* Mr. and Mrs. D, W. Stocks -eind daughter, Debra, of Ayden Vere Saturday guests of Mr. and Jdrs. Jim Corbett m Mrs. Etta Case of Greenville bnd Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cor-3&amp;gt;ett of Macclesfield were Sunday afternoon guests of Mr.</p>
        <p>nd Mrs. Jim Corbett.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Bill lilley and sons, Brjron and Derrel, of Norfolk. Va Mr. and Mrs. Calvin ^oore and children, Kindell and Debra, and Mr. and Mrs. John Lilley and children, Johnnie,</p>
        <p>Jesse, and Jackie of Greenville ^were Sunday guests of Mrs.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;JSadie UUey.</p>
        <p>* Mrs. F, L. Eagles has returned ]^ome after spending several days with her children at Tar-'^ro, Nashville and Louisburg Jast week.</p>
        <p> Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Brown and daughter. Bveljm. were Sun-May guests of Mr. and Mr.. Billy Joyner of Greenville.</p>
        <p>HI Mrs. Ernest Moaley returned home last TTiuraday after spend-a week with her dp**rbter son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>W. E. Hardy, in Baltimore. Md. m Mr. and Mrs. E W. Hunt of *T&amp;gt;avtona Beach. Fla. are spend-thi week mith Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>strident combination.</p>
        <p>TTiere are no reasons for color choices, he said, spreading out sample books from 40 years ago, along with the newest ones. But overall fashions do change. Women used to go for certain colors in waves. Now theyre beginning to think of themselves as part of their own houses.</p>
        <p>The modem samples were more numerous than those of years ago, since many more subtle variations of basic shades Uni- are offered today. This makes It pos.&amp;lt;ible for women to choose shades which will flatter both their rooms and themselves.</p>
        <p>Of course, it was mostly fur- gram would consist of about five</p>
        <p>minutes of warm-up exqrcises.</p>
        <p>we did encourage floors. Most women fled the</p>
        <p>20 minutes of those exercises which one feels is needed, and</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Jojmer and children. Delta. Mona, Vicky and Connie, of FarmvUle were Sunday afternoon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hines.</p>
        <p>R. L. Jones of Parmville, Mrs.</p>
        <p>Carrie Lee Cox, and Mr, and Mrs. L. H. Cox and daughter,</p>
        <p>Diaxme, of Ayden were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>R. L. Jones.</p>
        <p>J. R. Everett of Rocky Mount was Saturday guest of Mr. and Mrs. Thad Everett.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Junior Roberson and children, Herbert Jr. and   ,</p>
        <p>Kay. and Mr. and Mrs. David I  :</p>
        <p>Roberson and son of Tarboro  by  Mrs.  Daniel</p>
        <p>uic evcuiiig were ivirs, Anne, In general, the best  -  roinr  xirb&amp;lt;/.vx</p>
        <p>Dunn Ross,  chairman. Dr.  Tara  loi* women  are pink and all the .  flatter</p>
        <p>Larsen. Dr.  Ruth Modlin,  Mrs.  shades of  off white through |</p>
        <p>Daniel Taylor, and Mrs.  J. E.! tvory. Pink  casts a glow on any</p>
        <p>Winslow  \Rkln tone, whites reflect light.</p>
        <p>Dr. Ruth Modlln poured cof-</p>
        <p>ftkSk of fVlA  f aoJ 4&amp;gt;aK1a   TllC &amp;amp;QU81- SllftQ0S  tSUrpriSlri^</p>
        <p>fee at the decorated table oh|,^  have  to  be</p>
        <p>house when it was being painted a finale of about five minutes In those days. Now they can give themselves a beauty treat-mit via their own walls.</p>
        <p>Mr. Eckart hopes the flatter-yourself trend will lead women away from slavish following of!</p>
        <p>decorator colors.</p>
        <p>Nobody looks good In rooms with brown or eggplant walls, although these odd shades can be very effective for rightly placed accents. Most rooms n^d to be given an Illusion of larger size nowadays. ALso, odd colors dominate a woman. She should dominate the room, by</p>
        <p>She and her family joined her husband who was with the foreign service stationed In the Philippines.</p>
        <p>Members were asked to submit a name appropriate for the book club which will be voted on at the next meeting. It was voted on to meet the third Mon-</p>
        <p>of floor progressions. Since heated muscles have a tendency to spread, it was suggested that this period end with a rest on the floor rather than in a soft:'^^^  month.</p>
        <p>'The next meeting will be a Christmas meeting with a covered dish supper at the home of Mrs. J. D, McArthur.</p>
        <p>TTu ^1 Books were exchanged and Mr. and Mrs. J. John Grier  coffee  were</p>
        <p>and family of Spartanburg.  ^</p>
        <p>C., will arrive today to spend' the holidays with Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>H. L. Ormond.</p>
        <p>fieAAjona</p>
        <p>ClothTis: Needed</p>
        <p>a^cSS oTLLdicaifl'ry:'u;^ 7f</p>
        <p>P!  look  awful  in  rooms  with'?^  Greenville  are  asking  for  all</p>
        <p>yellow and orange chrysanthe-1 mums, with fruit. This was flanked by small turkeys and orange candles in silver holders.</p>
        <p>The members helped themselves The Mt. Pleasant Home Dem-to Individual mince pies with | onstration Club met in the home</p>
        <p>H. D. Club Meets</p>
        <p>whipped cream and nuts.</p>
        <p>were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thad Everett.</p>
        <p>Anxiliary Meets The Womans Auxiliary of Aspen Grove Free Will Baptist Church met in the home of Mrs. Lovelace Gardner Friday night. The program chairman. Mm. Oamette Gay, opened the meeting. Mrs. Bessie Goff offered prayer. Miss Nancy Smith gave a program on Home Missions and closed with a prayer.</p>
        <p> Mrs. Odell Gardner, president, presided over the business session. Mrs. David Hobgood. sec-retary-treasurer. called the roll and received the due*. She also read the minutes of the last _  meeting.  Mrs.  A.  G.  Mangum</p>
        <p>^untaiir  Garnette  Gay  paid</p>
        <p>Mrs. E. P. Whitaker returned birthday dues, A collection was</p>
        <p>taken to send to Miss Flora Gray Hines, a student at Mount Olive College, who graduated</p>
        <p>Taylor, as the chairman of the Legislative Committee, Mrs. C. A, Bowen, was out-of-town. Dr. Howell gave a talk on the voting</p>
        <p>of Mrs. Lonnie Staton Thursday night.</p>
        <p>Mrs, Staton, president, opened the meeting. Mrs. A. C. Rowland gave the demonstration on Cooking Ahead and Freezing. She also gave tips on gift wrap-</p>
        <p>.'ystem used in the United Na- Plng. tions. After his talk, he an- j Mrs. F. A. McLawhorn gave swered questions on the United I report on clothes worn by the</p>
        <p>Natimis.</p>
        <p>people pn the Ivory Coast. Mfs.</p>
        <p>Miss Elizabeth Utterback gave  i**?/  E^u-</p>
        <p>a report on the 14th Conference I "'i i"'*</p>
        <p>of the International Federation 1Health in that re-</p>
        <p>Thorne Monday to Kemersville %rter spending two weeks with</p>
        <p>Jkf- and Mrs, R.  A.  Fountain. _____ _____</p>
        <p>-PA. Fountain  Is  a patient I from Middlesex Orfrfianage  in</p>
        <p>Woodard-Herring Hosoltal. ji962  y-. and Mrs. Rav  Britt and j pian^ ^re made  to be host  to</p>
        <p>rfbudren. Beverlv  Dalton andjtb^ Ea.st Carolina  College Free</p>
        <p>of University Women which she  attended as a delegate In Mexico City July 12-19.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ross gave a report on membership. It was agreed that the club would send Christmas cards again this year to all the member associations throughout the world, and to Dr. Bessie McNIel, a former member of the branch who Is now in Leopoldville in educational work.</p>
        <p>gion.</p>
        <p>Refreshments were served by the hostesses, Mrs. Staton and Mrs. Herbert Randolph.</p>
        <p>To reshape Orion Sayelle knitwear which has stretqhed. launder it as usual and put it into a tumble-type dryer.</p>
        <p>kinds of clothing for overseas relief.</p>
        <p>There Ls also a need for blankets. All items may be brought to the Eighth Street Christian Church where they will be collected by the Church World Service team one day during the week of Nov. 26.</p>
        <p>+ Birth +</p>
        <p>Ward</p>
        <p>Born to Second Lieutenant and Mrs. Charles S. Ward of Quan-tico, Va., a .son, Charles S. Ward n, on Nov, 19. 1962 in the Marine Base Hospital, Quan-tico. Mrs: Ward is the former Miss Beth Baker of Parmville.</p>
        <p>Mrs. B. C. Gardner Sr. is In Baltimore for medical attention. She is from Bethel.</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Rev. and Mrs. R B. Crawford and family wil lhave Thanksgiving dinner with the R. D. Phillipses in Richmond, Va. Prom there the Crawfords will go to Palls Church, Va., where they will visit with Rev. Crawfords brother, Lt, Col. Charles J. Craford. Mrs. P. A. Crawford, the mother of Rev. Crawford, will return to Greenville with them where she will visit through the Christmas holidays.</p>
        <p>House plants In those traditional red clay flowerpots can add an attractive note to your decor, if you keep the containers clean. Use a vegetable brush dipped in hot suds to scrub off chalky deposits and mold, then' wipe with a damp cloth. 'The best place to do this is in the sink.</p>
        <p>FRESH Peanut Brittle Dieners Bakery</p>
        <p>815 Dleklns(Mi Ave.</p>
        <p>Never neglect to wash nylons after every single wearing to remove soilbecause hosiery gives and stretches after a days wear, and only a sudsy bath will restore its original slim, trim fit.</p>
        <p>KENTUCKY</p>
        <p>8TRAI6HT</p>
        <p>BOURBON</p>
        <p>WHISKEY</p>
        <p>86 PROOF</p>
        <p>6 YEARS</p>
        <p>OLD</p>
        <p>Educators believe, that clean, neat children tend to behave better.</p>
        <p>GfMnvilIes lYE CliM FMhion Center</p>
        <p>l^ldgauiaije</p>
        <p>OPTICIANS</p>
        <p>m IVMN fl.</p>
        <p>Cr'e&amp;lt;mrv. of Charlotte were guest* of Mrs. Sadie</p>
        <p>Will Baptist student* Monday night. Dec. 3, at a fellowship suoper at the college in Green-</p>
        <p>most wonderful</p>
        <p>- Pflttle Owen* was a guest yju^ pians were also made to ^^dnesday through Sunday of ^^ve refreshment* and fx-*on and daughter-in-law  ChrI.stma*  gift*  in  the</p>
        <p>-e - ann Mr.s, Carroll Owen* of Sunday school room following Or*nvflle.</p>
        <p>- Albert B-11 left Friday for ]J/ni*v!lle. Kv to be on the -toH^cco market.</p>
        <p>- Mr*. Eva Hobffood. Mrs. Eu-Jilco Bell. Bobby Hobgood. Mrs. J^icille Leagett. and Harold -Fobgood were weekend gueats t)f relatives In Annapolis and 'Crownsville. Md. On the way home they stopped for a visit -with Mr. and Mrs. Billy Nichols )n Frederlcksbunr. Va. </p>
        <p>Bennie Bell left Monday fori Louisville. Ky. to be on the tobacco market.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Dilda wlslted Mrs. J. O. Bryant and Mr. an Mr*. Oscar Bryant Jr. In Kinston Sunday evening.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Bishop Jr. And family of Murfreesboro were sretkeod fuesU of Rsv. and Mrs. tfMss M. Parks.</p>
        <p>* Mrs. Luis Lewis of Fsrmvllle vss Monday gusst of Mr, and</p>
        <p>the Auxiliary meeting to be held Friday night, Dec. 14. Mrs, David Hobgood gave the closing I prayer.</p>
        <p>The hostess served fruit cake, salted nuts, coffee and cold drinks to the followl members: M!rs. A. O. Mangum, Mrs. Dick Smith. Mrs. Marvin Langley. Mrs. R(^i)ert Oakley, Mrs, Eugene Baker, Mrs Oamette Gay, Mrs. Robert Bell, Mrs.</p>
        <p>THE GREENVILLE BEAUTY SCHOOL</p>
        <p>ttt East Ith Street WiU Be Closed rhnrsday, Friday 41 Saturday For Thaaksfflvtnf</p>
        <p>ever!</p>
        <p>Appliance Mart Gift Shop</p>
        <p>We Gift Wrap</p>
        <p>320 Ewans Streat</p>
        <p>Custom</p>
        <p>and Mall</p>
        <p>*The Shop of Lovely Gifta and</p>
        <p>Picture Framing</p>
        <p>Distinctive Acceasories</p>
        <p>Watch</p>
        <p>Thursday</p>
        <p>Paper</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>Important</p>
        <p>After</p>
        <p>Important</p>
        <p>Savings</p>
        <p>On</p>
        <p> FaU Coats</p>
        <p> Fall Suits</p>
        <p> Fall Dresses</p>
        <p> Famous Name Shoes</p>
        <p> Group of Sportswear</p>
        <p>Starts Friday m - 9 P.M.</p>
        <p>Extra</p>
        <p>Salesladies</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>Help</p>
        <p>You</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0003" />
        <p>NEW PHOTNdGRAPH OP SUPREME COURT Chief Justice Earl Warren and the</p>
        <p>eight Associate Justices of the Supreme Court pose in Washington Nov. 19 for this new photograph, the first permitted in several years. Seated, from left, are: Associate Justices Tom C. Ciark and Hugo L. Black: Chief Justice Warren, and Associate Justices William O. Douglas and John M. Harlan. Standing, from left: Associate Justices Byron R. White,' William J. Brennan. Jr., Potter Stewart and Arthur J. Goldberg. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Confusion Marked Early Setting Thanksgiving Day</p>
        <p>By JUNIUS GRIFFIN Associated Press Staff Writer Anycme searching for one more blessing to count this Thanksgiving Day might c(msider the absence (rf confusion which has attended the date of the observance through the years.</p>
        <p>Thanksgiving was observed by Americans as a day of feasting, worshiping and family reunions on dates from January to December before becoming an annual fourth Thursday in November observance.</p>
        <p>Popular tradition assigns the origin of the observance to the Pilgrims harvest in Plimaouth, Mass., in 1621. In 1789. President George Washington proclaimed the last Thursday of November as a day of general thanksgiving.</p>
        <p>Since then, presidents have proclaimed Thanksgiving observances using dates in eight of the 12 months.</p>
        <p>to lapse before he issued a second proclamation for a day of thanksgiving. Two other presidents followed his example.</p>
        <p>Andrew Jackson refrained for the sake of separati(m of church and state. 2^hary Taylor left the matter up to the judgment of state governors.</p>
        <p>February was the month Wash-ingtcHi chose for his third proclamation in 1795.</p>
        <p>April was singled out for Thanksgiving Day by President John Adams in 1799, by Madison in 1815, and by Lincoln in 1862. Adams chose May 9 in 1798.</p>
        <p>In 1812, President Madison picked the third Thursday in August for the holiday. September had a Thanksgiving Day proclaimed by Madison to fall on the second Thursday of the month in 1813.</p>
        <p>Madison designated Jan. 12 as Thanksgiving Day in 1814, and</p>
        <p>Washington allowed five years i said the holiday should be a time</p>
        <p>ECC Cheerleader Will Enter Contest</p>
        <p>Jacqueline Polk of Plymoutn, East Carolina College cheerleader, has been chosen by the Student Government Association to compete as representative of the college in a nation-wide contest conducted by the Winter Haven, Florida, Chamber of Commerce to select the prettiest girl cheerleader in the United States. Photographs of her have been forwarded to judges who</p>
        <p>Pope Orders Study 01 Thesis</p>
        <p>will select the winner.</p>
        <p>The competitor chosen as the most beautiful cheerleader and her chaperon will be given a Christmas holiday in Winter Haven with all expenses paid and a trip to the Orange Bowd Game January 1.</p>
        <p>Winter Haven, City of 100 Lakes, is located in the heart of Floridas Holiday Highlands, the lake and hill region of Central Florida.</p>
        <p>Miss Polk, a senior at East Carolina, is a graduate of the Plymouth High School, where she also acted as a cheerleader. She attended St. Marys Junior College in Raleigh before entering East Carolina in 1961.</p>
        <p>Hiis fall she represented Jones Dormitory for men in the Homecoming Day celebration on the campus October 20 and was one of the attractive women students at the college who competed for the honor of being Queen for the 1963 edition of the college yearbook, the BUCCANEER.</p>
        <p>She is the daughter of Mr. and</p>
        <p>of public humiliation and fasting and prayer In i^preciation of the abimdant fruits of the season and other blessings."</p>
        <p>A woman editor, Sarah Josepha Hale, waged a forceful 25-year cimpaln that finally caused Thanksgivisg to become a regular recurring holiday.</p>
        <p>Sarah, as editor of Godey's Ladys Magazine, wrote in 1827:</p>
        <p>We have too few holidays. Thanksgiving like the Fourth of July should be a national festival observed by all our people as an exponent of our Republican institutions.</p>
        <p>President Lincoln proclaimed an August Thanksgiving in 1863, but came back three months later with another one in November the month in which the holiday generally has been observed since.</p>
        <p>President Johnson, taking over the White House after Lincolns death, delayed Thanksgiving until the first Thursday of December 1865.</p>
        <p>General Grant, in the first year of his presidency, appointed Nov. 18 for the Thanksgiving festival, but for the rest of his term followed the Lincoln tradition of setting it on the fourth Thursday in November.</p>
        <p>President Franklin D. Roosevelt experimented by choosing the next-to-the last Thursday in November for the holiday. But Congress decided in 1941 that Thanksgiving should be celebrated on the</p>
        <p>U.S, Blockade Ships Sailing To Home Ports</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON AP)Ships of the big U.S. blockade fleet steamed toward home ports or headed out for ourtlne patrols today, their month-lcmg vigil over arms shipments into Cuba ended.</p>
        <p>The Defense Department sent Instructions to the Atlantic Fleet cmnmander to disperse the force within minutes after President Kennedys announcement Tuesday night the naval quarantine was lifted.</p>
        <p>The first ships were expected to come into the nearer , home ports tcHiight or Thursday morning, scMne of them back to base for the first time since Oct. 22.</p>
        <p>They had composed wie of the largest naval concentrations since the Korean Waran armada of carriers, cruisers, destroyers, attack submarinesand supporting tankers and supply vessels.</p>
        <p>The Defense Department had listed 49 Communist and no-Com-munist ships as having passed through to Cuba during the month-lwig quarantine. One Lebanese freighter under Soviet charter was boarded by a U.S. naval party. No ships were turned back, but about six Soviet vessels believed to have been carrying missiles turned around after having been headed toward Cuba.</p>
        <p>Kennedy said that Soviet Premier Khrushchev told him that the IL28 jet b&amp;lt;nl)ers in Cuba, which remained a point of disagreement after the ballistic rockets were dismantled and shipped out, would be withdrawn within 30 days. Khrushchev, said the President, "agreed that these planes can be observed and counted as they leave.</p>
        <p>How the IL28 bombers would be observed and counted as they leave Cuba was not made clear Immediately.</p>
        <p>The fact that the blockade force has been dispersed does not necessarily mean that shipping into and out of Cuba will pass along the sea lanes unnoticed.</p>
        <p>The Atlantic Fleet, with both ships Uid planes, routinely patrols the western Atlantic and Caribbean waters.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Wednesday, November 21, 1962-^3</p>
        <p>Record Shows First Thanksgiving Day In America Held In Virginia</p>
        <p>Denies Ads Are For Youngsters</p>
        <p>fourth Thursday  and its been that way since.</p>
        <p>VATICAN CITY AP)  Pope John XIXII intervened today In the Roman Catholic Ecumenical Council and ordered a new study of a controversial theological thesis considered important for Christian unity.</p>
        <p>The Pope said the thesison divine revelation and its sources</p>
        <p>should be examined Jointly by Mrs. M. J. Polk of Plymouth, the councils Theological Commission. the Vatican Secretariat for Christian Unity, and a number of cardinals.</p>
        <p>His action, announced by a spokesman, amounted to a success for progressive elements in- Officers said two juveniles and .side the council. They had argued a 16-year-old lad were charged</p>
        <p>Students Visit Greene School</p>
        <p>Three Charged In Purse Theft</p>
        <p>that the thesis either be shelved or rewritten in the interest of in-terchurch relations.</p>
        <p>In the past, the Roman Catholic Church has emphasized tradition</p>
        <p>with breaking, entering and larceny following theft of a pocket book from a car parked on First St. yesterday.</p>
        <p>'The theft of the purse, re</p>
        <p>as well as the Bible as sources of! ported to contain $100 was re-</p>
        <p>Gods revelation to man. Protestants have held that the Bible is the main source.</p>
        <p>The thesis was prepared In a preliminary commission headed by conservative Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani, secretary of the Vaticans powerful Congregation of the Holy Office. He also presides over the councils Theological CommissiMi.</p>
        <p>The Secretariat for Christian Unity is headed by Augustin Cardinal Bea, a German Jesuit considered progressive.</p>
        <p>By calling for a new joint study, including Cardinal Beas secretar!- Recorders Court.</p>
        <p>at, the Pope clearly underlined  _</p>
        <p>the importance of the thesis in current efforts to improve con-i tacts between churches.</p>
        <p>The cardinals who will participate in the new study were not identified. Presumably they will include both proponents and opponents of the thesis.</p>
        <p>ported at 11:02 a.m.</p>
        <p>The three youths, one 13, one 14 and Clifton Eugene Parker, 16, of 105 West First St. were charged later with the incident.</p>
        <p>The purse was owned by Mrs. Frank Parker of Falkland. The pocketbook. Investigators reported. had been taken from Mrs. Parkers car, which had been parked at 108 East First St.</p>
        <p>The two juveniles were turned over to Welfare officials. Parker now faces trial in City</p>
        <p>Hogs High On Dumped Mash</p>
        <p>Application Is Assigned Number</p>
        <p>GRIFTON  Griftons applica tion for federal funds, totaling $18,000 under the Accelerated Public Works Act, has been assigned project number APW-NC-40-G, Mayor Wiley Gaskins said.</p>
        <p>'The funds would be u.sed for extending water service to the south side of Contentnea Creek in a project which would cost $36,000, with the grant providing half the' funds. The town filed the application about Nov. 7 with the Housing and Home Finance Agency.  ^</p>
        <p>TO OBSERVE HOLIDAY</p>
        <p>GRIFTON  The Town Office will be closed on Thursday. Thanksgiving Day, it was announced today. It will reopen as usual on Friday.</p>
        <p>GASTONIA, N.C. (AP)  Hogs were swinging free and easy on the Wallace Fisher farm Tuesday. No troubles, no hot weather, no fliesjust plenty of hard liquor.</p>
        <p>Rural pohce and federal gents dumped sour mash from a 500-gall(Mi liquor still they found in Fishers hog lot.</p>
        <p>"I got 127 hogs, Fisher said later. "They began lapping it (the mash) up, and some of em got real drunk. Two or three of them just plum passed out while crawling around in them barrels. Fisher, held for trial in federal Court, said he previously had decided to destroy the still.</p>
        <p>"Aint no money in it, he said. "Theres a heap more money in just raising hogs.</p>
        <p>Twenty-two students enrolled in the class of Materials and Methods of Teaching Typewriting ^d other basic business subjects at East Carolina College took a field trip and visited a beginning typewriting and a general business class at the Greene Central High School near Snow Hill, Dr. Alice M. Harrison, associate professor of the School of Business at Ea.st Carolina and teacher of the college class, has announced.</p>
        <p>Students of the college class, who will be doing their studeni teaching this year, were interested in attending classes in typing and methods of teaching and in observing the enthusiasm and good behavior of the high school students.</p>
        <p>Greene Central, a consolidated high school which is two years old, was also toured by the college group. Mrs. Hugh Allen and Mrs. Janice ORear, teachers of the business classes at the high school, are graduates of the School of Business at East Carolina College.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)-A spokesman for the tobacco industry says cigarettes advertising is intended for people of "mature judgment and is not aimed at high school students.</p>
        <p>George V. Allen, president of the Tobacco Institute, Inc., made the statement in denying a complaint that cigarette advertising is intended to influence potential smokers of high school age.</p>
        <p>Leroy Collins, presidwit of the National Association of Broadcasters, told a regional NAB conference at Portland, Ore., that, because more high school age youths are becoming habitual smokers, "mounting evidence that tobacco provides a serious hazard to health cannot be ignored.</p>
        <p>He suggested that broadcasters invoke a voluntary control of advertising aimed at the youthful smoker.</p>
        <p>In his statement, Allen said the tobacco industry "regards smoking as an adult custom, and the decision to smoke or not should be made at the age of mature judgment.</p>
        <p>He also said Collins has mistaken repetition of charges "for what he refers to as mounting evidence, of hazards to health from tobacco.</p>
        <p>Allen said individual companies control their advertising programs but said he is convinced Such advertising is not aimed at students.</p>
        <p>By JERRY BUCK BERKELEY PLANTATION, Va. (AP)At about the time the Pilgrims were wondering if the Mayflower was safe to travel in, 39 colonists knelt (i the sandy banks of the James River here to offer the first Thanksgiving.</p>
        <p>It was Dec. 14, 1619, and the nail band had just arrived in the struggling colmy of Virginia after a 2&amp;gt;^-m(mth journey aboard the ship Margaret from Bristol, England.</p>
        <p>With breastplates glinting in the low autumn sun and halberds at the ready, the colonists watched as Capt, John Woodleaf opened the companys charter and read its instructions.</p>
        <p>Impr wee ordalne that the day of our ships arrivall at the place assigned for the plantacon in the land of Virginia shall be yearly and perputually keept holy as a day of thanksgiuing to Almighty God.</p>
        <p>This is the view held in Virginia, a state rarely known to be modest about its history.</p>
        <p>In proclaiming Thanksgiving</p>
        <p>son Jr. ignored the long-accepted Plymouth Rock version and said the day would serve as a memorial to the Virginians "who gathered at Bericeley near Richmwid in 1619 to observe America's first Thanksgiving ceremwiy.</p>
        <p>Virginias claim on the first Thanksgiving has been ndsed only in recent years, although the landing and the services at Berkeley are documented.</p>
        <p>As an annual holiday, the state has celebrated Thanksgiving only for the past 77 years. In the years before and after the Civil War Virginia was only too happy to give all the credit to New England and Ignore the whole affair.</p>
        <p>Historians believe the settlers at Bei^eley Hundred ccwnmemo-rated the landing again in 1620 the year the Pilgrims set foot on Plymouth Rockand again in 1621.</p>
        <p>Correspondence from the parent company in England reminded the colonists in August 1620 that the Thanksgiving was to be observed each year.</p>
        <p>Plans for a fourth observance</p>
        <p>nough when he led an Indian uprising on Good Friday in 1623 and slew 350 settlers alcMig the James.</p>
        <p>The Virginia General Assembly set aside the date of the colony's deliverance frtMn the "bloudie massaker for commemoration and it was observed for a number of years.</p>
        <p>. Thereafter followed another series of Thanksgivings in Virginias History. Between 1692 and 1705 the legislature proclaimed nine days of Thanksgiving for</p>
        <p>that a gubernatorial proclamation W'as enthusiastically received. * Even without a claim (xi the first Thanksgiving, the Berkeley plantation has a firm place In the nations history. Here ws bom Benjamin Harrison V, *a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and his son, PresidAt William Henry Harrison.  Benedict Arnold sacked the mansion for the British In the Revolutionary War and burned the portraits of the Harrisons on</p>
        <p>this year Gov. Albertis S. Harri- were ended by Chief Opechanca-</p>
        <p>Americans Have A Lot To Be Thankful For</p>
        <p>servicemen will feast on 112,000 turkeys and all the trimmings from shrimp cocktail to after-dinner mints, the Defense Department said.</p>
        <p>Although the military is being kept on alert on the holiday, some servicemen will be able to enjoy Thanksgiving meals with their families.</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It makes no difference where Americans arewhether at home, in hospitals or staticxied around the world with the armed forces theyll have a lot to be thankful for Thursday.</p>
        <p>Along with the feasting. Thanksgiving Day will be a day of prayer.</p>
        <p>President Kennedy gave this Thanksgiving thought at his news conference Tuesday night: "There is much for which we can be grateful as we look back to where we stood only four weeks ago the unity of this hemisphere, the support of our allies and the calm determination of the American people.</p>
        <p>things the Robert Watson, distinguished President did not mention:  vouncr  nnpt  fmm  tho xnrnman'cr</p>
        <p>For one thing, the United States  h  tt  !  </p>
        <p>still is at peace. Perhaps It has  ..,,1  University of</p>
        <p>events ranging from survival of the front lawn.</p>
        <p>^ ^he Civ war it became the victory ^ Blenheim.  birthplace of Taps and headquar-</p>
        <p>Essentially, historians noted, ters of Union Gen. George B. Mc-Virglnias Thanksgivings were re- CleUan. President Abraham Lin-ligdws in nature and had little coin came here in 1862 to see of the social overtones found in McHellan and he landed at ap-the Pilgrim holidays.</p>
        <p>In the last century, particularly for a time when Thanksgiving became linked with the abolition of slavery, Virginia rejected the observance completely.</p>
        <p>The first Virginia governor to call up(xi the state to observe Thanksgiving as a national holiday was Gov. Gilbert C. Walker, who served from 1869 to 1874.</p>
        <p>'The Richmcmd Dispatch noted at the time "there was with many a feeling of indigantion that in the light of then recent events he (Gov. Walker) was trying to set this New England plant in our sanred soil.</p>
        <p>Thanksgiving was not celebrated in the state again until  _ ^_____</p>
        <p>1885, when the Dispatch reported Plymouth Rock style</p>
        <p>proximately the same place as did the 39 colonists 243 years earlier.</p>
        <p>And, in one of those quirks of history, it was President Lincoln who set aside the last Thursday of November as Thanksgiving Day.</p>
        <p>The landing at Bericeley has been re-enacted several times last year in a driving rainbut there is no rush to make it an annual production. There is already fear that it would become commercialized.  </p>
        <p>Virginia can be expected to c&amp;lt;ffi-tinue to assert its claim to tSe first Thanksgiving as it joins tke rest of the nation in celebrating the holidayperish the though^</p>
        <p>Poet To Appear At ECC Monday</p>
        <p>been a bit shaky in the past several weeks, what with the Cuban crisis and all. But at least theres no immediate danger of any American having to eat his turkey in a bomb shelter.</p>
        <p>For another thing, the nation still is a land of plenty.</p>
        <p>Americans can still pray in the religion of our choicethe idea behind the Pilgrims migration to this country.</p>
        <p>In Plymouth, Mass., where the Pilgrims settled on Dec. 21, 1620, the city will carry on its traditional observance of Thanksgiving-first celebrated by the Pilgrims in 1621.</p>
        <p>Each child will be given a Pilgrim hat at Plymouth's Pilgrim!</p>
        <p>North Carolina, will appear at East Carolina College on Monday, Dec. 3, for the fall presentation of the Poetry Circuit.</p>
        <p>The Poetry Circuit, established in 1961 under sponsorship of the University of North Carolina Press in Chapel Hill, brings into the state two poets each academic year for readings of their own works at eight participating institutions of higher learning.</p>
        <p>Colleges in addition to East Carolina which .participate include N.C. State, N.C. Wesleyan, Duke, University of North Carolina, Womans College, Davidson. Wake Forest.</p>
        <p>Watson is the author of A</p>
        <p>Hall, where refreshments will be Paper Horse, published last served during an open house. A spring as his first book of verse.</p>
        <p>re-creation of the Pilgrim ship, Mayflower n, will be on display.</p>
        <p>Along the harbor front, where Plymouth Rock provided the stepping stone to the New World, a drum roll will signal the start of the annual Pilgrims Progress march to a church where a religious service will be held.</p>
        <p>In another part of Massachusetts, at Hyannis Port, President and Mrs. Kennedy and their two children plan to spend the four-day Thanksgiving weekend at the family home with the rest of the Kennedy clan.</p>
        <p>Away from home, American</p>
        <p>Wind And Rain Storms Dwindle</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Damaging wind and rain storms diminished in the northwest today and colder air spread across</p>
        <p>Masonic Notice</p>
        <p>Crown Point Lodge' No. 708, A.F. &amp;amp; A.M., will have a stated communication Thursday at 7:30 p.m. All Master Masons are cordially invited.</p>
        <p>utslie H. Garner, Master  F. L. Whitehurst, Secty</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>northern sections of the western two-thirds of the nation.</p>
        <p>Rainy, showery and cloudy weather prevailed in most of the eastern third of the country.</p>
        <p>The heavy rains and stiff winds set off landslides and floods ^ In some areas of the northwest storm belt. The gusty winds, sweeping eastward from the northwest Pacific, spread from the northern rockies across the Da-kotas and the Nebraska panhandle.</p>
        <p>Only preclpitatiMi in the far northwest was light rain, while light rain and rain mixed with snow fell in the Northern Rockies.</p>
        <p>Strong winds fanned the cold air southward from Canada through the upper Mississippi Valley, the Central Plains and the Northern Rockies. Temperatures were mostly 10 to 15 degrees lower than unseasonable marks of 24 hours earlier. Readings were mostly in the low 30s in northern areas,\ about 40 in central sections and the upper 40s in southern regions. The 50s- prevailed in the West Coast.</p>
        <p>Showers dampened parts of the Great Lakes region and the North Atlantic states. A small disturbance in the Western Gulf of Mexico caused dismal weather in the Gulf states, with fog and rain in most areas.</p>
        <p>Suspend Work On Water Line</p>
        <p>AYDEN  Work on enlarging a water line on Planters Street has been temporarily halted here but will probably be completed next week. Town Manager Cleveland Paylor said yesterday.</p>
        <p>The line extends from Venters Street to Park Avenue on Planters Street for a distance of about 1,000 feet. Workmen are Installing two-inch line, replacing a line which varies frwn one and a quarter inches to three-quarters of an inch in width.</p>
        <p>Another water line project financed by property owners near the elementary school has been completed, Paylor said.</p>
        <p>Ayden Buying New Chassis For Utilities Dept.</p>
        <p>AYDEN  At a special meeting of the Town Board here yesterday afternoon. Ayden commissioners awarded a contract to Venters Motor Co. of Ayden for a 1963 three-quarter ton chassis for use of the utilities department.</p>
        <p>'Town Manager Cleveland Paylor said the Venters bid was $887.40. The new chassis will replace a 1961 one-half ton truck currently In use by the utilities department. The new chassis is expected within the next 30 days.</p>
        <p>Other companies submitting</p>
        <p>It Was widely acclaimed by reviewers throughout the country. Watson, the first North Carolinian to read on the circuit. Is associate professor of English at Womans College.</p>
        <p>Howard. Webber, editor-in-chief of the North Carolina Press and founder of the circuit, said that Circuit poets are chosen from among the best young poes in the country, Mr. Watson clearly qualifies and I am delighted to be able to present this time somebody from our own state.</p>
        <p>A native of New Jersey, Watson studied at Williams College and Johns Hopkins University. He has since attended the University of Zurich as a Swlss-American exchange fellow.</p>
        <p>Speight Speaks To Ayden Rotary</p>
        <p>AYDEN  W. W. Speight of Greenville, attorney for Pitt County, discussed the progress of obtaining an area airport In eastern North Carolina at last Thursdays meeting of the Rotary Club here.</p>
        <p>A special guest for the occasion was the Rev. Cecil Brown of the Robersonville Christian CXiurch, who was introduced by Curtis Cavileer. Lee Nance, president, was In charge of the</p>
        <p>bids were S&amp;amp;E Motor Service of I meeting.</p>
        <p>Ayden Offices Close Tomorrow</p>
        <p>AYDENOffices in the Ayden Town Hall will be closed tomorrow in observance of Thanksgiving and will reopen for business as usual on Friday, Town Manager Cleveland Paylor said.</p>
        <p>However, emergency crews will be available for service on Thanksgiving.</p>
        <p>Ayden, $1,252.99 and City Motor Co. of Ayden, $1,447.50.</p>
        <p>Mayor S. F. Peterson presided at the meeting, which was called especially to award a contract for the truck chassis.</p>
        <p>During the meeting, tickets, both adult and childs, were distributed for the annual pancake supper to be held Dec. 14-15 at the Ayden Elementary School cafeteria.</p>
        <p>Took Advantage Of Privacy!</p>
        <p>HUNTSVILLE. Ala. (AP)-Au-thoritles granted Johnny Ray Smiths request to teU his wife privately of his conviction on a burglary charge.</p>
        <p>Smith stepped into the hall outside Madison County Circuit Court where his wife was supposed to be waiting.</p>
        <p>He never came back.</p>
        <p>Saads Shoe Shop</p>
        <p>Rely On The Best Pron^ Expert Berrien At Moderate Prieea All Work Gnaranteed</p>
        <p>Wo CHre Ktng Kom Stamaa</p>
        <p>111 Orando Am. PL l-im</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>Suburban</p>
        <p>Beauty</p>
        <p>Salon</p>
        <p>is proud to announce that Betty McLawhom is now associated with them as a hair stylist, Betty has had 6 years experience and wishes to invite her friends to come by and visit her.</p>
        <p>E. 10th St. Ext.</p>
        <p>PL 2-7630</p>
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        <p>BOURBON*</p>
        <p>70</p>
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        <p>$^28</p>
        <p>^W4/5 QT.</p>
        <p>MELROSf BOURBON 99. 80 PROOF.</p>
        <p>MELROSE DISTILLERS CO.. N.Y . N.V</p>
        <p>A'</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0004" />
        <p>Wednesday, November 21, 1962</p>
        <p>Ths</p>
        <p>Gc':d Points Are Recognized</p>
        <p>*Ehe Two-Way Stretch</p>
        <p>It i:ust lia\e been a bitter task for Pi^mie*</p>
        <p>He even touched on the matter of a profit in-</p>
        <p>Khrushc^.cv to oruer S:,oviet industry and agriculture centive, being careful to try to define the difference to Loriow ideas and meihods from the capitalist in the profit motive in a oommunist state from that s&amp;gt;. eni to boost the industrial .and agricultural econ- in a capitalistic society.</p>
        <p>omv of tlio comm-nist state.  Even  with  his  carefully  guarded  words,  it  was</p>
        <p>system in meeting ______ _____</p>
        <p>herd cl the communist movementwho has so often wants of its people. Instead of being decadent an i tb-lo n-cd capitalbm as a decadent way of life dying, capitalismin the official Moscow defim-v,'s -  M" rn ordfci that some capitalistic principles tionnow has some good points which communism nv i I c adopted in his communist state if industi v may embrace. In some respects it offers improve-p.nd a'^ncHt^re arc to produce the results that were ments over the economic practices followed under nec ed. The comniunist economic system is not the communist sys,,em.</p>
        <p>capr e of meeting the task before it.  For  official Moscow to make such concessions</p>
        <p>i.If re tangible incentives for individual work- suggests dire conditions in both industry and agri-,cr r.nd more efficiency in operations were cited by culture in the Soviet Union.</p>
        <p>P. I nner Khrushchev as needs in his economy. He pointed to low productivity, inefficient use of capital investment in plants and agricultural operation.^, di ee^'ont on the part of workers causing them to move from job to another because of wage? or poor Avorking conditions.</p>
        <p>Hare-Brained Plot Of Sinister Proportions</p>
        <p>What N.C. Has To Sell Abroac.</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM A. SHIRES SELL &amp;gt;- A delegation of foreign newspapermen ilstened at 6(xne length to glowing reports about plans for the 1963 North Carolina Trade Fair and state officials told about efforts to interest Eur(H?e in trade with the Tar Heel state.</p>
        <p>Then one of the correspondents asked a question.</p>
        <p>What, other than tobacco, does North Carolina have to sell to Europe?</p>
        <p>It was a fair question and an easy one. But there was indi-catk that the state officials including Governor Sanford may ha\% muffed it, at least (m this occasion of the governors press conference.</p>
        <p>Perhaps It was too elementary. but perhaps the state officials should have been better prepared.</p>
        <p>LIST  Governor Sanford and Dr. Mott Blair of the State Board of Conservation and Development ticked off a few commodities. But merely mentioning a few items such as poultry. textiles and sweet potatoes did not present an exciting picture. nor did it tell the whole story.</p>
        <p>Dr. Blair, who led the recent North Carolina businessmens trade mission to Europe, did stre.s.s that the list erf potential market products is a large (me. And it a varied me.</p>
        <p>The -0 businessmen who toured England. Denmark. Belgium. I&amp;gt; and, West Germany. Switzerland and Italv had a list of more than 100 North Carolina commodities and producrts suitable for international trade.</p>
        <p>Dr. Blair mentioned this list and it later was made available to the touring corresp&amp;lt;md-ents.</p>
        <p>IMPORTANCE - The real Importance of this press confer ence Incident however may lie in recognizing that now is the time to be specific in selling North Carolina abroad. What does North Carolina have to sell?</p>
        <p>The states tobacco economy Is well known and this was mentioned a number of times, both in relation to trade tmd in reference to the health problem. Dr. Blair, to his report on the Trade Missicm, also dealt with poultry, a commodity which is being emphasized.</p>
        <p>He reported, for example, tiiat one (rf Eunnms largest poultry Importers who. had been ilnuuily fnxn the West Coast was now excited over prospects of being able to buy much of his needs to North Carolina.</p>
        <p>There is expected to be further specific evaluation of the international trade prospects, and Blair said individual reports are to be compiled and made to the governor.</p>
        <p>MISSION  Sanford said he felt the trade missicm, latest of a series of such forays by private businessmen, produced</p>
        <p>Castro plans for a campaign of terrorism in the New York area during the pre-Christmas rush has been nipped ii. the bud by the FBIs discovery of a cache of sabotage weapons and explosives in New York.</p>
        <p>Vicious enough in itself was the apparent plot</p>
        <p>to sabotage oil refineries in New Jersey. But the</p>
        <p>thought of Castroites tossing grenades into holiday</p>
        <p>more tangible results than any- shopping crowds in the nations largest city be-</p>
        <p>ft  ^  spcaks  thc  desperate lengths to which Cuban com-</p>
        <p>It was designed primarily to  u    i.</p>
        <p>munist fanatics have determined to go.</p>
        <p>It is doubtful that the conspirators seriously</p>
        <p>believed they would be able to completely wreck</p>
        <p>atti act foreign exhibitors to the Trade Pair at Charlotte beginning April 27. But It also resulted to sparking renewed and fresh interest azixmg EurcH&amp;gt;ean buyers as well as exhibitors.</p>
        <p>And even more significant  Sanford said, a surprisingly large number of industrial plant location situaticMis were uncovered and develc^u.</p>
        <p>James R. Hinkle, head of the Commerce and Industry division. told the governor that plans for follow ups on the industrial prospects already are being made.</p>
        <p>One of the industrial prospects was identified as a dia-m(X)d-cutttog concern in the Netherlands which wants to expand its U. S. maricet.</p>
        <p>PAIR  Dr. Blair and other officials, C&amp;amp;D director Robert Stallings and the governor, each expressed confidenije that the results of the tour and the Trade Pair will be far reaching.</p>
        <p>Blair said the response was gratifying and he felt it would be rewarding. Trade fairs, however, are nothing new to Europe where each country had several of these every year. He reported that the group encountered a problem in the travel expense involved for a European buyer or exhibitor to make a trip to North Carolina. He mentioned that efforts are being made to arrange a package travel tour for European w ho will be visiting New York or Chicago next Spring, to defray some expense of the trip to North Carolina.</p>
        <p>A side benefit, Blair said, was in getting a close look at the European Comm(xi Market and studying this economic bloc. He said tour members were impressed with the vigor and enthusiasm of lais group and recognized it as a  great force to be dealt with m international trade.</p>
        <p>SANFORD  The foreign newspapermen told Sanford that he Is described as a southern moderate, but Sanford declined to define this term. Instead, he outlined what he said was the philosophy and identifying mark of the people of North Carolina  not just of the governor of the state  and that is that the people of this state can be described as progressive and fair.</p>
        <p>He spoke briefly also on the state's approach to control of alcoholic beverages and, to another questi(Mi, said he feels there should be no snap decisions about the effects of use of tobacco on health. His own feeling, he said, is that there is no clear-cut medical CAldence that use of tobacco in moderation is harmful, and on the other hand provides pleasure, enjoyment, relaxation and other benefits.</p>
        <p>By HAL BOYLE</p>
        <p>New Jersey refineries even if they were successful in setting off some explosives. Certainly they could not have hoped to cripple the nations oil industry that is spread far and wide over the country. The motive behind the plan, therefore, would have to be primarily one of terrorism.</p>
        <p>Setting off of smoke bombs and incendiary</p>
        <p>devices in major New York department stores would</p>
        <p>be of no military significance. The killing of prp-</p>
        <p>holiday shoppers by tossing grenades into crowds</p>
        <p>could serve no real purpose except to send a wave President John Adams,</p>
        <p>of terror over the people of that major city. It could  t</p>
        <p>i,,,,  poleon Bonaparte and</p>
        <p>not help the Castro cause.  ruu, had m common?</p>
        <p>Srndiwte. I*</p>
        <p>Snuff Remains PoDular</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)What S</p>
        <p>Babe</p>
        <p>Why, they all used snuff! You may have thought that</p>
        <p>Insofar as it is possible for the United States to do so, it should see that those who planned to carry out the sinister plot of unwarranted destruc-</p>
        <p>i   1 1.1  II.*  ,  ,  ,  gree  wlg or the bustle. Fie on</p>
        <p>tion and the murder of innocent people are severely your ignorance, sir! A double</p>
        <p>punished for their conspiracy. The nation must also fiei</p>
        <p>be alert for other similar plots on the part of des-  The  so-calkd Great Age of</p>
        <p>perate followers of the desperate Cuban leader.</p>
        <p>Press</p>
        <p>Critica. Of Restraints</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED imblished Every Afternoon Except Sunday Established ^88-DA VID JUUAN WHICHARD. Publiahei</p>
        <p>totered at Pott Office, OretoTlllo, N O. m aecord elM mall matter.</p>
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        <p>credited to this paper and also the local news publlshea herein All rights of publication of special dispatches her are also reserved</p>
        <p>NATIONAL AOVKRTI81NO REPRESENTATIVBB lliomae P Clark Co. Inc., New Tork, Ohlcafo, Atlanta Member Audit Bureau of Ch-ctilattaii.</p>
        <p>All advertising ropy must be received at least one day before</p>
        <p>By JAMES MARLOW</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - President Kennedys relations with the press are getting sticky. Newsmen dont like the way his administration has handled them or information.</p>
        <p>He faced questions about it Tuesday evening at his first conference since Sept. 13. But hes had the idea of some restraint on news stories to a critical period, like this one with Cuba. since early to his administration.</p>
        <p>His administrations ideas about this, and newsmens ideas about it, came into conflict after the Cuban crisis erupted because of w^hat his administration said and did.</p>
        <p>As a result of newsmens criticism, Rep. John E. Moss, D-Calif., said his House Government Operations subC(Hnmittee would look into the situation.</p>
        <p>The 10-week gap to his news conferences is understandable to some extent because Cuba became a critical problem since his last meeting with reporters. Actually he has held more news conferences this year than last.</p>
        <p>Before he became president, while still a candidate in 1960, he said he thought that whoever was president would see the press once a week. He hasnt quite made good on it. He held 19 conferences last year, 24 so far in 1962.</p>
        <p>Kennedys concern about news stories in tense moments came out April 27. 1961, when he call ed on the press for sane form of self-censorship because of cold war threats to national security.</p>
        <p>On May 9, 1961. he told eight editors  who called at the White House to hear more about his plea for self-restraintthat his administration contemplated no type of government restrictions on access to the news.</p>
        <p>This meeting got a little confusing. Kennedys press secretary. Pierre Salinger, said the President had suggested to the editors that newspapers select a representative to advise them on news which might affect national security.</p>
        <p>One of the editors, Felix R. McNight, who was president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, said the group</p>
        <p>agreed the nations position was grave but suggested censorship, voluntary or otherwise, was not needed.</p>
        <p>Kennedy, since taking office, repeatedly has had editors to the White House from all over the country to discuss natiHial problems. But concern about his administrations handling of news mounted after he announced the Cuban crisis. That was Oct. 22.</p>
        <p>There has been some (x&amp;gt;ncem about what was happening in the m(Hith before Oct. 22. While Kennedy was insisting Russian help to Cuba involved &amp;lt;mly defensive weapons, there were reports the weapons were offensive missiles.</p>
        <p>Days before Kennedys broadcast, Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y, said publicly he had been Informed the weapcms were offensive missiles. The administration nevertheless took the position they were defensive weapons until the broadcast.</p>
        <p>In this case at least the administrations intelligence service on Cuba was tardy.</p>
        <p>Within less than 10 days after the broadcast three things in particular happened: a Defense Department statement and a tightening up on news sources at the State and Defense departments.</p>
        <p>1. The Defense Departments chief of information, Arthur Sylvester, assistant secretary, said the Kennedy administration controlled news of government actions in the Cuban crisis as a weapcxi to the drive to force Russia to dismantle its missile bases.</p>
        <p>News flowing from actions taken by the government is part of weaponry, Sylvester said. In the kind of world we live in. the generation of news by actions taken by the government becomes one weapon in a strained situation. The results in my opinion justify the methods used.</p>
        <p>Lee Hills, this years president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, wired Sylvester that his statement about the weaponry concept of news shocked responsible editors.</p>
        <p>The New York Times said: There is no doubt that man- uontlnuea on page Lve&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>snuff in Europe was during the 16th and 17th centuries and w'as largely a privilege of the aristocracy. But snuff is now in its second-great age, and has more devotees in this country than during the U.S. Revolution.</p>
        <p>America leads the world In snuff, and we use far more than all the rest of the people on earth put together, proudly proclaimed Gerry Gilmar-tin, spokesman for the Snuff Information Center.</p>
        <p>Our prodution last yeai' was 34 million pounds with a retail value of $60 million That can be compared with a production of only three million pounds m 1875. Giimartin estimates Ameri-ca.s snuff clientele at about six million. 'The reason you dont notice them is that few sniff snuff in public anymore. Most simply park their snuff under their lower lip, or between cheek and gum, and let it slowly dissolve.</p>
        <p>Snuff precedes the discovery of America. said Gil-niartin. Indians here customarily sniffed it through an eight-inch reed called a cubit. Explorers brought snuff bacK to Portugal. Jean Nicot, French ambassador to Lisbon, sent samples hom-e to his queen, Catherine de Medici, who spread the fad through European nobility. Nicots reward.</p>
        <p>Other Editors Saying... Two Cuts Or' None</p>
        <p>(Henderson Dispatch)</p>
        <p>Three congressmen, two of them from North Carolina and one from Virginia, pledged at a news conference in Wilmington last week that they would fight any proposal in the new Congress for a tax cut unless there were a corresponding reduction in Federal spending. Our hat is off to them, with the earnest hope that they will not retreat from the stand they have taken, and that they will have enough support to prevail.</p>
        <p>The Virginian, Rep. William Tuck, said the overwhelming sentiment in the Southeast is that Federal spending has got to be curtailed before we reduce taxes, although I k n o w taxes are too high. All of us know they are too high, and, while such burdensome levies are essential for sound government so long as spending is continued at the present rate, the fact is that the enormous outlays were in many instances proposed and fought for by the administration and were approved by Congress, as they had to be to make them legal.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina congressmen at the press conference were Rep. Alton Lennon of Wilmington and Rep. Charles R. Jonas of Lincolnton. Lennon criticized the Kennedy administration for including Alliance for Pr(ress funds (for Latin America) in the general foreign aid program without allowing Congress to vote on each of its merits. Jonas said it Is silly to borrow money and then cut taxes. It is, of course.</p>
        <p>There should be two cuts or none. Unless there is a read</p>
        <p>iness to reduce spending there should be no tax cut. And that Is said despite our owm ardent desire for lowering the tax take.</p>
        <p>Congressmen are at home  except for those who are on junkets to many far away places in the world at taxpayers expense, and which Is also unnecessary. While they are mingling with their constituents they should be told that the people want the reckless outlay of public funds ended. If enough such protests are registered, not only in North Carolina and Virginia and the Southeast but in the country generally, there will be a curtailment in such nonessential squandering of public funds.</p>
        <p>If one keeps his ears to the ground, however, he will hear of plans for added Federal outlays, likewise for unnecessary projects and programs. One such, w'hich came to light over the week-end, is to create a so-called peace corps here at home to supplement the sending of thousands of young people to the far comers of the earth to show under-privileged and indifferent people something of what Americans are like and how they live. We have never been sold on that idea, and do not think It is at all worth the cost. But the liberals in the Kennedy administration dreamed up the plan and put It through Congress.</p>
        <p>Americans will never have any relief from high taxes and spending until there is a grassroots uprising against both. That thought should be driven home to congressmen in no uncertain manner before they return to Washington to January.</p>
        <p>He gave his name to nicotine.</p>
        <p>Snuff comes in two forms-dry and finely powdered-known in the trade as scotch and moist, which is coarse cut.</p>
        <p>There are some 60 brands, flavored with licorice, clove, cinnamon, wintergreen and other flavoring ingredients. Each manufactmer guards his secret formula as carefully as do the makers of fine whiskies or Coca-Cola,</p>
        <p>So far no one has thought of coming up with a whiskey-or cola-flavored snuff, thus combining the various markets.</p>
        <p>Why would anyone want to take snuff? There are several reasons. You dont have to light it, filter it or puff it and it leaves the hands free to work. Second, it is inexpensive. A weekly supply of three ounces costs about 36 cents.</p>
        <p>Many of its fans also claim snuff helps clear their sinuses, settle their stomachs and relax their nerves. And, finally snuff doesn't start forest fires or cause explosions in chemical factories.</p>
        <p>Ooinions</p>
        <p>Getting old is merely reaching the point where you feel your corns more than your oats.  Belton (Texas) Journal.</p>
        <p>Former President Eisenhower advises businessmen to get into politicstwo terms in the White House convinced him it is the thing to do. Memphis Press-Scimitar.</p>
        <p>Fallout shelters arent so new. Our grandfather had a snuggery in the fai' corner of the attic. He used it whenever he and grandma had a fallout.  Hutchinson (Kan.) News.</p>
        <p>Tlie effect of noises on the nerves of stenographers has been tested. How about testing the effect of gum-cracking on the boss?  Johnson City (Tenn.) Press-Chronicle.</p>
        <p>People grow up so fast that before you know it the cute little girl in the frilly dress is a woman in blue jean.s and tennis shoes,Cochran (Ga.) Journal.</p>
        <p>Every time sales begin to drop off, ^mebody launches a nev.' attack on Russell Brantleys book about Wake Forest. The Raleigh Times.</p>
        <p>^esser</p>
        <p>Of The</p>
        <p>iVils</p>
        <p>By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY</p>
        <p>Copyright. 1962, King Features Syndicate, Inc.</p>
        <p>Lento and Stalin met opposition by murder. Khrushchev has not been able to do that. Thus in the Omimunist Party, throughout the world, there are party adherents and non-Party adherents. Tlie non-party adherents are called Stalinists.</p>
        <p>Stalin brcxrfced no living Trotskyists to the politics of the Communist Universal State. A Trotskyist had to be killed. Even Trotsky himself was murdered In Mexico by order of Stalin. The Stalinists, however, have not been killed by Khrushchev. They live and plot. Molotov, Malenkov, Kaganovich, Zukov and others are not only alive but are active in Russian affairs. The Chinese-Albanian Axis is Stalinist and it operates independently of Khrushchev. Castro had the Impudence to threaten that he would go over to the Chtoese-Albanian Alliance and the matter was so serious that Mikoyan dared not leave Cuba to bury his wife.</p>
        <p>This Communist Party Congress will deal with the survival of Khrushchev. If he Is permitted to hold (XI to the reins of leadership, it Is likely that his antagonism to Mao Tze-tung will increase, he will come to an understanding with the United States and he will aid India.</p>
        <p>He may be kept to office, but his power will be diffused. A committee to the Kremlin will have the real power, while he will be the front. This will lead to confusion and possibly to civil war to some of the satellites.</p>
        <p>The third possibility Is that the Stalinists, backed by Mao Tze-tung, will be victorious. They will kick Khrushchev out, put a fourth generation perscwi in charge, end the quarrel with Mao Tze-tung, renew the quarrel with Tito, take a determined stand on Berlin and Cuba. This could lead to war.</p>
        <p>The current Communist Congress may turn out to be one of the most important In the history of the Soviet Universal State. The 20th Congress altered the program of Stalinism to anti-Stallnlsm. Further, that Congress established opposition to the cult of personality which, in effect, ended the period of individual dictatorship and established a broad participation in policy by the Presidium. The changes were not only structural but doctrinal and Khrushchevs concept of co-existence  that Is, a recognition of the temporary survival of capitalism and democracy in Western countries  was accepted as possible.</p>
        <p>Khrushchevs somewhat bourgeois attitude did not please Red China. Mao Tze-tung, an absolute Marxist and a protege of Stalin, regards Khrushchev as an upstart. It is to be remembered that the Chinese Communist Party, largely influenced by Karl Radek, was Trotzkyist until Stalto took the Chu-Mao alliance and made Mao the leader of the party. This . leadership was directly ordered from the Kremlin and all Chinese Communists with Trotzkyist leanings were expelled. So Mao owes everything to Stalin. In each Communist country, a strong Stalinist element remains. Albania is not the only Balkan country where Stalinism Is important. 'The Stalinists have taken advantage of the Cuban situation to accuse Khrushchev of abandoning  a  satellite.  In</p>
        <p>fact, so bitter has been the attack on Khrushchev, that he had to back-track on his promise to President Kennedy with regard to Cuba.</p>
        <p>The purpose  of  this  article</p>
        <p>Is not to evoke sympathy for Khrushchev. He is an able politician w^ho knovTi his own country and its politicians. He managed to survive all of Stalins purges and finally to have Stalins body removed from its tomb. What greater triumph can a Communist have!</p>
        <p>My purpose  rather is  to  attempt to state  the  facts  of  the</p>
        <p>situation as I see them and as they are now developing. From the standpoint of the United States. International Communism Is our enemy and hopes to destroy our way of life. Manv techniques are being used against us, some of which could bring war; others could Impoverish us.</p>
        <p>But this much seem.s to be clear: among the various Communist leaders now on the scene, the least oblectlonable, (Continued on Page 6)</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>A Flow Of Businessmens Books</p>
        <p>By EARL L.DOUGLASS MIXTURE OF GOOD AND EVIL</p>
        <p>Youthful violence sqopears to be one of the outstanding and alarming characteristics of contemporary life. The average age ol criminals has dropped irom the late twenties to the early twenties and. late teens. More people are engaged to crime today than ever before. Their number is Increasing six times as last as the population. We pick up the newspaper to read of mere youngsters who murder to order to see what it feels like to kill somebody. Attacks are made on elderly women. Young knife-wielding boys, to the congested centers of a number of cities, roam to packs flying at (xie anothers throats.</p>
        <p>Yet strangely enough churches are crowded today as they</p>
        <p>Teachers to all varieties of schools feel the necessity of impressing upon pupils the value of moral standards. There are certain movements among young people today revealing a deep religious faith and commitment to high Ideals which has probably never been surpassed in the whole of our nations history. Social morality is higher today than it has ever been: individual morality is lower.</p>
        <p>Why this inexplicable and indescribable Jumble of good and evil with the evil at the present time considerably ahead to the race?</p>
        <p>This is a time for prayer, for solemn consideration, for quick and purposeful actl(Hi. There will be no peace In the land or In the hearts of individuals unless we can do a right about</p>
        <p>have not been In a generation, face and do it quickly.</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER</p>
        <p>The businessmans wife need have no trouble In finding a Christmas present for him this year, if he reads. The holiday tide of books for businessmen is at a peak. It Is. incidentally, bringing In some strange driftwood, but more of that anon.</p>
        <p>There are many classes: Inspirational books, think books. flnariClal books, muckraking books dealing with operations. Lets look at some of the new operational, bread - and- cutter, books in the holiday stalls: Manual for the President of a Growing Company, by David M. Thrston, engineer and business executive iPrentlce-Hall. 426 pages, $20). An Impressive work covering almost every phase of the executive field. </p>
        <p>MORE MOREMORE</p>
        <p>How to Select and Develop Leaders, by Jack W. Taylor, director of mai)||ement development, Packing Corp. of Ameri</p>
        <p>ca, (McGraw-Hill, 257 pages, $6.50). A veteran to the field offers a deep-dlsh program. HOW TO RETAIL</p>
        <p>The Retail Revolution, (Fairchild, 105 pages, paper. $1,50). A series of lectures for the New York Society of Security Analysts, on changing aspects of modem retailing.</p>
        <p>How to Sell Domestics and Linens, by Albert R. Levine. (Fairchild, 48 pages, $2.75). A merchandising editor offers salespeople basic, day-to-day guidance.</p>
        <p>Hammonds Sales Planning Atlas, (Hammond, 159 pages plus map. paper, $3.95). Maps and statistics needed to lay out a national sales campaign.</p>
        <p>Fairchilds Financial Manual of Retail Stores, (Fairchild, 110 pages, plastic. $12). The 1962 ed-Uior, the 35th, of facts and figures on 260 publicly owned retailed outlet-s. A guide for manufacturers.</p>
        <p>The Vanishing Salesman, by</p>
        <p>E. B. Weiss, the noted advertising commentator. (McGraw-HUl, 282 pages, $6.95). The salesmans main function is no longer selling but servicing. He no longer woos the purchasing agent; he must engineer his product through tough buying committees.</p>
        <p>IDEAS GALORE</p>
        <p>1010 Tested Ideas That Move Merchandise, by E. B. Weiss (above) and Richard E. Weiss, head of a merchandising idea service. (McGraw - Hill, 322 pages. $6.95). Just what the title Indicates.</p>
        <p>Executive Decision Making in Business and Government, by Marion B. Folsom, former Secretary of Health. Education, and Welfare, (McGraw-Hill. 138 pages, $4.95). How business executives can conduct themselves, and what they can leam from government.</p>
        <p>The Personnel Man and His Job, by almost 50 contributors, (American Management</p>
        <p>Assn., 448 pages, $9). A mine of opinions and lots of information.</p>
        <p>Personnel Management and Industrial Relations, by Dale Yoder, (Prentice-Hall. 6C7 pages, $10.60). The fifih edition of a basic text.</p>
        <p>SHORT AND SIGNIFICANT BUSINESS NEWS ITEMS The Department of Labor spent money on many studies to find what any passer-by could have told it: that men usually get paid more than women for the same job. . .Fashions in shower curtains for spring will reflect Parisian and Italian styles, says Noel Levine, Hygiene Industries executive. , . .Of 20.-000 economists to the United States last year, half were employed by educational Institutions, a third by govemrhent and the rest by banks and industry . . .Farm consolidation Is continuing, reports William H. Scofield. Agriculture Department researcher.  ^</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0005" />
        <p>Secrecy Mi</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. CWednesday, November 21, 19628</p>
        <p>Special Mission To Survey Indias Needs..</p>
        <p>Kennedy is sending a high powered special mission to New Delhi today to survey Indias military needs in the conflict with Red Ciiina and recommended a US. assistance program.</p>
        <p>wrmanently the level of his military strength.</p>
        <p>The surprise maneuver by the Chinese Reds, however, threw an element of uncertainty into the situation. As Kennedy told a news</p>
        <p>Li spite of a sudden Chinese I conference Tuesday night PC r^nme Minister Nehru to re-1 assessment of the move as a</p>
        <p>He said there is no present Indication that U.S. troops will be sent to India.</p>
        <p>Kennedy said he was sending a team headed by Assistant Secretary of State W. Averell Harrl-man to New Delhi in order to better assess Indian needs </p>
        <p>Other members of the survey team include: Assistant Secretary</p>
        <p>of Defense Paul H. Nitze. who</p>
        <p>heads international security affairs in the Defense Department; Gen. Paul D. Adams, chief of the .S. Strike Command, which specializes in moving fully equipped</p>
        <p>troop units by air over l&amp;lt;mg distances; Carl Kaysen, deputy assistant to Kennedy; Roger HUls-man, State Department intelli</p>
        <p>gence chief, and James P. Grant, deputy assistant secretary of state for South Asia and the Middle East.</p>
        <p>Harriman heads the State Departments Far Eastern section. A former ambassador and onetime governor of New York, he is a veteran of many- forei^ assignments and has been inUmate-, ly Involved in developing resist-J ance to Communist pressures in Southeast Asia.</p>
        <p>Harriman declined to discuss the present state of the Chlnese-Indian crisis, saying that the situation is changhig every hour.</p>
        <p>Harriman recalled that just 21 years ago, near the outset o. World War n. President Franklin D. Roosevelt sent him wi a somewhat similar mission to Moscow to study problems of U.S. assistance to the Soviet Union against Nazi Germany.</p>
        <p>In the Chinese-Indian border war which began a mrath ago the United States has already sup-</p>
        <p>of small arms, COTnmunlcations</p>
        <p>equipment and other materiel to the Indian forces in an effort to help Nehru stem the tide of Communist advance in the Himalayan Mountains.</p>
        <p>Informants said that urgent new Indian requests for additional equipment have come in almost daUy.</p>
        <p>A far more serious problfem than that Involved in technical and financial arrangements concerns Indias relaUons with Pakistan, which is a U.S. ally.</p>
        <p>In providing military assistance to India, President Ken-</p>
        <p>By FRED S. HOFFMAN WASHINGTON (AP) - The nations news organizations were free today of voluntary restrictions they accepted on reporting military movements and similar news during the Cuban crisis.</p>
        <p>But Defense Department officials and military personnel stiU were under strict orders to re-</p>
        <p>Milk Price Hike Termed 'Hasty'</p>
        <p>nedy said, we are mindful of our alliance with Pakistan. All of our aid to India is for the purpose of defeating Chinese Communist subversion. Chinese Incursions Into the subcontinent are a threat to Pakistan as well as India, and both have a commoi interest In opposing it.</p>
        <p>College Holidays Through Nov. 25</p>
        <p>plied more than $5 mUlirai worth</p>
        <p>Wonjan To Keep Count Of Dogs</p>
        <p>i-iAIxiJiNG</p>
        <p>-Tanks of First  . ,</p>
        <p>Pla Not  Hutchlmon'  id  neir'  pm Pieri:</p>
        <p>Fla., Nov. 10. Some 1,500 soldiers are takmg part in mock maneuvers, first since Cuban crisis.</p>
        <p> -  (AP  Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Yiddish Sons Of Erin In</p>
        <p>Formal Vharter*Meeting</p>
        <p>By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Teievision-Radio Writer new YORK (AP)-The principal sketch on last Saturdays Jackie Gleason Show was an interesting example of the way today s flesperate search for comedy material can lead writers into strange pastures.</p>
        <p>^ It was a spoof, of all things, of Alcoholics Anonymous, an or-gpization dedicated to helping victims of what today is widely believed to be a disease.</p>
        <p>The skit used the phraseology generally associated with compulsive drinking, described the sym-tomsmerely switching the problem from over-drinking to overeating.</p>
        <p>The treatment was not only unfunny, but tasteless and gratuitous. Sufferers from compulsive drinking or eating must have been dismayed by the spectacle. It was part of a program the networkCBShad labeled satiric comedy. It was neither.</p>
        <p>According to Webster, satire Is the use of ridicule, sarcasm etc., to attack vices, follies, etc. The Gleason sketch surely ridiculed and was sarcastic but the purpose was a build-up to a sorry gag: both victims sneaking back to the kitchen to gorge themselves.</p>
        <p>Generally, Gleasons program was like most television programs W'hich use a tag of satire, and then go in for a long series of slap-stick comedy sketches, Imitations of Frank Sinatra or President Kennedy, and  almost inevitably  a lavish burlesque of television Itself: Its commercials and the popular doctor. Western and private eyes shows.</p>
        <p>One of Gleasons allegedly satiric sketches was just a gag: a space ship landing in a park. A</p>
        <p>midget in a space suit disembarks, buys a hot dog from a vendor, returns to the ship and takes off. Two black-outs boobed television commercialsa housewife in a room full of suds because she used the wrong washday detergent, ad the midget, again, reenacting with an outsize man a commercial (rf a couple of seasons back advertising a brand of paper napkins.</p>
        <p>But where real satire is sharp and purposeful, television is bland and broad, dedicated to evoking a chuckle rather than a small wound.</p>
        <p>Recommended holiday viewing:</p>
        <p>Tonight: Young Peoples Concert, CBS, 7:30-8:30 (EST)Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra demonstrate the acoustifcs of New Yorks Philharmonic HaU.</p>
        <p>Thursday:  Thanksgiving  Day</p>
        <p>Parades, CBS and NBC, 10 a.m.-12 N; Thanksgiving Day special, NBC, 5:30-6:30 p.m.Pat Boone. Patti Page and Phil Harris in holiday variety show; Telephone Hour, NBC 10-11Carl Sandburg, John Raitt, Mahalia Jackson, in a music and poetry hour.</p>
        <p>YORKTOWN HEIGHTS, N.Y. (AP)The Yorktown Town Board appointed a woman Tuesday night to serve as the townships dog enumerator. Her ojb will be tc count the townships dogs, at a salary of 30 cents per canine head head.</p>
        <p>The new appointees application was the only one received by the board. Her name Is Anne Barker.</p>
        <p>Thanksgiving holidays at East Carolina College are scheduled from 5 pm. Tuesday through Sunday, Nov. 25.</p>
        <p>Practically all students will spend the five-day vacation visiting at home or elsewhere.</p>
        <p>All cafeterias, dormitories for | be women and Jones and Aycock'the</p>
        <p>Halls for men will be closed. New Dormitory, residence hall for men, will be open.</p>
        <p>Administrative and business offices at the college will close for Thanksgiving Day and Friday of JJiis week.</p>
        <p>Classes will be resumed Monday, Nov. 26, and will continue through December 8, when final examinations for the fall quarter will begin.</p>
        <p>Christmas holidays are scheduled for Dec. 12-Jan. i. Registration for the winter quarter will be held Wednesday, Jan. 2.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  The State Milk Commission was told 'Tuesday it acted hastily in opening the way for increases in the prices dairymen receive for milk.</p>
        <p>The result, said Erick Morgan of Lexington, likely will be an increase of half a cent a quart, or one-cent per gaUon, in the prices consumers pay for milk.</p>
        <p>Morgan appeared as chairman of the milk committee of the North Carolina Dairy Products Association. He said distributors agreed at a meeting Monday that any increase in prices paid to producers, over the level prevailing in October, would have to be pa^d on to the consumer.</p>
        <p>Fred Calhoun, operator of a cost-accounting service for independent dairies, said it is cheap-fr to import milk from Wisconsin than to pay the $6.55 per 100 pounds to Tar Heel producers, as required by the milk commission. He said the agency should talking about a decrease in price paid the producer,</p>
        <p>rather than a raise.</p>
        <p>The commission rejected the suggestion that it reconsider recent changes which had the effect of giving a price increase to milk producers, effective Nov. 1. The principal change was to reduce the required butterfat content for class one milk from 4 to 3.6 per cent.</p>
        <p>fraln from talking with reporters about a wide range of subjects considered vital to natiraial security.</p>
        <p>President Kennedy announced at his news conference Tuesday night that his administration was , lifting 12 restrictive Guidelines which the White House suggested to the nations news media at a time when the crisis over missiles in Cuba was rushing toward a peak.</p>
        <p>These restrlcUons covered such matters as details on numbers or movements of U.S. forces, any discussi(xi of plans for use of those forces, location of aircraft, intelligence estimates of enemy plans or capabiliUes and the like.</p>
        <p>Kennedy said I have no apologies for keeping secret the developments leading up to the imposition of the arms blockade developments which Included Increased aerial surveillance to confirm the presence of nuclear missiles in Cuba threatening the United States.</p>
        <p>He ^d it might have been a disaster if this news had dribbled out when we were unsure of the extent of the Soviet budup in Cuba, and when we were unsure of our response, and when we had not consulted with any of our allies.</p>
        <p>During the week of mounting tension, before Soviet Premier Khrushchev agreed to pull out the missiles, we attempted to have</p>
        <p>Northampton County farmers planted 30,465 acres of peanuts in 1961 to rank as the top peanut producing county in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>the government speak with one voice, the President said.</p>
        <p>This remark recalled a statement by Assistant Secretary of Defense Arthur Sylvester on Oct. 30 that the Kennedy administration used news of government actions in the crisis as part of the weaponry In the drive to force out the missiles.</p>
        <p>Kennedy acknowledged there were obvious restraints on newspapermen, such as denial of permission for them to go to the Guantanamo naval base in Cuba. The base since has been opened to newsmen.</p>
        <p>Since Khrushchev agreed to withdraw his missiles, Kennej^ said, we have tried, or at least Intend to attempt to lift any restraints in the news.</p>
        <p>Kennedy said that if any of the procedures designed to safeguard Intelligence Information are be</p>
        <p>ing used in a way inimical to the f^ flow of news, then we would change those procedures.</p>
        <p>After the President spoke, newsmen were told by a Pentagon spokesman that there has been no change yet in our own guidelines, internally.</p>
        <p>He referred to a 12-point security guidance Issued to defense personnel at the time the voluntary guidelines were given to news media. The 12 points were Identical In subject matter.</p>
        <p>Another bone of contention was a memorandum issued by Sylvester on Oct. 27 requiring officials to report the substance of their talks with newsmen and to have parties sit in as monitors.</p>
        <p>The State Department followed up with a similar edict and the White House has applied the policy oti an Informal baiss.</p>
        <p>Kennedy said I have not been convinced yet that the Sylvester memo has restricted the flow of essential news from the Pentagon. If it does, we will change it, the President said.</p>
        <p>HHRT</p>
        <p>diseovered what millions ready know. You cant buy better than Goody's. Yet Goociy^ actually cost less.</p>
        <p>POWDERS</p>
        <p>12 POWDERS 2S</p>
        <p>G)medy Writers Moved Into A Tasteless Pasture</p>
        <p>Injury</p>
        <p>Caused A Perpetual Cold</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP)-Kathleet Swln-chatt hasnt stopped sniffling since she was injured in a car accident three years ago. Because she may never get rid of her perpetual cold the high court has awarded her 1,250 pounds$3,500 damages.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Swinchatt broke her cheekbone and injured her nose while riding home from work with William Frost, who was ordered to pay the damages. The car ran out of control and crashed.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Swinchatt complained: It doesnt matter whether its gloriously hot or bitterly cold. I always have a cold. It costs me a fortune in paper handkerchiefs.</p>
        <p>Marlow____</p>
        <p>(Continued from page four) agement or control of the news Is censorship described by a sweeter term. There Is no doubt It restricts the peoples right to know.</p>
        <p>The Washington Star called the meaning of Sylvesters words truly sinister.</p>
        <p>2. The Defense Department issued a directive which said: Unless a public InformaUmi officer of the department sits ta on an interview of a department official by a reporter, that official must report to Sylvesters office the same day on the substance of the conversatlra.</p>
        <p>3. The State Department required Its officials to report the general subject of any talks they have with reporters.</p>
        <p>The net effect, in both cases, could be expected to make officials who previously might have been w'illing to talk with newsmen a good deal more cau-</p>
        <p>T-</p>
        <p>By JUNIUS GRIFFIN</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  Shamrocks are green, stars of David are blue. But, sure, you can be Irish and Jewish too.</p>
        <p>Thirty Jews who were bom in Ireland proved that Tuesday night by organizing and holding a charter meeting of a group they call the Loyal League of Yiddish Sons of Erin.</p>
        <p>The Irlsh-Jews or Jewish-Irish said they are dedicated to banding together in a fraternal clan those persons who wish to observe and celebrate both the traditions of their faith and the land of their birth.</p>
        <p>One question raised at the charter meeting was: Shall we solemnly and sincerely request that the St. Patricks Day parade committee grant the Loyal League of Yiddish Sons of Erin permission to march in the grand parade up Fifth Avenue next March? Another proposltl(xi seriously debated in soft Irish brogues: Shall we charter a plane for a trip back to our native land of soft mists and sweet winds, a 19-day tour that will take us on to Israel too?</p>
        <p>The Loyal League of Yiddish Sons of rln already has an official song called, Erin Go Bragh and Shalom.</p>
        <p>The chorus goes:</p>
        <p>Erin go bragh and shalom, Ireland for ever and peace.</p>
        <p>Erin go bragh and shalom,</p>
        <p>May goodwill and brotherhood increase.</p>
        <p>Erin go bragh and shalom, Always means good news.</p>
        <p>Erin go bragh and shalom.</p>
        <p>Here comes the Irish and the Jews.</p>
        <p>(Erin go bragh  Ireland forever in Gaelic. Shalom a Hebrew greeting meaning either Hello or Goodbye.)</p>
        <p>The membership card of the organization shows a harp superim posed on a star of David.</p>
        <p>Why did the Irish Jews organize?</p>
        <p>Larry Lewis, a Brooklyn heat ing engineer who once played soccer for the Talmud Torah School in Irelands County Ar magh, answered;</p>
        <p>Well you know the Irish are very clannish and we like to get together and we have fun being with other Irishmen.</p>
        <p>The group elected Michael Mann, the AFL-CIOs regional di rector for New York-New Jersey, came here from Dublin 25 years ago.</p>
        <p>The leagues first vice president is attorney, Lewis John Goldberg He came here from Cork City, County Cork, Ireland, two weeks ago.</p>
        <p>Sokolsky____</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) from the American standpoint, la Khrushchev. We might get, at the head of world Communism, Mao Tze-tung, a bigoted Stalinist to whom human life is no more sacred than an ants life Is to us. We might get Suzlov or Kozlov, or some per-s&amp;lt;m as yet unknown to us who was brought up on the milk of hatred for our country, just as Castro was reared by a Spanish father who was a soldier In the Spanish-Amerlcan War and never forgot the defeat.</p>
        <p>Lairds</p>
        <p>Apple</p>
        <p>Brandy</p>
        <p>HRnt</p>
        <p>$025</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Distilled Straight Apple Brandy, 80 Proof Laird &amp;amp; Co., ^obeyville, N.</p>
        <p>YOU GET PLUS VALUES-hard -to-measure extrasfrom newspaper adver</p>
        <p>tising. For example-ACCEPTABILITY. For instance, a very recent survey,</p>
        <p>made by Audits and Surveys for the newspaper industry, revealed that</p>
        <p>of the men and 84% of the women who read a daily newspaper say, I like to^</p>
        <p>look at ads even when I do not plan to buy anything. A plus value like this</p>
        <p>is hard to measure, but it adds up to a big difference. Thats why advertisers</p>
        <p>last year spent more money in newspapers than in radio, television, magazines, and outdoor combined!*</p>
        <p>EVERY DAY... ALMOST ALL YOUR CUSTOMERS READ A DAILY NEWSPAPEfl</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Pitt County's Home</p>
        <p>Newspaper</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0006" />
        <p>6The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Wednesday, November 21, 1962</p>
        <p>r * k.; fur***  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>WHAT HAS HAPPENED Col. Hugh North, U. S. Army tnttligeoce, and ally i a mission to Burma. Capt. PUanung Pokh of the Inwerial Troop in Bangkok. Thailand, had one more complicaticn added to their as-fligninent when a WKxnan who kicntlfled herself as Mme. Bo Lln-Un tdephoned North at his hotel in Raxigoon with an invitatimi. The Colonel, awaiting official</p>
        <p>either giving the Chinese Commies a* go at her or offending Bunna.</p>
        <p>Hugh's Commanding General nodded down the table at the</p>
        <p>clearance for a trip into the flood-beset Burmese interior to recover a fallen U. S. space capsule, told his csiller he was too busy. She flew into a rage and threatened him so loudly that Pokh overheard.</p>
        <p>Oh. well, wwit make much difference, we already got almost everybody else in the act. We got American moon shoots, airplanes crashed &amp;lt;i purpose, Chinese Communists, and now we got beautiful Thakln lady using telephone to threaten us dead, was the Thai Captain's comment.</p>
        <p>CHAPTER S</p>
        <p>The Commanding General oi G-I flew to Taipei within hours, almost minutes, of the time Colonel Hugh North's report landed on his desk. With the Intelligence General came several other high-ranking gentlemen. Army, Navy, Air Force and dvian, for an emergency session that would have made the world blink if it had known about It.</p>
        <p>General with the cigar. Already set up, isnt it? he asked quietly.</p>
        <p>The thick-set man scowled, drummed his thick fingers &amp;lt; the tabletop. Dammit, it ought to be an Air Force job, he complained. We could put some choppers in there and scoop that thing right out frwn under their noses before they knew it.</p>
        <p>You couldnt get a helicopter within a hundred miles of there, another man said quietly. Worst monsoon in twenty years.</p>
        <p>Rll clear. the cigar-smoker grumbled. Bound to.</p>
        <p>He was overruled by the t&amp;lt;&amp;gt;-ranking man. Cant afford to take that chance. Well execute One-Ought-Six, General. Nobody else sp&amp;lt;^ as the ranking man raised the one telephone and said: Plan One-Ought-SIx. Execute.</p>
        <p>What the men who met around that table in the underground bunker in Taipei had to do was to arrange some situation whereby Voyageur I could be recovered by the United States without</p>
        <p>startled: he had expe&amp;lt;^ this</p>
        <p>misskm to be taken over by the Air Force or NASA, not an Army man.</p>
        <p>Yes. Colonel. hia own 0-2</p>
        <p>Investment Dollar Sought At Home And Abroad, Too</p>
        <p>By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)Americans</p>
        <p>ful, like fast-growing California, still hit the money-markets regularly. both to build state facilities and to get new capital for growing</p>
        <p>Gener had called down the ta-jf weU as foreigners axe c^pet- jno m g ble. Routine check and search!hxg today for the Yankee invest-</p>
        <p>for possible surviving, (rf whichdollar, theres be none, of course. Youre; Perhaps the</p>
        <p>to the space age.</p>
        <p>The 49th state also Is seeking</p>
        <p>weU known in the Southet Aei market of .11 JiSn'.wTmu r!irS,eS"SS!ci!S2 area:  theBurmese  will  think  it  which  long-term  investment  funds  ovemmeni  omciais  ana  dus</p>
        <p>natural that youre given the mission.</p>
        <p>Butbut what am I to bring out? North had asked.</p>
        <p>Not a three-hundred-and-fif-teen-pound nose cone, certadnly, the General with the cigar had said with a grim chuckle. No, Colonel North, all you have to do is find and destroy a little box about so big. His blunt hands measured a one-foot square. Just destroy that box. Youll be instructed on how this can be done with just a twist of the wrist, as I understand it. Just destroy that box. Colonel.</p>
        <p>And you wont be working entirely alone. The man who spoke was a quiet-voiced individual in civilian clothes whwn North recognized as a Counter-intelligence chief. Youll have General Saw-nu of the Burmese Army leading your search party. You worked with him in the Chlna-Burma-In-dla Theater.</p>
        <p>Barely had this informatlim</p>
        <p>are sought. It is beset by clamor ing groups seeking the wherewithal to develop the frontiers of which the world still has a huge supply.</p>
        <p>There are a lot more fnmtiers than there are dollars.</p>
        <p>This clamor Is far from restricted to the new nationsthe Industrially unde-devel&amp;lt;)ed of which so much neard.</p>
        <p>Many Americ? "  s and communities have c.  in  recent</p>
        <p>years for the funds needed to turn once agricultural economies into industrial Complexes. The pitches have ranged from new markets, tax ccmcessions, cheaper labor, climate, superior resources.</p>
        <p>Some have been remai^ably successful. Some localities havent been able to sell their stories to the bankers and other investment sourcesperhaps as much as anything because there just wasnt enough money to go around.</p>
        <p>And many of the most success-</p>
        <p>Iness arc in town to tout the resources just waiting for the Midas touch of investment funds.</p>
        <p>And one of the spokesmen stresses that our own Alaska is one of the most underdeveloped lands in the world.</p>
        <p>Just now Alaska is out to interest New York bankers and other investment fund sources in a b&amp;lt;Mid issuean $18-million program for the newly formed Alaska State Development Corp.</p>
        <p>And its pitch goes far beyond just the underdeveloped resources of the northernmost state. Alas</p>
        <p>kans have their eyes focused far on the horizon, the role they see their state playing in developing the potentials of all the lands bordering on the Pacific.</p>
        <p>Some see a chance that the Pacific lands, from Alaska to Australia, some day might develop a trading bloc like the spectacular Common Market in Western Europe.</p>
        <p>For the shorter term theyd like to develop Alaskas resources. The area once known primarily for its gold, now boasts a big salmon and king crab industry,- a growing oil and gas industry. It says its iron ore deposits could be developed, especially for the Japanese steel mills. Its forests offer huge supplies of timber and pulp.</p>
        <p>And even closer at hand, enthusiasts say, is the opportunity to turn Alaska into a tourists paradisewell, in summer anyway.</p>
        <p>violating Burmese neutrality in the</p>
        <p>cold war. This was what Plans been relayed to North than the</p>
        <p>Nine-Nine and One-Ought-Six proposed to do: the first located the</p>
        <p>They group^  nose cone exactly, surrounded by</p>
        <p>encc ttle to an im^ig^tHind the ancient ruins she had uncov-room that  Invio^ m  ^ |^gp ^rash, and the sec-</p>
        <p>guards and  rad slammed a giant B-57 bomb-</p>
        <p>any place and li^ed to the G-2 g ^ on top of the indestrucU-1 Colonel recite what Pila-oung P(^b had hdd him.</p>
        <p>A telephone call was made by the top-ranking persraage from a sealed circuit guarded against a tap by (teviccs that made it foolproof to a po^ a thousand miles away Just one phone call, with the caller saying: Plan Nine-Nine. Execute. and hanging up.</p>
        <p>The heavy-set General opposite</p>
        <p>ble nose cone in a pillar of flame.</p>
        <p>Hugh hoped he did not gime at this last terse explanatira but his expressira brought a slightly fuller explanation from Uie cigar-smoking General. No crew and electrraically guided, of course  the officer said laconically. The aircrafts equipped with a gizmo that propels it full power</p>
        <p>--------- j.to earth at the radioactive waves</p>
        <p>Hugh had Just sta^ s^d up by the cone-and that cigar when a courier ln*ought to g^^g.g hottern heU and will the photograph.  stay that way for forty-eight hours.</p>
        <p>It V AS at least six feet square and L the cigar-sm(dng General unrolled it and fastened its sides to the conference table by its attached tapes, Hugh lo(dmd down</p>
        <p>craft, he said, just to give you an excuse to go in there. Me, sir? Hugh had been</p>
        <p>ra a vast iranorama of land and streams and mountains and black dots clustered to what must be towns. Near the right center of the great phoU*raph had been slashed a white arrow, pointing to a speck that could have been anything or nothing.</p>
        <p>The Mian opposite Hugh grunted past his cigar and a lieutenant colonel North had not noticed before pushed a contraption of lenses over the map, centered wij the arrow.</p>
        <p>The craferencc room lights were  snapped off and the strange to-; stniment blazed with its own j student light, so brightly that no mra lo. Glossy fabric</p>
        <p>report reached the underground council chamber that everything* had been run off according to; plan. A B-57 had crashed on a flight from Karachi to Bangkok, presumably wrecked in the storm that was howling over North Burma.</p>
        <p>A query went off to Rangora and within a remarkably short time the Burmese government agreed to allow an American officer, rae Colrael Hugh North, and his aide to accompany a Burmese Army search party that would be under the command of General Sawnu which would hunt lor the missing aircraft.</p>
        <p>Better take that Thai captain who tipped us off with you as interpreter, Norths General had added.</p>
        <p>Yes, sir, the G-2 Colrael</p>
        <p>at least. Heaven help anyone who fools with that thing before the times up. He sighed past his said.</p>
        <p>Irag-dead cigar. For a hunk of; That about wraps it up, radioactive tin were blowing then, the top-ranking man had eight million bucks worth of air-1 said. No need to tell you how</p>
        <p>important it is we get to that fox first. Colonel. Good luck.</p>
        <p>(To Be Continued Tomorrow)</p>
        <p>Upon a Mattress, the New York production of which brought fame to the popular comedienne Carol Burnett. Casting is now in progress, and rehearsals will begin in the near future.</p>
        <p>Crossword Puzzle</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1. Eccentric pieces 5. Ata distance 0. Military</p>
        <p> t</p>
        <p>could look directly at it. Instead, all eyes swung toward the screen that somebody had set up at thei end of the room and Hugh North saw Voyageur I, at least fouTj feet long and with every crumpl-i ed deta outlined, lying ra a bed I of crushed ferns and what looked; like old broken masonry.  1</p>
        <p>Thats her. the General with the cigar grunted. Looks like, .he hit sraie old building when' she landed. Colonel, give usi more background please.  i</p>
        <p>An adjustment was made andi while the projected picture of Rubberneck shrank, the men !n the underfund rorao now could see more of its surroundings. It speared to be a reined temple of some kind, overgrown by the rapacious jungle, possibly brought to light again after all these ages by this strange visitor from the skies.  '</p>
        <p>Enough? the man with the cigar asked and nobody demurred. The projectors dazzling light winked out, the picture disappeared, the overhead lamps blazed again.</p>
        <p>Well, we know where she Is. one of the civilians said heavy., Now weve got to find a way ., to get her out of there without</p>
        <p>All Was Soggy Except Money</p>
        <p>DANVILLE, Va. (AP) - Customers In Danvilles Southern, Sank of Cmnmerce had to use, umbrellas to transact business business Tuesday.  I</p>
        <p>Workers were taking a valve off' a fouth-floor water supply pipe when a second valve, unable to. stand the Increased water pressure, pwpcd.  I</p>
        <p>Water gushed out and dripped; Into lower floors. It was a foot deep to the board meeting room In the basement.</p>
        <p>No soggy money, however. Em-| aloyes managed to cover or put ^-fil the bills in vaults.</p>
        <p>12. Gold in heraldry</p>
        <p>13. Half score 15. Assemblage</p>
        <p>of species 17. Youth 19. Chum</p>
        <p>21. Female saint: abbr.</p>
        <p>22. Elliptical 24. Armed band 27. Was</p>
        <p>agitated</p>
        <p>29. Faucet</p>
        <p>30. ItaL river</p>
        <p>32. Stannum symbol</p>
        <p>33. Nothing</p>
        <p>35. Native of Havana</p>
        <p>37. Dialect</p>
        <p>39. Deal out sparingly</p>
        <p>40.Tii^nsit coach</p>
        <p>42. Soft mass</p>
        <p>44. Capuchin monkey</p>
        <p>45. Female bears: Lat</p>
        <p>48. Indefinite</p>
        <p>50. TraflBc Director: abbr,</p>
        <p>51. Gloomy</p>
        <p>53. Asiatic</p>
        <p>p&amp;gt;eninsula</p>
        <p>55. Different</p>
        <p>56. Gr. underground</p>
        <p>.DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Desert train</p>
        <p>2. Business getter</p>
        <p>p</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>C</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <p>Oi</p>
        <p>!</p>
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        <p>T</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>P</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>L</p>
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        <p>m</p>
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        <p>DE</p>
        <p>E H</p>
        <p>s</p>
        <p>RlE T E M P E D</p>
        <p>Pain Is Progress For Young Boy</p>
        <p>BOSTON (AP)Pain is progress and hope for a plucky young Sraierville boy.</p>
        <p>The terrible pains that 13-year-old Everett Knowles Jr. sometimes feels in his right arm and fingers indicate to doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital that sdl is going well to the final and crucial chapter of a battle to make medical history.</p>
        <p>Last May 23, the red-haired youngsters arm was restored to his body after it was severed by a freight train.</p>
        <p>Doctors who have performed a series of operations say they know of no other case where a severed limb has been restored to use with feel and motion.</p>
        <p>In an operation Sept. 11, surgeons recranected numerous nerve fibres,</p>
        <p>' Dr. Ronald Malt said if thei</p>
        <p>ment, subject to amputation. </p>
        <p>Malt added it would be at least Mosca is the Italian name for months before a full assessment I Moscow, and the card went off of the nerve operation could be to the Soviet capital. The Moscow</p>
        <p>I post office sent it back.</p>
        <p>Choosing Cast For Musical Production</p>
        <p>East Carolina Colleges annual and have attracted capacity au-musical for 1962 will be Once diences to the McGinnis audit</p>
        <p>orium for the last few years.</p>
        <p>Gene Strassler of the School of Music, will act as music director; Edgar Loessin. Director of the East Carolina Playhouse, as drama director; and John</p>
        <p>Sponsored by the East Caro-';^eden. Technical Director of</p>
        <p>lina Student Government Association with the cooperation of the School of Music and the East Carolina Playhouse, the musical comedy will be presented in four performances Feb. 2. 3, 4. 5.</p>
        <p>Once Upon a Mattress is the thirteenth in a series of annual musical productions which have become increasingly popular in Eastern North Carolina</p>
        <p>Postcard Took The Long Way</p>
        <p>the Playhouse, as scene designer and technical director.</p>
        <p>Music for Once Upon a Mattress is by Mary Rodgers, daughter of Richard Rodgers, composer of South Pacific, The King and I, and other notable successes. Jay Thompson, Dean Puller and Maurice Barer are the librettists; and Barer Is the l3rricist.</p>
        <p>The Saturday Review described the musical as Pleasant</p>
        <p>Television Log</p>
        <p>WlTNCh.7</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00M Squad 7:80^The Virginian, NBO 9:00Perry Como, NBC 10:00Eleventh Hour, NBC 11:00Late Weathre 11:06Late News and SporU 11:16Tonight, NBC THURSDAY</p>
        <p>6:00Aspect, NBC 6:30Continental  Classroom,</p>
        <p>NBC</p>
        <p>7:00Today, NBO 7:25Tarheel Morning New 7:30Today, NBC 8:25Tarheel Morning -iews 8:30Today, NBC 9:00Jane Wyman Thow, ABC 9:30Tennessee Ernie Ford, ABC</p>
        <p>10:00Say When, NBC 10:25NBC Morning News, NBC 10:30Play Your Hunch, NBC 11:00Price Is Right, NBC 11:30Concentration, NBC 12:00Your Rirst Impression, NBC</p>
        <p>12:30Truth or Consequences, NBC</p>
        <p>12:56Noonday News, NBC 1:00Weather 1:05News 1:15Debbie Drake 1:30Queen for a Day, ABC 2:00Mery Griffin Show, iNxiv 2:56NBC Afternoon News, NBC</p>
        <p>3:00Loretta Young, NBO 3:30^Dr. Malone, NBC 4:00Make Room for Daddy, NBC</p>
        <p>4:30Here's Hollywood, NBC 4.:65NBC Afternoon News, NBC</p>
        <p>5:00Funny Page 6:00Channel 7 Reporter 6:10Weatherwlse 6:15Dragnet</p>
        <p>6:45Huntley-Brlnkley Report, NBC</p>
        <p>7:0(yPhil SUvers 7:30Bell Telephone Hour, NBC</p>
        <p>8:30Dr. Kildare, NBC 9:30Hazel, NBC 10:00Andy Williams Show, NBC</p>
        <p>WNCTCh. 9</p>
        <p>6:00-</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY -Quick Draw McOraw</p>
        <p>6:30Esso Reporter 6:40Weather 6:45News, CBS 7:00Arthur Smith 7:30Wagon Train, ABO 8:30My Three Sons, ABO 9:00Beverly Hillbillies, CBS 9:30Dick Van Dyke, CBS 10:00Circle Theatre, CBS 11:00Weather 11:05Carolina News 11:10News and sports 11:20Human Comedy THURSDAY 6;(K&amp;gt;_college of the Air 6:30Carolina Today 8:00Capt. Kangaroo, CBS 9:00Best of Groucho 9:30^Union Pacific 10:00Thanksgiving Parade, CBS</p>
        <p>12:00Green Bay @ Detroit, CBS</p>
        <p>2:30Football Kickoff, CBS 2:45Texas A &amp;amp; M vs. Texas, CBS</p>
        <p>5:45Scoreboard, CBS 6:00Yogi Bear 6:30Esso Reporter 6:40Weather 6:45News, CBS 7:00Highway Patrol 7:30Mr. Ed, CBS 8:00Perry Mason, CBS 9:00Ben Casey. ABC 10:00Gallant Men, ABC 11:00Weather 11:05Carolina News 11:10News</p>
        <p>11:15Magic Moments in Sports 11:20Lassie Come Home</p>
        <p>fun with the old fairy tale about'11:00Late Weather</p>
        <p>the princess who proved her royal lineage by being unable to sleep atop twenty soft mattresses because a tiny hard pea had been placed under the bottom one. Brooks Atkinson of the N. Y. Times called it a pleasant holiday and a show</p>
        <p>PARMA. Italy (AP) - It took two months and a trip to the Soviet Union for a postcard sent from here to reach a village only 1-full of good miisic.</p>
        <p>10 miles from Parma.  _  ...</p>
        <p>Participating</p>
        <p>The postcard was addressed to</p>
        <p>in the production w'ill be a cast of talented student singers, actors, and di.ncers and a full orchestra.</p>
        <p>11:05Late News &amp;amp; Sports 11:15^Tonight, NBC</p>
        <p>700 LAYMEN GATHERED</p>
        <p>MONTEAGLE, Term. (AP)  The Tennessee Episcopal Laymen's Conference which meets near here every fall calls itself the worlds largest gathering of laymen within the Anglican communion. Seven hundred attended this years session.</p>
        <p>Extortion Trial Set For Woman</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)  Mrs. Vera F. Switzer, 40, of Chicago, has been docketed for trial at the Dec. 3 term of Federal Court here ra a charge of extortion.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Switzer is accused of making an interstate telephone call threatening to maim the children of Burdette (Burt) F. Massen-gale, Greensboro band leader. A warrant was Issued here July 2 on complaint of Massengale, who employs Kenneth Switzer, the defendants estranged husband, as a part - time trumpet player. Mrs. Switzer is accused of threatening to maim Massengales three children unless he discharged her husband.</p>
        <p>FBI agents arrested Mrs. Switzer in a Chicago bar Oct. 15. She was brought here Sunday and placed in Guilford County jail in default of $1,(KX) bond.</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>U</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>Solution of Saturdays Puzzle</p>
        <p>Slow Start In Filming My Fair Lady^ Musical</p>
        <p>3. Encountered</p>
        <p>4. Pace</p>
        <p>5. Equally</p>
        <p>6. Fatigue</p>
        <p>7. Goddess of infatuation</p>
        <p>8. Wash lightly</p>
        <p>9. Regimental fiag</p>
        <p>11. Kernel 14. Doze</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>zx</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>J2</p>
        <p>AS</p>
        <p>la</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>ss</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>At</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>3a</p>
        <p>Aa</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>Is</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>A3</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>Si</p>
        <p>Zi</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>3f&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Sf</p>
        <p>lo</p>
        <p>PAR TIMi M MIN.</p>
        <p>AP</p>
        <p>ll-l#</p>
        <p>J/</p>
        <p>16. Compass point</p>
        <p>18. Unbranched antler</p>
        <p>20. Parcel of ground</p>
        <p>23. Give temporarily</p>
        <p>25. Algonqui-an Indian</p>
        <p>26. Potato: colloq.</p>
        <p>28.'Five hundred and two</p>
        <p>30. Parts of the mouth</p>
        <p>31. Irrauoian Indian</p>
        <p>34. Moo</p>
        <p>36. Cow genus</p>
        <p>37. Upshot</p>
        <p>38. Angry</p>
        <p>40. Unit of dry measure: abbr,</p>
        <p>41. Woolly pyrol</p>
        <p>43. Protective barrier</p>
        <p>46. Entire amount</p>
        <p>47. Dutch meters</p>
        <p>49. Gram molecule</p>
        <p>52. Pronoun</p>
        <p>54. Sun god</p>
        <p>By BOB THOMAS</p>
        <p>AP Movie-Television Writer</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (AP)Progress report on My Fair Lady Theres no need to start saving  up to see the film version of the champion musical. It wont be available before mid-1964.</p>
        <p>Director George Cukor is just back from scouting locations in England. Obviously this will be no hasty production. Not when you consider Warner Brothers shelled out $5.5 million for the film rights.</p>
        <p>Cukor begins active preparations in January. Six weeks of re</p>
        <p>hearsals start in June. Filming My Fair Lady. Nor did the</p>
        <p>women. Among his famous sub-jecte: &amp;lt;3arbo (Camille), Katharine Hepburn (Philadelphia Story), Ingrid Bergman (Gaslight), Judy Holliday (Bom Yesterday).  j</p>
        <p>He will be directing another! Hepburn in My Fair LadyAu-| drey. She was the first one cast^ in the film. Some critics raised^ the question whether the Dutch-1 Irish actress could handle the i Cockney accent.  |</p>
        <p>Of course she can, Cukor | said, She will have to take les-; sons. But every girl who has played Liza has taken lessons. Audrey Hepburn did not test for</p>
        <p>probably wont conclude until years end.</p>
        <p>We dont have any schedule</p>
        <p>male star, Rex Harrison. Warners' figured he could handle the role. But Harrison was no shoo-in for;</p>
        <p>as yet, said the director. It will the Professor Higgins he created</p>
        <p>be long.</p>
        <p>Cukor is ideally cast for the film. He is known for his impeccable taste and for his talent for diawing fine performances from</p>
        <p>and played hundreds of times. Many were called before he was, chosen. Among those mentioned:' Cary Grant, Richard Burton. Peter OToole.  </p>
        <p>Congratulations to</p>
        <p>VICAR ALLEN, WE PRESUME</p>
        <p>MILWAUKEE (AP)The Rev. James Allen of Picayune, MLss., was named vicar of St. Boniface Episcopal Church recently, sue-, ceeding the Rev. James Allen, ' now of Lancaster, Wls.</p>
        <p>Killer Abducts Judge To Prove Theory</p>
        <p>Special guest Lee Marvin and aeries regular Lee J, Cobb portraying a sadistic ex-convict and his victimare stars of It Tolls for Thee, a 90-minute color feature set against a Wyoming wilderness on . Channel | Sevens THE VIRGINIAN tonight at 7:30.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>According to Judge Garth,' when a man dies, part of every , man dies; man cannot live alone' and still live among men. This ' temperate belief is not shared,</p>
        <p> by Judge Garths ranch fore-1 man, the Virginia, a staunch, Individualistnor by Martin 'Kallg, a brutal killer who ab- ; ducts the Judgs i^nd submits him. to torture and humiliation to' prove that "there . is savagery *in all men. Dont miss (his dhow, tonight, on WITN-TV.</p>
        <p>(Adv.)</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>BILLY C. ELLIS</p>
        <p>Billy C. Ellia was the leading representative for the second conseculTve month, September and October for the Greenville Staff. Mr. Ellis haw been with the Durham Life Insurance Company three .year* and has qualified for the Presidents Club each year. Mr. EIIls has completed the Companys Training Program and is well qualified to help you with your Life Insurance Planning. Call him at:</p>
        <p>Bus. Phone PL 2-2544  Residence Phone PL 2-.'52l5</p>
        <p>Durham Life</p>
        <p>Insurance Company</p>
        <p>NOME OFFICE</p>
        <p>Oioit/i Ca^ot7te2</p>
        <p>wa</p>
        <p>PftOTBCT</p>
        <p>THB</p>
        <p>PAMILV</p>
        <p>Sale At Public AUCTION</p>
        <p>R. E. WILLOUGHBY FARM</p>
        <p>in Arthur Township, Pitt County on</p>
        <p>Friday, Nov. 23, 196211:30 A.M.</p>
        <p>Courthouse Door, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Total acreage in farm 140.33 Cropland 68 acres</p>
        <p>Tobacco allotment ............................ 12.71  acres</p>
        <p>Cotton allotment ................................ 5.7  acres</p>
        <p>Com allotment .................................... 30.  acres</p>
        <p>Wheat base ........................................ 5.  acres</p>
        <p>Allotments, other than wheat, based on 1962 quotas.</p>
        <p>Terms of sale: 30% ca.sh, remainder in equal payments over 5 year period.</p>
        <p>Interest at 6% on deferred payments.</p>
        <p>10% deposit required of highest bidder at sale until sale is closed.</p>
        <p>Oaners reserve the right to reject bid.</p>
        <p>Bid will be confirmed or rejected on day of tale.</p>
        <p>Harrell &amp;amp; Rountree, Attorneys</p>
        <p>STRAIGHT</p>
        <p>KENTUCKY</p>
        <p>BOURBON</p>
        <p>STMIGHT NrUCKY BOURBON WHISKY  86 PROOF INCIEHT *6t OISTILIISO CO.. mNKTOIT. RY.</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0007" />
        <p>Prep Scores</p>
        <p>Suffers 38&amp;gt;33 Loss</p>
        <p>no* how.</p>
        <p>-i"thV= ^rn^on</p>
        <p>unable to hold their lead during the final pirlod.</p>
        <p>with 12 ri.lnti T^."n'' k" ?**h-Palkland waa Steve Oobb</p>
        <p>were Wayne Allen with* 14'and WeeSWrtb^wite</p>
        <p>with .f-hlanda girls team was aWe CoL home</p>
        <p>The wTn"!?.this year 32-20 The winners were paced by Andrea Wonfin rui-i n</p>
        <p>Kh  Pollard  with 10 points. The high score for</p>
        <p>outh Mgecombe was Judy Edwards with sevon points</p>
        <p>ame on^'r:?,:*'*'    tyW/lr  neat</p>
        <p>East Carolina Faces Tough Cage Schedule</p>
        <p>BOYS</p>
        <p>Bel-Falk  So.  Edgecombe</p>
        <p>^  Hudson  0</p>
        <p>Jefferson 6  Norville  4</p>
        <p>Allen 14  Little  7</p>
        <p>Webb 13  Cobb  12</p>
        <p>Brown 1  BeU  6</p>
        <p>Subs: (BP) Pridgen; (SE) Hathaway 2, Edwards 2, Watson, Everett.</p>
        <p>60. Edge. ...12 11  5  10-38</p>
        <p>Bel-Palk ..10 7 12  433</p>
        <p>Bel-Falk Webb 6 Lewis 0 Edwards 7 Burres 1 Eason 5 Harper 1 Subs: (B-F) ams, Gardner; Steiner, Pierce.</p>
        <p>So, Edge ..... 4</p>
        <p>Bel-Palk a.... 8</p>
        <p>GIRLS</p>
        <p>So. Edgecombe PoUard 10 Wooten 11 Garrette 6 Stancil 3 Pollard 1 Morris 1 Harrell, Willi-(SE) Beaman,</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>420</p>
        <p>732</p>
        <p>Sto-Pac Downs Bear Grass 48-42</p>
        <p>fiw-i  GRASS-^The Stokes-Pactolus Blue Jays gained</p>
        <p>ed  they  hand</p>
        <p>ed the Bear Grass Bears a 48-42 loss.</p>
        <p>late in'^'fSfrth  }eir opponents at the half and</p>
        <p>Ume. beSfe thi  hands  several</p>
        <p>times b^re the Blue Jays gained their victory.</p>
        <p>WsminSto-Pac were Carrol  n?  Sammy Whitehurst with 13. Top-</p>
        <p>whh 5  Mobley</p>
        <p>With 19 points and Jimmy Taylor with 10 points</p>
        <p>frller in the night the Stokes-Pactolus girls also gained a victory as they topped the Bears 28-25.</p>
        <p>Jennie Forbes the Sto-Pac girls led captured a 17-11 halftime margn. Forbes picked up 13 points in the game. The top scorer for Bear Grass was Brenda Biggs with seven points.</p>
        <p>V,    Stokes-Pactolus  will  be  Nov.  30  when</p>
        <p>they host Jamesville.</p>
        <p>BOYS</p>
        <p>Sto-Pae</p>
        <p>Albertson 8 Taylor 10 Mobley 19 J Mobley 5 Wobbleton 0 Subs: (B)</p>
        <p>Bear Grass</p>
        <p>Jenkins 4 Alexander 7 Leggett Congleton { Roebuck 1 Harrison, White</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>10,</p>
        <p>Harris; (OC) C. Fleming Whitehurst 13.</p>
        <p>Bear Grass . 16 7  8  1742</p>
        <p>6to-Pac .... 13 6 13 1048</p>
        <p>Sto-Pac</p>
        <p>Jenkins 5 Revels 4 Malone 0 Rogers 4 Bailey 1 Harris 0 Subs: (SP) Gurganus;</p>
        <p>Fleming, Tripp. Bear Grass . 2 Sto-Pac ..... 6</p>
        <p>GIRLS</p>
        <p>Bear Grass</p>
        <p>Crisp 6 Mizell Whitehurst Cascone Lee Forbes 13 Biggs 7, Kell, (BG) Perkins,</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>1025</p>
        <p>628</p>
        <p>Bethel Defeats Oak City 55-34</p>
        <p>BETHEL</p>
        <p>The Bethel Indians gained their second</p>
        <p>non-conference victory of the season here last night as they defeated Oak City 55-34.</p>
        <p>Coach Jimmy Fornes Indians gained an early lead in the contest and held a 16 point margin at the end of the first half. Oak City was unable to gain on the high scoring Bethel team the second half.</p>
        <p>Topping the scoring column for the winners was Tex Everett with 16 points. Others in the double figures for Bethel were Glen White with 12 and Jesse Thomas with 10. The high scorers for Oak City were David Whitfield and Benny Bunting with nine points each.</p>
        <p>Bethel also came out on top in the girls game by a score of 48-32 after gaining a 13 point lead the first quarter.</p>
        <p>The high scorers for the girls were Mary Chesson with 17 points and Barbara Manning with 11 points. For the Oak City girls Becky Fleming led the scoring with 19 points</p>
        <p>The next game for Bethel will be Nov. 27 when the Indians host Pantego. In their first game of the season the boys defeated Pantego and the girls lost.</p>
        <p>BOYS</p>
        <p>Bethel</p>
        <p>Everett 16 Warren 6 Alexander 5 Thomas 10 White 12 Subs; (B)</p>
        <p>Oak City Edmondson 7 Johnson 6 Daniels 4 Whitfield 9 Bunting 9 Hunnlecutt</p>
        <p>Bethel</p>
        <p>Manning 11 Bet Manning 8 Hunnlecutt 3 Chesson 17 Gurganus 0 C Gurganus 0</p>
        <p>GIRLS</p>
        <p>Oak City</p>
        <p>D Fleming 5 B Fleming 19 Cofield 2 Adams 6 Scott 0 Hardison 0</p>
        <p>Dewar 2, Latham, Keel, Whitehurst, T Thomas; (OC) D. Daniels, Mobley, Cofield 1, Whitfield 3.</p>
        <p>Bethel ..... 19 15 2  955</p>
        <p>Oak City ... 8 10 3 1334</p>
        <p>Subs: (B) Bonner 7, Weeks, Beth Manning, Lassiter 1, Phiefer 1, Thigpen, Wynne, Warren; (OC) Peel, Mobley, Raynor.</p>
        <p>Bethel ..... 18  9  15  648</p>
        <p>Oak City ... 5 6 7 1432</p>
        <p>Chicod Downed By Aurora 59-29</p>
        <p>-The Aurora cagers handed the Chicod</p>
        <p>CHICOD</p>
        <p>Hornet boys a 59-29 loss and the girls a 41-30 loss hereTas't night as the locals got their 1962-63 basketball campaign underway.  ^</p>
        <p>By CHARLES VAUGHAN Reflector Sport* Writer</p>
        <p>With football season almost at a close, fans will turn their heads toward the oncoming 1962-63 basketball campaign Sports fans in Eastern North Carolina will undoubtedly focus their attention on the East Carolina Pirates.</p>
        <p>The Pirates, coached by head mentor Earl Smith and assistant coach Wendell Carr, have scheduled six Southern Conference teams for the approaching season. They will also play Belmont Abbey, Erskine, and Oglethorpe. Other teams that will face the Bucs are Lenoir Rhyne, High Point, Elon, and AUantic Christian.</p>
        <p>Coach Smith noted, We have a better club this year than last season, but we also have a tougher schedule. Smith later added that the schedule had been set up to Improve the competition as well as to ready the Pirates for Southern Conference par-' ticipation. East Carolina still hopes to enter the Southern Conference within the next few years.</p>
        <p>SC Games Away The games against Southern Conference teams will all be played away as they would not agree to make the trip to East Carolina. The Pirate coach remarked that the larger teams were used to playing before large crowds, and the East Carolina facilities will not accommodate such great attendance.</p>
        <p>Despite the keen competition, Smith and Carr stated they were afraid on no team this year. They remarked that they would be going after every game with everything and everyone available.</p>
        <p>Lacy West and Bill Otte will serve as co-captains during the season. Both boys were instrumental in the Pirates</p>
        <p>15 victories last year.</p>
        <p>West, a senior from Ashe-boro, stands 6-3 and weighs 184 pounds. During last years campaign, he scored 266 points in 24 games for an average of 11.1 points per game. West also collected 239 rebounds for the Bucs.</p>
        <p>The tallest man on the club, Otte measures 6-7 in height and tips the scales at 216 pounds. He averaged 14.3 points per game last season and collected a whooping 332 rebounds.</p>
        <p>Billy Brogden and Russell Knowles also saw plenty of action during the 1961-62 campaigns. Knowles stands 6-S while Brogden measures an even 6-0. Along with West and Otte, both boys are listed on Coach Smiths tentative starting lineup.</p>
        <p>Rounding out the probable starting five is Richie Williams, a sophomore from Muncie, Indiana. Although positioned as a guard, Williams 6-1 makes him a valuable rebounder. Last season he picked up 125 rebounds and averaged 8.3 points per contest.</p>
        <p>Two Experienced Reserves</p>
        <p>In reserve strength, Smith noted he had only two boys on the squad who gained some experience last season. They are senior Mai Boyette and</p>
        <p>The varsity Pirates will have to share the limelight this year as the Baby Bucs, the freshman club, emerges for the first time with a 21 game schedule. 1716 freshmen will accompany the varsity to all Southern Conference games, and they will also provide local fans with entertainment several times while the varsity is out of town.</p>
        <p>Leading the Baby Bucs will be high school All-America Bobby Kinnard from Great Bridge. Va. A-staters Jerry Woodside Neil Hodges, and Grady Williamson will also be called on for plenty of action.</p>
        <p>The freshmen continue their list of potential stars with East-West All-Star players Larry Phillips and George Styron. Completing the list will be Gary Lattimore, Brian Gilliam, Richard Austin, Jerry Hoyle, and Brian Haskins.</p>
        <p>Greenville sports followers will have the opportunity to see the University of Richmond and William and- Mary freshmen clubs as they travel to the local campus to meet the Pirate frosh. The Baby Bucs host William and Mary on February 5, and Richmond on February 7.</p>
        <p>Open Dec. 1 'The East Carolina Pirates open their season December 1 when they travel to Lexington, Va. to meet Southern Conference foe Virginia Military Institute. The Bucs will then return home to play High Point and Lenoir Rhyne before traveling to The Citadel.</p>
        <p>On December 15, the Bucs play host to Belmont Abbey. Belmont Abbey was the District 26 HAIA Champion last year and is expected to be a strong team in the current campaign.</p>
        <p>During the Christmas holidays the Pirates will participate in two tournaments. The first will be the Camp Lejeune tournament Dec. 18-20, Following this, the Bucs travel to Hickory w^here they play in the Holiday Tournament Dec. 28 and 29.</p>
        <p>Monday night, November 26, Greenvillites will be able to see a preview of the Pirates squad. At eight oclock, the freshmen will clash with the varsity In a regulation contest.</p>
        <p>Coastal Loop Admits Dixon</p>
        <p>Board WiU Pick</p>
        <p>The Chicod boys were paced by senior Douglas Hudson who gained 16 points while the</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)  A five-man board will serve the Atlantic Coast Southern Conference area for the Associated Press during the college basketball season.</p>
        <p>The board will vote weekly on the national top 10 teams, along with similar boards throughout the country, starting early next month.</p>
        <p>The Coastal Conference entertained its All-Conference team at a dinner last night at Respess Brothers.</p>
        <p>Trophies were presented to co-champions Ayden and Rob-ersonville and LaGfange received the sportsmanship award.</p>
        <p>Following the dinner a short business meeting was held at which Dixon High School of Holly Ridge near Jacksonville applied for admittance to the league.</p>
        <p>The team was voted in which increases the number in the conference to eight.</p>
        <p>Cliffs Oyster House Dickinson A Grande Aves. Open 7 Days Til 8:00 P.M. RAW OYSTERS Bushels, Pecks A Pints To Carry Out</p>
        <p>girta were led by Brenda Dixon with 12 points.</p>
        <p>The next game for Chicod will be In Wlntervllle Nov. 27. The game will be considered a non-conference contest.</p>
        <p>Fight Results</p>
        <p>SAN JOSE, Calif.  Luis Molina. 138^, San Jose, knocked out A1 Medrano, 139, Sacramento. .</p>
        <p>LEICESTER, England  Jose Gonzales, 182V4, on (m disqualification over Billy Walker, 192, England, 3.</p>
        <p>For Boys and Girls</p>
        <p>A popular cowboy boot with full, roomy toe and low roping heel. Handsome underlay and stitched design. Contrasting broadtail leather top. Popular flexible 3-aole construction.</p>
        <p>Infants Sizes 4 to S Childrens Sizes 8H to 3 Boys* Sises 34 to  Mens Slzet &amp;lt;4 to If</p>
        <p>$4.99 up</p>
        <p>LARRYS</p>
        <p>SHOE STORE 5 Ways To A Perfect Fit At f PoinU. Greenville, N. C. (['Mh ~ Charge  Laya way</p>
        <p>sophomore Bobby Duke.</p>
        <p>Other members of the team who are slated to see action this year are Gerald Parker, Chuck Scott, Fred Fowler, Dwight Frazier, Roger Reges, and Everette Cameron. Fowler and Frazier are juniors while the remaining four arc sophomores.</p>
        <p>TKe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Wednesday, November 21, 1962 7</p>
        <p>Reflecting On</p>
        <p>SPORTS</p>
        <p>By George Bryant</p>
        <p>Much Activity</p>
        <p>Even though the Thanksgiving holidays have now begun, area sports fans will be well entertained over the long weekend and they will not have t() travel far for the games.</p>
        <p>Friday night Ayden and Windsor will play a championship game for the Eastern Class A tle in East Carolina College Stadium at 8 oclock.</p>
        <p>should be one of the better prep playoffs in the state %s both teams have top notch talent and have been well coached for the upcoming battle.</p>
        <p>On Saturday afternoon at 2 oclock East Carolina College will entertain Kentucky as the rirates and the Maroons square off for the final game of the season.</p>
        <p>The ECC game has been designated as children s day and all children will be admitted free with an adult. Athletic Director Dr. N. M. Jorg-ensen noted that no age limit has been set for the children.</p>
        <p>There should be planty of good seats for the game as most of the student body has gone home for the holidays.</p>
        <p>Grudge Battles</p>
        <p>In A CCSaturday</p>
        <p>Thursday Battles</p>
        <p>, ,  sames  are also scheduled across the</p>
        <p>state with the State-Wake Forest battle in Win-ston-Salem highlighting the Thursday activity in the big four. In the Carolinas Conference the Lenoir Rhyne-Catawba game will be the one to watch as the Bears strive for a perfect season.</p>
        <p>On Saturday the annual Carolina-Duke clash in Chapel Hill will be the big one. In this game anything can happen and it usually does. The Tar Heels will be out to upset the conference leading Blue Devils.</p>
        <p>Reports from Chapel Hill are that by game time all 43,971 seats in Kenan Stadium will be full.</p>
        <p>Our Picks</p>
        <p>Due to the Thursday games we are going to make the selections early this week. Last week we hit 80 per cent again with eight right out of 10 tries. This boosted our season average to 68.8 per cent which leaves us 1.2 per cent to go to reach the 70 per cent passing mark.</p>
        <p>On the local scene we choose Ayden over Windsor for the State title.</p>
        <p>Grudge battles  where the term opponent takes on a truly nasty meaning  ^ill decide the football championship of the Atlantic Coast Conference Saturday.</p>
        <p>Two of the bitterly fought feuds are on tap, with South Carolina going to Clemson and Duke making the 12-mlle trip to Chapel Hill and the University of North Carolina campus.</p>
        <p>Duke and Clemson both need victories in the family squabbles. A Duke defeat and a Clemson victory would mean a tie for the title. But ii Duke wins, the Blue Devils W1 have the ACC crown for the third straight year.</p>
        <p>Qemson, 4-1 in conference play, has a strong offense with bulldozing sophomore fullback Charlie Dumas as its major instigator. But its defensive qualities are more notable than its offense, with the Tigers pacing the ACC in rushing defense and in second place in total defense.</p>
        <p>That defense will get a test from South Carolina, which goes Into the game as the leagues rushing, leader with 306.3 yards a game, i Helping South Carolina along In Its rushing effort is Billy Gam-brell, whose 579 yards in 97 carries makes him second in Individual rushing.</p>
        <p>The Clemson-South Carolina series began in 1896, when the Gamecocks won 12-6. In 59 meetings. South Carolina ha won 34 games. Clemson has taken 22. and theyve tied three times.</p>
        <p>North (Carolina scout Emmett Cheek, warning the Tar Heel squad about Duke, summed up the league-leaders tactics thus-y:</p>
        <p>Duke, does what It did last year but does it better, with such a balanced attack you cant gang up (HI either the run or the pass.* Duke, 3-0 in the ACC, ran through a rough session against North Carolina defenses, and was told the squad is in top physical shape for the game.</p>
        <p>Wake Forest, which meets North Carolina State in a Thanksgiving Day contest at Winston-Salem, finished its preparations with emphasis on forward passing. Throwers Included Wally BrldweU, Ralph Brandewiede and John Mackovlc.</p>
        <p>State held another rought workout in finishing out its heavy practice for Wake Forest. State will be seeking its third victory of the season and its second In a row.</p>
        <p>Virginia, which meets fading Maryland, went through a hardhitting scrimmage after being introduced to Marylands deceptive I-formatlon. End Stuart Christhllf of Annapolis, Md., moved up to Virginias first unit.</p>
        <p>Maryland Coach Tom Nugent newsmen he may kep two of his starters, tailback Len Chia-verini and center Gene Peher, out of the Virginia game because of shoulder injuries. Chlaverlnl Is the league rushing leader.</p>
        <p>Pro Basketball</p>
        <p>NBA</p>
        <p>Tuesdays Results Boston m, Chicago 106 New York 103, St. Louis 95 Todays Games Cincinnati at San Francisco Syracuse at Detroit Chicago vs. New York at Boston St. Louis at Bost(Hi</p>
        <p>In the Carolinas Conference on Thursday we choose Lenoir Rhyne over Catawba and Newberry over Presbyterian. Saturday we pick East Carolina over Eastern Kentucky and Tampa over Appalachian.</p>
        <p>In the Atlantic Coast Conference Saturday we select Duke over Carolina (not being loyal as it does not pay), South Carolina over Clemson and Maryland over Virginia. On Thursday State should have an easy time with Wake Forest.</p>
        <p>Football On WGTC</p>
        <p>Thanksgiving Day Game</p>
        <p>North Carolina State v Wake Forest _ 1:45</p>
        <p>WGTC  Dial 1590  CBS Radio</p>
        <p>5,000 Watt/ of Power</p>
        <p>THIS IS GREAT NEWS! ITS TERRIFIC!</p>
        <p>LaiMiiCAR PRICES</p>
        <p>FALL TO A NEW LOW</p>
        <p>n V w  Davenoort  Motor  Sales</p>
        <p>Do You Want To Buy A Late Model Car? Read This!</p>
        <p>We want to clear our used car lot with one giantic pre-season event  and this is it! Now. during the peak of the season weVe slashing prices on 20 late model used cars. Come, see test drive and buy a better car for less  at Davenport Motor Sales, Farmville, N. C.</p>
        <p>A MESSAGE .   to those of you who have good credit. If you wish to buy a late ipodel used car for a low, low down payment, offering a special consideration during these four days.</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>we are</p>
        <p>2 MORE DAYS! Friday &amp;amp; Saturday</p>
        <p>November 23 &amp;amp; 24</p>
        <p>1962 COMET 4 DOOR SEDAN Equipped with radio, heater and straight drive. White finish. Sold new by us. One owner.</p>
        <p>$1795</p>
        <p>1962 FORD GALAXIE 500 4 DR. SED. Chestnut and white finish, power steering, radio, heater, Cruise-O Matic transmission and whitewall tires. Value packed at . .</p>
        <p>$2450</p>
        <p>*62 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DR. SED. Hardtop model, with power steering, PowerGIide transmission, 250 hp (V-8) engine. One owner. Extra clean.</p>
        <p>$2475</p>
        <p>'SI CHEVY IMPALA  DR. HDTP CPE</p>
        <p>Firily equipped. Also a new set of Firestone tires. An extra clean, one owner car.</p>
        <p>$2595</p>
        <p>TWO 1962 THUNDERBIRDS Fully equipped, including air conditioning. One owner car with 9,000 actual miles. Sold with a new car guarantee.</p>
        <p>1961 FORD GALAXIE 4 DOOR SED. Low mileage, one owner car with power steering, power brakes, whitewall tires and solid Wack finish. Perfect used car for only , . .</p>
        <p>$1850</p>
        <p>1961 CHEVY IMPALA 4 DR. HDTOP</p>
        <p>Solid white finish with red interior. A fully equipped, one owner car. Just like new.</p>
        <p>1959 FORD GALAXIE 4 DR. SEDAN One owner car, 21,000 actual miles, Fordomatic transmission, V-8 engine. Will furnish owners name to verify mileage.</p>
        <p>$1950</p>
        <p>I960 CHEVY 4 DOOR BELAIR SED.</p>
        <p>V-8 engine, PowerGIide transmission. An extra clean, one owner car.</p>
        <p>$1550</p>
        <p>I960 FORD GALAXIE 4 DOOR SED. Solid white with red interior, power steering, V-8 engine, Fordomatic transmission and new tires.</p>
        <p>$1595</p>
        <p>I960 FALCON 2 DOOR MODEL Standard transmission. A rcai econo my car at an economy price. Only . .</p>
        <p>$950</p>
        <p>I960 MERCURY MONTCLAIR SED. A fully equipped, one owner car with solid white finish. Drives like new</p>
        <p>$1695</p>
        <p>$1395</p>
        <p>1959 CHEVROLET IMPALA door hardtop sedan. Full power including air conditioning. Buy air conditioning at no extra cost.</p>
        <p>$1395</p>
        <p>1958 FORD 4 DOOR HARDTOP Fordomatic transmission, V-8 engine, radio and heater. A nice car for oniy</p>
        <p>$795</p>
        <p>1958 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR HDTOP Solid black finish and whitewall tires</p>
        <p>$850</p>
        <p>1957 PONTIAC 2 DOOR HARDTOP Light blue finish. An extra olean ear</p>
        <p>$850</p>
        <p>1956 FORD FAIRLANE 4 DR. SEDAN</p>
        <p>V-8 engine, Fordomatic transmission, power steering. A one owner ear with 32,000 actual miles. Will give owners jiame to verify actual mileage. Buy this car and get a lot of unused transportation for . . .</p>
        <p>$795</p>
        <p>19S.4 FORD FAIRLANE 4 DR. SEDAN V-8 engine. A nice car for only , , .</p>
        <p>$495</p>
        <p>1955 CHEVROLET STATION WGN 4-door modeL A good second &amp;lt;su* for only , . .</p>
        <p>$450</p>
        <p>1954 FORD 4 DOOR SEDAN 1954-FORD STATION WAGON 1954 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR SEDAN 1953 PONTIAC 4 DOOR SEDAN 1953 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR SEDAN</p>
        <p>All Prices On Tho Abovt Automobiles Are Below</p>
        <p>300.00</p>
        <p>Davenport Motor Sales</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE. N. C.</p>
        <p> MERCURY</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0008" />
        <p>a^The Baily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Wednesday, November 21, 1962</p>
        <p>THERE OUGHTA BE A LAWI</p>
        <p>iccm- TH|T rHvrn tc escaps TWf PO^UTEQ crry for ths</p>
        <p>HSAw^ COUNTRY m </p>
        <p>MOYli  &amp;gt;0U  ANP</p>
        <p>yw^fA CO^iW'OJT TO OUR COU'NTRV FOR tWf  t</p>
        <p>K.nOCK'NG- AROUNP H THC FjltfSH air WiwL PUT SC^* PS? ,NTO you? WWATPO SAy %</p>
        <p>Bv FAGALY mad SHORTEN</p>
        <p>/iNC? BfFOW THf WEBC ENP t9 MZ MXilA * PRAY TO GET ft4ClC7D T^ OTV Si^f</p>
        <p>CANY PlSURf OTiJPF) &amp;amp;0(W,PLfroH &amp;gt;OUR</p>
        <p>suee</p>
        <p>PSfir,</p>
        <p>30IZAX, THATP , EE FUM</p>
        <p>PUFF) WHY THIS FiRS -P^f FL/FF)SM0&amp;gt;Cf5 ^ SO f (n&amp;gt;Ff) woop</p>
        <p>RAINCOAT ANO GET A^f-OTWSR carton of C-</p>
        <p>Sale Of Titans Assured; Leahys Role Uncertain</p>
        <p>NEW YORK AP)The sale of.general manager. If his groupjselling price because the new the New York Titans of the Amer-! takes over the team.  |  group understands Leahy is to be</p>
        <p>ican  Football  League  probably; **If I had the money, Id  buy  coach and general manager,</p>
        <p>will be  concluded  today or Friday,; the franchise.  he said. He  said  -My agreement with  Leahy ito</p>
        <p>but whether former Notre Dame  he had some friends  who mighthead coach and general man-</p>
        <p>Coach Frank Leahy will  pUot the  finance the  purchase.  He didnt  ager would make the  price less</p>
        <p>team remains a question.  n^e  therm  jthan  I  might have asked other-</p>
        <p>Titan owner Harry Wismer said Said Mort Liftin, Wismer s at- - said wismer Im going Leahy will be head coach and tomey and a calm voice in the to Denver tomorrow for the Ti-general manager.  istonn:  We  have been  negotiating  tans-Broncos game on  Thursday</p>
        <p>Leahy said he would  be advn-  for the last  week or so with sev-'and will talk to Leahy  then </p>
        <p>sory coach and general manager, ^eral groups and I would say we Anv sale would have to be an-t.    ------------</p>
        <p>are close to a  deal with a  new'  *"ed bv the AfT  exuUv^  the  Lions,  meanwhile  gained</p>
        <p>group, all New  York people  and,  I^tte  executive  momentum  and  roUed  to  a  IM</p>
        <p>Im sure, acceptable to the AFL.;  record  with  four  games  remain-</p>
        <p>The group wants Leahy to become,.  ^th  bUtzkrieg</p>
        <p>'had made offers to buy the team.ithrough the NFL was slowed a</p>
        <p>Detroit Lions See No Futile Gridiron Task</p>
        <p>PETrROIT (AP)  A h&amp;lt;H?eless, frightening task, defeating and overtaking the unbeaten Green Bay Packers? tt isnt so, claim the Detroit Lions.</p>
        <p>We should have beat them last time and I think were going to win this time. said fullback Ken Webb after the Lions completed a shivering, hurry-up workout Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Sure, my boys have been pointing for this game ever since the last one. said Coach George Wilson, soundly criticized Tjy his own Detroit players after the Lions fell 9-7 to the Packers Oct. 7 The long-awaited rematch between the reigning National Football League Champions from Green Bay. current Western division leaders, and their closest pursuers from Detroit is Thursday at Tiger Stadium. Tickets have been as scarce as Packer defeats for the last month and a standing-room crowd of 55,000 will attend th annual Thanksgiving Day game.</p>
        <p>It also will be seen by a natim-al television audience via CBS starting at noon EST.</p>
        <p>None of the bitterness has left the Lions since their last meeting with the Packers. Detroit was leading 7-6 with time running out when WUson told MUt Plum to pass, hoping to secure a first down.</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>a.</p>
        <p>POVOU.</p>
        <p>TMtVS A MON  THt OVWvM&amp;amp;Sgr MUwi6~*e PWftWtlO MVt M---U, sHt orrA 00 if chuck</p>
        <p>PCNr</p>
        <p>HMiYPOAP'/Tmy</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;orAMCNHtt * UKAjfAHV</p>
        <p>AfTA</p>
        <p>AffM</p>
        <p>IM6WW</p>
        <p>Picking Winners On The Gridiron</p>
        <p>Receiver Terry Barr slipped 1    .</p>
        <p>Herb Adderley intercepted ^idre-!  HAROLD CLAASSEN</p>
        <p>turned the baU 41 yards. The Associated Press Sports Writer Packers pulled it out on Pauli NEW YORK (APIPicking this</p>
        <p>Hornungs 21-yard field goal.</p>
        <p>The Lions offense since then has sputtered and their defense has carried them. They lost once more, by three points to the New York Giants, and now have an 8-2 record.</p>
        <p>weeks college football winners out of the second helping of turkey stuffing. Last weekend the figures were 42-12 for .777 which left the seasonal totals at 362-105 for .776.</p>
        <p>conquer their cross-state rivals.</p>
        <p>Miami over Northwestern: The Hurricanes love to manhandle Big Ten teams and they are proud of their George Mira, a pass-tossing quarterback. With Tom Myers in the Wildcat line-up, it should be a pitchers battle. This is a Friday night affair.</p>
        <p>Ohio State over Michigan: Re-</p>
        <p>Public Notice</p>
        <p>Wismer, who maintains he has lost $1,750,000 during the 2'^ years he has owned the club, said he hopes to sell the club to a group headed by Leahy for about $1.5 million.</p>
        <p>I dont get that advisory coach</p>
        <p>Southern California over UCLA:</p>
        <p>The  proud Packers,  shocked  by i The Trojans need this one to ^^^r when this pairing set the</p>
        <p>being  held without  a  touchdown' insure their Jan. 1 Rose Bowl entire country aquiver?</p>
        <p>engagement. Southern Cal has two'  Thursday</p>
        <p>quarterbacks of almost equal abil-| Montana over Colorado State ity plus Hal Bedsole, a pass catc.h-i University, Richmond over Wiling end.  liam &amp;amp; Mary, Virginia Tech over</p>
        <p>Minnesota over Wisconsin: The Virginia Military, North Carolina</p>
        <p>R0n0Fsil rriRiiBR0r suid corcIi  ^     ^   -</p>
        <p>I understood Leahy to sav he  seemed  to  be  enthused  with  bit  when  they  escaped  with  a  17-131 Gophers cant go to the Rose Bowl State over Wake Forest, Texas</p>
        <p>would be head coacii as well as^i'  Baltimore.  again but a triumph here would Western over Trinity.</p>
        <p>stuff, said  Wismer.  He  will be  general  manager  when  I talked  Picture.  | On this squeaker, the Lions have</p>
        <p>head coach  as  weU  as  general  with him Monday  night.  But there  If TYank  Leahy  gets  control  of  ^^ut up their hopes the Packers</p>
        <p>manager if  his  group buys the  could  have been a  misunder-ifh team,  he  said,  it  will  be  a  ^ 'crt^en.</p>
        <p>clublike Paul Brown is at Cleve-.standing.  great thing for New York. i  Bay  Coach Vince</p>
        <p>land and Vince Lombardi is at! Most of the basic terms for the' The Titans, currently in last;Ra*,r Green Bay.  sale have been agreed upon. I feel place in the Eastern Division - wppV in v f  result</p>
        <p>Rut in Shrevenort. La., where there is a good possibility of with a 4-6 record, were forced. ...y. ,  weex-out  pressure,</p>
        <p>he addressed a  Touchdowm Club  closing  the deal  either  today or  to  get an  advance from  the' &amp;gt;  fliat</p>
        <p>dianer Tuesday night, Leahy  saidlFriday.  league to  meet the players last  , of pressure, said</p>
        <p>he would be advisorj coach  and Wismer  said he was cutting  the ^ payroll.  no!  haven t had any</p>
        <p>other  flat  games and I hope we</p>
        <p>havent reached a downward point now.</p>
        <p>Detroit needs not only a victory Thursday  but outside help against Green Bay in the final three weeks to throw the Western Division into a tie. And, of course, the Lions would have to win their final three games after to make It stick,</p>
        <p>Wilson, an optimist all season, thinks it can be done.</p>
        <p>Baseball Trading Season Will Likely See Number Of Swaps</p>
        <p>the new talent moving up from the minors. The Dodgers went most of the way with youth last</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS j The St. Louis Cardinals already The inter-league baseball trad- have been active on the trading ing season opened last midnight mart within the National League, with all signs pointing to a num- Disturbed by last seasons fail-ber of swaps before the deadline; ures, the Cards got a top short-at midnight, Dec. 15.  stop  in Dick Groat of Pittsburgh</p>
        <p>The Pittsburgh Pirates and Bos- and a hard-hitting outfielder in ton Red Sox apparently already George Altman of the Chicago Yanks extra catcher, and PhU have something on the fire, re-^Cubs. They had to give up short- Linz, the Yanks young utility in-portedly a swap that would send  stop Julio Gotay to Pittsburgh and first baseman Dick Stuart to Bos- pitchers Larry Jackswi and Llndy</p>
        <p>clinch the Big Ten title for them. It will be a bruiser.</p>
        <p>Texas over Texas A&amp;amp;M: Your Thanksgiving Day TV morsel. The Longhorns have too much balance.</p>
        <p>Arkansas over Texas Tech: The Porkers sail into a bowl picture</p>
        <p>Saturday East: Columbia over Rutgers, Harvard over Yale, Holy Cross over Connecticut, Cornell over Pennsylvania, Syracuse over West Virginia.</p>
        <p>South:  Allhum over Florida</p>
        <p>at the expense of the hapless Tech State, Clemson over South Caro-Raiders.  Ilina, Maryland over Virginia,</p>
        <p>Louisiana State over Tulane:  Memphis State over Detroit, Ten-This has been a traditional gameinessee over Kentucky.</p>
        <p>for years but in recent years the only tradition about it is that,LSJJ</p>
        <p>NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Pitt County made in that certain proceeding entitled Sarah (also known as Sadie T.) White Stokes and husband, William E. Stokes, Petitioners, vs. Roy White (unmarried), Et Als, and under and by virtue of an order of resale upon an advanced bid made by said Superior Court, the undersigned Commissioners will on the 5th day of December, 1962, at twelve oclock noon, at the door of the Pitt County Courthouse in Greenville, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash upon an opening bid of Twenty-seven Thousand Five Hundred Sixty Dollars ($27,560.00) but subject to the confirmation of the Court, all that certain tract or parcel of land more particularly described as follows:</p>
        <p>Lying and being situate in Winterville Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, and bounded on the North by the lands of John Corey, on the South by the lands of Lonnie Smith, East by the lands of Lawrence Anderson and on the West by the lands of 'Joshua Tripp and BEGINNING at a stake on the canal, John Coreys corner on the canal, it being the old corner between Lots Nos. 2 and 3 in the</p>
        <p>lands, and running thence with</p>
        <p>I still think somebody Is going a tougher schedule.</p>
        <p>Midwest: Xavier over Cincln-nati, Iowa State over Ohio Univer-doesnt lose against the Greenies. sity, Oklahoma State over Kansas Penn State over Pittsbuigh: State. Iowa over Notre Dame,</p>
        <p>Army beat Penn State and lost to i Purdue over Indiana, North Texas -  Fianklin  Nichols</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh but the pick here is'State over Southern Illinois.</p>
        <p>Penn State vilth relative ease. ; Southwest:  Rice over Texas</p>
        <p>Oklahoma over Nebraska: The Christian, Baylor over Southern revived Sooners have manhandled, Methodist.</p>
        <p>their last five opponents 176-7. | Far West: Stanford over Cali-Arizona State over Arizona? jfornia. Air Force over Colorado,</p>
        <p>[State has the better record despiteiOregon over Oregon State.</p>
        <p>John Coreys line S 89 East 208 poles to Lawrence Andersons line, being the old corner between Lots Nos, 2 and 3 in the division aforesaid; thence with Lawrence Andersons line S. 1 W. 40 poles to the corner of Lot No. 1 in the aforesaid division; thence with Lonnia Smiths line N. 89 W 208 poles to a stake in Joshua Tripps line; the second corner of Lot No. 1 in said Franklin Nichols division; thence with said Joshua Tripp's line in the road N. 1 E. 40 poles to a stake on the canal, John Coreys corner, the point of beginning, containing 52 acres as shown by map of said survey of record in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of PJtt County Division of Land Book No. 1, page 134, and being Lot No. 2 In the division of the Franklin Nichols lands and being the identical tract or parcel of land conveyed by that certain deed of record in Book F-21, page 168, Pitt County Registry, to which reference Is hereby directed for a more complete and accurate description.</p>
        <p>The highest bidder will be required to make a deposit of ten per cent of his bid at the time of the sale. 'This sale Is also subject to a lease which lease expires on December 31, 1962.</p>
        <p>'This 20th day of November, 1962.</p>
        <p>M. E. CAVENDISH ROBERT D. "WHEELER Commissioner!</p>
        <p>Nov. 21-28</p>
        <p>year and just missed.  to  beat the Packers for us before</p>
        <p>Many National League clubs, as the season ends, he-said, well as American Leaguers, have their eyes on John Blanchard, the</p>
        <p>fielder. The Yanks already have dealt right-hander Bob Turley on</p>
        <p>FIGHTS</p>
        <p>ton in exchange for a pitcher McDaniel to Chicago. They also a conditional basis to the Los An-me ir * r&amp;gt; *</p>
        <p> either Gene Conley or Don passed on Don Cardwell, a pitcher I geles Angels and are after a big^?f?,r  i  ^ Boston,</p>
        <p>Schwall. Announcement was ex- acquired from Chicago. Cardwell'name pitcher  outpointed  Gaylord  Barnes,  150,</p>
        <p>pected at news conferences sched- went to Pittsburgh in the deal for: The New York Mets are ready| HON^ULU Hurricane Kid,</p>
        <p>Dartmouth over Princeton: Bill; King and Don McKinnon are two! of the best football players in the East. Both wear Dartmouth uni-i forms.</p>
        <p>Duke over North Carolina: A victory or a tie gives the Blue Devils a third straight Atlantic</p>
        <p>SCOfRES</p>
        <p>nojmmooxK, (M.-</p>
        <p>ulrt simultaneously In Pitteburgh &amp;amp;;oat and reUef man Diomedes to deal most anybody. Among the &amp;amp;nd Boston.</p>
        <p>I Olivo.</p>
        <p>most likely prospects in the shop</p>
        <p>The Pirates also may be trying! The Los Angeles Dodgers can window are Ditcher Rnj?pr rmi/  in</p>
        <p>to make a deal involving Don: be expected to step into the</p>
        <p>1534, San Francisco, outpointed Rudolph Bent, 1544, British Hon-</p>
        <p>Hoak, the peppery third baseman who had a subs^r 1962 season because of frequent injuries.</p>
        <p>^  it*</p>
        <p>Statistical Honors All But Tied Up By Lenoir Rhyne</p>
        <p>, ,  ,  .  .  ,  outfielder Frank Thomas  and in-</p>
        <p>m^ket. cle^mg out some of the Beider Charlie Neal, older material like Duke Snider  u  * ^</p>
        <p>and Wally Moon to make way for ^  ^  !,</p>
        <p>Gus Triandos and would like to</p>
        <p>make a deal for another catcher.</p>
        <p>It could be Earl Battey of the</p>
        <p>Minnesota Twins. Or it could be</p>
        <p>Blanchard. The Orioles are ready</p>
        <p>to peel off one of those young</p>
        <p>pitchers, possibly Chuck Estrada.</p>
        <p>Bo Belinsky is also on the way</p>
        <p>out with Los Angeles.</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP Defensively. Appalachian, which Milwaukee probably will make Barring a complete collapse both concludes its year Saturday  Burdette  and</p>
        <p>offensively and defensively, Le- Tampa, must make up a total    new  manager</p>
        <p>noir Rhynes champion Bears go yardage difference of more than  Bragan  vetoes  plans.</p>
        <p>Into their regular-season finale 320 yards to pass the Bears. ! Unless all signs fail this will be Thursday afternoon against Ca-, With a rushing average of 249.3 busiest inter-league swapping tawba at Salisbury  practically  as- yards per tilt,  Lenoir Rhyne  ap-  season  ever,</p>
        <p>sured of major offensive and  de-'parently has  that title locked  up</p>
        <p>fensive team honors in the Caro- and the Bears pass defense aver- n  ,</p>
        <p>Unas Conference.  lage of 50.0 yards apparently also riillKaplr InifArl</p>
        <p>Only a statistical miracle can'is safe. keep the Bears from claiming the Actually, Mily in nishing de-iRv SCiActlOri conferences total offense and de- fense are the Bears threatened. J</p>
        <p>fense hoiors. They go against,Lenoir Rhyne leads the conference MnoAirAvr  *ativ  ,</p>
        <p>Catawba leading in three out of in that department with a yield  ,  nu    t^' ^ r*</p>
        <p>four departments otherwise. In of 86.3 yards per game, but Ap-l!5!f  vf ^  ^</p>
        <p>only one of these  categories   iPalachlan is  a  close second with  ^</p>
        <p>rushing defense -  does anothei 88 4 yards.  '5*^  o  he Sooner ticket of-</p>
        <p>team appear to have a chance. ! Catawba leads the conference  u  i  ^tckets</p>
        <p>Going into the Thanksgiving i" offense with a 147.6 aver-i  school football coach.</p>
        <p>afternoon game, Lenoir Rhynesli^at mark appears safe. Aiwut the time I walked in.</p>
        <p>total offense of 349.6 yards leads i   pIIh  /nn  &amp;lt;Harold)</p>
        <p>OFFE.WSE  jReid,  (OU  ticket manager shout-</p>
        <p>G  R AV  P AV  Totalirom his  office  Grt.shams</p>
        <p>9  249.3  100.2  349.6named Back Of  The Week.</p>
        <p>9 149.4 147.5 296.9,' I really surprised. I had</p>
        <p>10 219.5  51.3  270.8  idea  I  would  win  it.  the  205</p>
        <p>10  173.9  79.4  253.3  pound Olney,  Tex.,  sophomore</p>
        <p>9  131.3  77.7  209.0  said.</p>
        <p>9  90.2  61.1  151.3;  The  honor  went to Grisham for</p>
        <p>his dazzling performance in Okla</p>
        <p>BEAUMONT. Tex. -Lou Gui-tierrez. 160, Nicaragua, knocked out George Lee, 160, New Orleans. 10.</p>
        <p>Michigan State over Illinois: If the Spartans learn how to keep the ball without fumbling the score could climb high.  i</p>
        <p>Missouri over Kansas: Johnny Roland gives the Tigers an edge in the midlands version of the Harvard-Yale game.</p>
        <p>Washington over Washington State: The Huskies still could squeeze into the Rose Bowl if they</p>
        <p>Thursdays Games Boston vs. Syracuse at Phila-; delphia</p>
        <p>Detroit at St. Louis Cincinnati at Los Angeles ABL</p>
        <p>Tuesdays Results Long Beach 93. Kansas City 89 Oakland 119, Chicago 100 Todays Games Pittsburgh at Philadelphia Oakland at Long Beach Thursdays Games Chicago at Kansas City Oakland at Long Beach</p>
        <p>"The Sweetest Sugar Ever Sold'</p>
        <p>its nearest competitor, Catawba, by a comfortable margin of 52.7 yards. Defensively, the Bears Hh^ie have yielded an average of only j 136.3 yards per game. 32.3 yards per tilt better than second-place Appalachian at 168.6 yaids. ^ Catawba, also playing its finale. | ^ would have to outgain the Bears by more than 520 yards In order |t phvnp to stand a chance to catch up on'</p>
        <p>Unbelievable Rebounds Total</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS If BiU RusseU of the Boston Celtics manages to stay in the National BasketbaU Association; another seven years, hell probably mak^ his exit with a un-' believable total of more than' IDjOOO rebounds.</p>
        <p>The 28-y^r-old former Univer-^ 4ty ai San Francisco AU-America i hM been averaging better than rebounds a year since he altered the league in 1956.</p>
        <p>hit the iO.OOO-mUestone Tues-; ty night when he grabbed 30 n^ottnds In the Celtics 113-106 liptory over the Chicago Zephyrs Is^flew Yorks Madison Square ^ CiFden. la tbe otlier game of a Mibteheader. the New York tKmckerbockerf snapped a six-,</p>
        <p>Eie losing ^reak by downing at. LoiUs Hawks. 103-95. No r SJLim were scheduled.  10,002 rebound.l</p>
        <p>Newberry</p>
        <p>Elon</p>
        <p>W. Caro. Guilford</p>
        <p>DEFE.NSE</p>
        <p>G  Av P Av  Total homas 13-0 victory over Missouri</p>
        <p>9  86.3  .50.0  136.3 last Saturday. The big Texan</p>
        <p>80.1  168.6 i gained 116 yards, five more than</p>
        <p>83.5  204.91 Missouri gained, and was sent in</p>
        <p>73.9  249.61 as a linebacker whenever Missouri</p>
        <p>81.7 254.4[threatened to get a drive going</p>
        <p>73.5  270.8 j Grisham said he felt it was his</p>
        <p>82.6  325.91 best game of the sea.son.</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>88.4</p>
        <p>121.5</p>
        <p>175.7</p>
        <p>172.7 197.3</p>
        <p>9 243.3</p>
        <p>you can count on</p>
        <p>fbr ths monoy you need, visit or telephons us todsy. We'U msks sure you get it, in keeping with our liberal credit policy</p>
        <p>MONTHLY MYMCNT PLANS</p>
        <p>CASH</p>
        <p>100.00</p>
        <p>UJf*.</p>
        <p>sea</p>
        <p>/N*</p>
        <p>728</p>
        <p>IQOO</p>
        <p>1833</p>
        <p>200.00</p>
        <p>ll.lC</p>
        <p>14J7</p>
        <p>i8.a</p>
        <p>36.60</p>
        <p>300.00</p>
        <p>ie.4i</p>
        <p>2108</p>
        <p>29.41</p>
        <p>64 41</p>
        <p>eoo.oo</p>
        <p>2001</p>
        <p>27.13</p>
        <p>18J2&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>71 88</p>
        <p>*SZ&amp;gt;&amp;amp;.'o5</p>
        <p>ibsi</p>
        <p>3U.2S</p>
        <p>1^1</p>
        <p>[iw'sr</p>
        <p>Iniuronc* a) itondoid ralm if ovailobis</p>
        <p>ess HOME CREDIT COMPANY</p>
        <p>SW Evans St.. Orecnville. N. C</p>
        <p>OLD</p>
        <p>GROW</p>
        <p>KENTUCKY</p>
        <p>STRAIGHT</p>
        <p>BOURBON</p>
        <p>WHISKEY</p>
        <p>%25 mo</p>
        <p>JL 4/5 QT. m PINT</p>
        <p>KENTUCKY STRAIGHT ^</p>
        <p>BOURBON WHISKEY</p>
        <p>lomco IV</p>
        <p>ry.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>ONiSK)*! Of iHt OU) csow 0sin.u* cewiiy</p>
        <p>rii*w&amp;gt;0o*</p>
        <p>TRf OLD C0'.V OlTILL[RVCOriiANWOI.lY.i</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0009" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Wednesday, November 21, 19629</p>
        <p>Telephone</p>
        <p>PL 2-6166</p>
        <p>Public</p>
        <p>Notfa</p>
        <p>cm</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE OP BICYCLES BY GREENVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT</p>
        <p>Notice Is hereby given that at 10 oclock, A. M., on Saturday, the first day of December, l82, at the Police Department in Greenville, N. C., the following unclaimed bicycles will be sold to the highest bidder for cash:</p>
        <p>Sky RayRed and white trim, with black frame, boys bike with basket, 20 in.</p>
        <p>Western Plyer  Red with white trim, boys bike with basket, 20 in.</p>
        <p>J. C. HigginsGray ^h white trim, boys bike, 16 in. </p>
        <p>Boys bike, wine, 22 in.</p>
        <p>Western PlyerBlue frame, chrome fenders, girls bike, 16 in.. with light &amp;amp; luggage carrier.</p>
        <p>Western PlyerRed frame and white trim, boys bike, .22 In.. with lights &amp;amp; luggage carrier.</p>
        <p>HuffyRed frame and white tr'rn. boys bike, 22 In.</p>
        <p>HerculesRed frame, boy's bike, hand brakes. '</p>
        <p>Western PlyerBlack frame, bovV bike, 22 - in.</p>
        <p>,T. C. HigginsBlack frame, boys bike, 22 in., hand brake.</p>
        <p>Western FlyerRed frame, bov.s bike, 22 In.</p>
        <p>Western FlyerRed frame, bovs bike, with basket, 22 in.</p>
        <p>J. C. HigginsBlack frame, white trim, boys biko, with lights, basket and hand brake.</p>
        <p>This the 19th day of November, 1962.</p>
        <p>POLICE DEPAR'TMENT City of Greenville, N.C. Nov. 21-24-29-30</p>
        <p>such pleading not later than^notice will be plead in bar of</p>
        <p>the 2nd day of January, 1963, and upon your failure to do so the party seeking relief against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.</p>
        <p>This 5th day of November, 1962.</p>
        <p>H. L. LEWIS JR.</p>
        <p>Asst Clerk Superior Court</p>
        <p>Pitt County Milton C. Williamson, Atty.</p>
        <p>Nov. 7-14-21-28</p>
        <p>ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OP PITT The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Benjamin R. Corey, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Administrator, OreenvUle, North Carolina, on or before May 8, 1963, or this</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN THE SUPERIOR COURT</p>
        <p>Georgia Bell Autry Kelly vs.</p>
        <p>William John Kelly</p>
        <p>To William John Kelly:</p>
        <p>TAKE NOTICE, that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above titled action, the nature of the </p>
        <p>DAILY REFLECTOR Classified Rates</p>
        <p>75e minimum charge for I lines or less for first Insertion.</p>
        <p>1 Day 25c  Per  Line  Per  Day</p>
        <p>4 Days22c  Per  Line  Per  Day</p>
        <p>7 Days20c  Per  Line  Per  Day</p>
        <p>Contract  Rates AvaUaUe</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY BATES $1.35 Per Column Inch, Open Rate Contract Rates Available CaU PL 2^6166 Por Further Informatlee DEADLINB No new ads, kills or corrections accepted after 3 p.m. the day before publication.</p>
        <p>ERRORS-OMISSIONS The Daily Reflector will be responsible only for the first incorrect or omitted insertion of any advertisement In these columns and then only to the extent of a make-good insertion. Ekrors which do not lessen the value of the advertisement will not be corrected by a make-good insertion. The publisher reserves the right to revise or reject any</p>
        <p>their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pajrment to the undersigned Administrator.</p>
        <p>This 5th day of November, 1062.</p>
        <p>Wachovia Bank. &amp;amp; Trust Co. GrecnviUe, fl. C. Administrator of the Estate of Benjamin R Corey, dccd L. W. Gaylord Jr., Atty.</p>
        <p>Nov. 7-14-21-28</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autoa For Salo</p>
        <p>Baeks Used Car Special</p>
        <p>1956 AUSTIN HEALEY Roadster with cloth and detachable hardtop.</p>
        <p>$75$</p>
        <p>BRIGHT LEAF MOTORS Across the River PL 8-2181</p>
        <p>1956 HILLMAN CONVERTIBLE.</p>
        <p>Hood needs attebtion. Reason selling: new car. Offers over $285. Owner, 105 S. Woodlawn Ave.</p>
        <p>Montb Specials</p>
        <p>1957 FORD FlOO Pickup, six cylinder with heater. Green Gnlsh.</p>
        <p>Jenkins Motor Co. til &amp;amp; Cotanohe St. PL 2-463$</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Female Help Wanted</p>
        <p>BUY 'TOP USED CAR VALUES LADY. BETWEEN 25-45, TO now at reduced winter prices, work on established insurance me high quality and guaran- debit in and around Ay den. Sal</p>
        <p>on safe buy used Wagner-Waldrop Motors.</p>
        <p>Twiay's Used Car Speelal</p>
        <p>1956 PONTIAC Stationwagon four door. Has automatic transmission, radio and heater.</p>
        <p>$695</p>
        <p>White Chevrolet</p>
        <p>cara^ary $260 per mmith or will give excellent commission and salary contract. Permanent and full time work. For interview, call PL 6-1681, Ayden between 8 and 9 a.m.. Box 395.</p>
        <p>1962 CHRYSLER, 300, POUR door hardtop for sale. Pull power and air conditioning. Low mileage. May be inspected at Atlantic Discount Corp., West End Circle.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>1956 FORD DUMP TRUCK. EX-ceUent condiUcm. CaU PL 8-2733 or PL 8-2269.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Male Help Wanted</p>
        <p>CARPENTERS. MUST BE GOOD craftsman for our home employment department. Need three crews Tuesday morning. Apply at office of Carolina Model Homes, 600 Memorial Dr., between 7:30 and 10 Tuesday morning. Ask for Allen Kennedy, construction manager.</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Male-Female</p>
        <p>SAVE MONET</p>
        <p>relief being sought is as follows: The plaintiff in this action seeks to recover an absolute uivorce from you on the grounds of two years separation. You are required to make defense to</p>
        <p>Order your ad to run 7 times; the cost is less per day. When you get desired results, call PL 2-6166 and stop the ad. You pay for only the number of days your ad actually appeared.</p>
        <p>1957 OLDS 98 IN VERY GOOD condition. Low mileage, power steering, power, brakes, air condition and new tires. If Interested, call. PL 8-1222.</p>
        <p>GeodwUl Used Car 1961 FORD 4 dr. 22,066 actual miles. One owner. Very clean and in excellent condition $1595</p>
        <p>Brown - Wood 1266 OleldnsoD Avs. t-YUI</p>
        <p>MEN AND WOMEN</p>
        <p>The largest expansion program In our history is in full swing. Openings for telephone survey, personal contact ladies, and sales people are now available. Excellent starting salaries as well as tremendous commissions for our sales people. Interviews now being held at Room 10, Tetter-ton Bldg., between the hours of 10 and 11:30 a.m. only.</p>
        <p>Female Help Wanted</p>
        <p>1940 MODEL FORD TW' DOOR.</p>
        <p>In perfect mechanical condition. Write Ford. Box 406, Oty.</p>
        <p>1960 FORD 4-door Galaxie. Red finish. Radio, heater and Fordomat-ie drive,</p>
        <p>$1495</p>
        <p>Jimmy Cox Motor Co. West End Circle 752-2506</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OP-erator, willing to work, will pay salary and commission. Call PL</p>
        <p>2-5212.</p>
        <p>Maida For New York Many Needed$35-$55 Week Free room, board, nniforms, TV. Guaranteed jobs in heart of New York and New Jersey. Fare advanced. DIX AGENCY, 249 West 34th St., New York.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Miscellaneoua For Sale !</p>
        <p>Awnings, storm windows, doors, t creens, Venetian blinds, porch' enclosures, paints, hardware. i roofing and siding materials. No down payment, three years to I pay.</p>
        <p>C. L. Lnpton C. **0 Comfor&amp;lt; is our business.* PL 2-2225</p>
        <p>For Real Estate &amp;amp; Insarance Of All Types, See</p>
        <p>BENNETT &amp;amp; MESSICA Real Estate Agency L312 Dickinson Ave. PL 8-1444</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>HIGGS ST. - POUR ROOM newly painted apartment. Piped for automatic washer. Close to (school. Dial PL 2-4788.</p>
        <p>FOUR ROOM APARTMENT.</p>
        <p>Good location. Also three bedroom comfortable country home</p>
        <p>______  _  ,  near Winterville. Four room</p>
        <p>rrn&amp;lt;?F.nTiT op imported NICE 75 ACRE FARM LOCAT- apartment in WintervlUe. Pres-Dutch b^bs Tulips ^^geas^ ed next to WITN-TV tower. 6 ton Corey, PL 2-5755, Corey Real-and d5foSff.*H!^ U  tobacco.; ^ acres com ty Co.. 313 Evans St.</p>
        <p>px 2-4156  I  Contact  Mrs. Jack Tucker, Grif-</p>
        <p>-^----------Iton, N. C.</p>
        <p>COREYS HARDWARE - ALL ---------</p>
        <p>types of heaters, stove pipes |</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>and elbows, furaanw filters ^'poR SAli BY OWNER: AT-</p>
        <p>Farms For Rent</p>
        <p>us for the best price. Colonial Heights. PL 2-6156.</p>
        <p>COMMISSION SALESMAN WANTED</p>
        <p>The worlds oldest and largest builder of Shell and Semi-Finish homes has openings in the fidlowlng areas: Green-vHle, Jacksonville, New Bern, Kinston, Morehead City, and Washington, N. C.</p>
        <p>If you are now employed in this type sales, check the advantages we offer: top commission, car allowances, company benefits, 12 year finance, all inside materials furnished or installed. Prefer men with experience in Shell and Semi-Finish homes. Apply daily Nov. 26-30, Or write p. O. Pox 1503, New Bern, Jim Walter Homes Corp., Hwy. 70 West, New Bern.</p>
        <p>WE ARE SALES AND SERr not representatives to Greenville for Westlngbouae washers and dryers. Smith EHectrlc Company. PL 2-2278.</p>
        <p>RESTORE YOUR CARPET* beauty. Guaranteed cleaning service by professional rug tleaners. CaO Browns Funlturs PL 8-2244</p>
        <p>tractive six room house with two car garage near college. Call PL 2-2050 or PL 2-4342.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOMS. TWO baths, elecUic kitchen, air conditioning, large lot, family room with fireplace. Greenville Blvd. Bill Williams, J. Hicks Corey Agcy., PL 2-2615.</p>
        <p>NEW EMERSON TV transistor radios and phono-</p>
        <p>NEW BRICK VENEER HOME.</p>
        <p>three bedrooms, \Vz baths, large lot, no down payment, no clos-SEUS, Ing cost. Call PL 8-2711 after 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>FARM 62 ALLOTMENTS-TO-bacco, 6.62; cotton, 5; com 20. Must furnish own equipment. See M. B. Jones, Farmville, N.C. Telephone SK 3-3421.</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>SIX ROOM COUNTRY HOUSE.</p>
        <p>Lights and running water. CaU PL 2-7848 at night or see EUis Adams, Rt. 3, Box 388, Greenville^_</p>
        <p>Housetrailers For Rent</p>
        <p>S.  *  17'FOR SALE BY BUILDER. NEW</p>
        <p>Shop, 917 8-2436.</p>
        <p>Dickinson Ave. PL</p>
        <p>PIANO, BEDSPREAD, DINING suite. Can be seen at 311 West Fifth St., GreenvlUe, or call PL 2-5213.</p>
        <p>Expert Service</p>
        <p>CLIFF Says . . .</p>
        <p>We specialize In Builders HardwareFrench Provincial, Colonial, Modem, Contemporary Designs. Let us assist you on your home or bnild-Ing. 1461 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>DO YOU NEED ANY EXPERT plastering done In your home or business? If so, call B. W, Johnson, plaster contractor, PL 8-1672, or see at 617 Clark St.</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE SALE. HALF COL-Ue puppies, $10. D. W. Mosier, phone PL 2-4345 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>SOMETHING NEW FOR VINYL and other hard surface floors.</p>
        <p>WANTED:  ELDERLY  WHITE</p>
        <p>lady to live in home as family for working lady and crippled brother. SmaU salary, no children.. Phone day PL 2-7157; night PL 8-2200.</p>
        <p>fiC</p>
        <p>pi</p>
        <p>uovguv, 1 f</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>&amp;lt;1?</p>
        <p>ITS RICKS SERVICE CENTElRjSeal Gloss ends frequent waxing.</p>
        <p>(comer 9th and Evans St.) foriBelk-Tylers. one stop auto service. Try usi --7-7,^ for the quality you desire. GOOD USED B-FLAT CLARI-</p>
        <p>net. Recently overhauled. Cheap. CaU PL 2-2088 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>three bedroom house, two baths, living room, kitchen-den combination, fireplace in den. Located in new subdivision. Telephone 758-2573.</p>
        <p>TWO HOUSETRAILERS FOR rent  one has one bedroom; the other, two bedrooms, CaU or see J. T. Williams, PL 2-5678 or PL 2-5822.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER-LARGE seven room, 2265 sq. ft, three bedrooms, two full baths, kitchen (21 X 12 ft.), built-in appliances, den, dining room, (french aoors), marble fireplace. Wooded lot, large expandable attic, walking distance to schools. Reasonably priced. Seen by appointment. CaU Joseph A. Lughes, PL 2-4531.</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOM HOUSE Located two blocks from coUege in CoUege View. On large comer lot. House Is two story, fully air cwiditioned with two complete tUe baths. For appointment, caU Day PL 2-7157 or night FL 2-7209.</p>
        <p>ARE YOU SATISFIED WITH your fuel bill? Let us help you</p>
        <p>by InstaUing storm windows and ,  miA/reFR  r&amp;gt;F</p>
        <p>doors or weatherstripping. CaU A LIMITED NUMBER OF PINE</p>
        <p>Woodrovlr Tew, day PL 2-6755; night PL 8-1390.</p>
        <p>AUTO LOANS</p>
        <p>Atlantic Discount</p>
        <p>Wert End Orel*</p>
        <p>ARE YOU SATISFIED WITH your fuel biU? Let us help you by installing storm windows and doors or weatherstripping. CaU Woodrow Tew, day PL 2-6755; night PL 8-1390.</p>
        <p>trees. 25 cents each. Come and get them. Mrs. Leota J. Tyson at Woodside Antique. Phone PL 2-6686.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE  ONE NEW BRICK house with V/z baths, 1600 sq. ft. Priced to seU. Down payment. $1000, balance financed with no closing cost. CaU PL 8-1222.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM BRICK home. Price reduced. Contact David Pringle. PL 2-3691 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON FIVE ROOM HOUSE, LARGE</p>
        <p>Goodyear Tires than on any other kind and have for 47 years. Your Goodyear Tire Hadquar-</p>
        <p>heating hall, floor furnace, bath, front and back porch. WiU accept sealed bids by Nov. 24, 12 noon.</p>
        <p>ters in GreenvUle  Gammon Contact W. P. Pope, Jr., pastor.</p>
        <p>Supply Co.</p>
        <p>TV TROUBLES?</p>
        <p>We specialize in speedy, de-</p>
        <p>POINTERS AND SETTERS.</p>
        <p>Broke and unbroke, one wheel trailer 360 degree swivel with dog box. Priced to seU, see anytime after 5:30 p.m. at Shelmerdine, Eddie Bennett, Rt. 2, Box 360. GreenvUle, N. C.</p>
        <p>Church .of God. 1900 Myrtle Ave. Phone PL 2-4967.</p>
        <p>Money to Loan</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM HOUSE WITH large family roon, buUt-ta kitchen-ceramic tUe bath-carpet In Uv-ing room. Ideal for smaU family. Contact owner, PL 8-1688 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Resorts For Sale</p>
        <p>pendable TV repair. Reliable TV FOR QUICK CONFTDEJNTTAL WATERF'KONT HOME  POR</p>
        <p>For Lease</p>
        <p>Sales &amp;amp; Service, Hwy. 264 and  Loans from $20-$600 on furni-N.C. 43. Phone PL 2-3972.  ture, autos, contact Provident</p>
        <p>--------  Finance Co., 515 Dickinson Ave.,</p>
        <p>RADIO, TV AND STEREO RE- . pL 2-3660.</p>
        <p>pair. Get the best at Sherrods Electronic Repair, opposite Res-pess Bros. 752-5567.</p>
        <p>servicers'OUR BUSINESS.</p>
        <p>See us regularly for Texaco Products. Carr AUen Texaco Station (next door to the Post Office,)</p>
        <p>J. F. BOWEN</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>YEAR TERM HOME LOAN</p>
        <p>AvailsMe in Ayden, Bethel, Farmville, GreenvUle, Grlfton FHA, GI and Conventional Bowen BIdff. tU W. 5th Si</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE NEXT TO THE NEW Hollowells Drug Store,</p>
        <p>ideal location for offices or busi- ____________</p>
        <p>ness. 2500 sq. ft. floor space plus gRIE RENTAL AGENCY FOR</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>2000 ft. parking space. Fronts on Dickinson Ave, and rear. BuUd-Ing buUt to suit tenant. Contact C. H. Edwards. Jr.. PL 2-4973.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Household Supplies</p>
        <p>jale at Glen Haven, about five mUes easw of Washington, on the north side of the PamUco. This Is a spacious one story bcxxie. with heating system, located on a nicely landscaped lot. Henry C. Harding. Realtor. WH 6-2444. Washington. N. C.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>ONE FURNISHED BEDROOM apartment. Real attractive and convenient, private entrance, close in. Couple preferred. Phone PL 8-1436.</p>
        <p>UNFURNISHED SIX ROOM apartment with bath. Plumbed</p>
        <p>best deals in Rentals. Office  at 205 East 3rd Street. PL 2-5700. for automatic washer. Private Closed all day Wednesday. 'front and back entrances. See Mrs.</p>
        <p>10. H. Forrest, WintervlUe, N. C., telephone PL 8-1029.</p>
        <p>CARPETS CLEAN EASIER WITH the Blue Lustre Electric Sham-pooer wUy $1 per day. Belk-Ty-lers.</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES LOW PRIC-esNew 1963 Roycraft 50 x 10 ft. two bedrooms, front kitchen $4295; new 1963 Richardson 50 X 10 ft. two bedrooms, center kitchen, front bedroom. $4295; 1958 Castle 41 ft. two bedrooms, excellent condition. $2396. Trailer can be financed with small down payment. Roanoke TraUer Sales, Welden Hwy., Roanoke Rapids, N. C. Dealer No. 2801. Phone 536-4347.</p>
        <p>NICE DARK BROWN LONG winter coat for sale, size 9. Ex-ceUent condition. Used only a few months. Price when new $55, Price $20. Phone PL 8-2733 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>40 Used Desks, $25 ap; Used Office Chairs. $5 up; New 4 Drawer Letter Files, $394)5 up.</p>
        <p>TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT COMPANY PL 2-2175</p>
        <p>D. G. NICHOLS AGENCY</p>
        <p>For Complete Real Estate Listings &amp;amp; Mutual Insurance PL 2-4585  PL  2-4012</p>
        <p>Classified Display</p>
        <p>BEFORE BUILDING OR BUY-ing a home, contact Van D. Hatch Construction Co. We build, buy and sell anywhere. Phone PL 6-4646 day or night, Ayden.</p>
        <p>Classified Display</p>
        <p>NEED COAL?</p>
        <p>If You Want The Best Call</p>
        <p>Bells Coal &amp;amp; Oil Company</p>
        <p>Guyan Eagle -</p>
        <p>Scarlet Flame Red Ash</p>
        <p>Dial PL 2-2975 GreenvUle</p>
        <p>SPECIAL VALUES In Used Oil and Coal HEATERS</p>
        <p>Furniture Exchange m Dlektoson Ave.</p>
        <p>PL 8-tlt1</p>
        <p>ONE TWO BEDR(X)M FURNISH-ed housetrailer for rent. Privately parked. WaU to waU carpet, concrete patio, with awning. Walled in underneath and air conditioned. Phone PL 2-3855.</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>NICE COMFORTABLE. QUIET rooms for rent to working men. Air conditioned. Plenty of parking tpace. Telephone PL 2-6734.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Rent</p>
        <p>MOVING?</p>
        <p>larkeef ;-RUCK RENTALS</p>
        <p>Nrtsons Texaeo Stotlse Near Hospital</p>
        <p>SchoolsInstruct iom</p>
        <p>READING IMPR0VT5MENTS R ledial, speed. Study skills, Indiv. &amp;amp; group mst. All levels. 'The Reading Clinic. 207 B. OUi St., after 12.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL I N S T R U &amp;gt; tion on all instruments for adults. Classes begin January 1. Ask about our rental, instruction plan. Music Arts, phone PL 8-2530.</p>
        <p>Special Notices</p>
        <p>HOTEL GREENVILLE. 618 Dickinson Ave., daily rates $2.50 up. Reasonable weekly rates. Permanent guests, spfeclal rates. J. L. Howard, manager.</p>
        <p>Wanted</p>
        <p>WANTED: 50.000 LBS. PECANS.</p>
        <p>Let me see them before you sell. Vance Overton, Overtons Super Mkt.</p>
        <p>WANTED: CHILDREN TO KEEP in my home. All day or any hours. Can give reference. Call PL 8-1911 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>HICKORY. ELM, BEECH, COT-t&amp;lt;m Gum and other Hardwooda Standing Timber. Also buying Pine and Cypress Timber. Would also Uke to buy Pecky Cypress Logs and Green or Dry Pecky Cypress Lumber. Wl pay top market prices.' Beasley Lumber Products, Phone 7A 8-5801, Seot-Irnd Neck, N. C.</p>
        <p>Classified Display</p>
        <p>Clinton Chain Saws</p>
        <p>414 to 6 hp engine</p>
        <p>Sales Se Service</p>
        <p>Hendrix-Barnhill Co.</p>
        <p>GENERAL PAVING COMPANY</p>
        <p>Asphalt--Conereto Zack Taft  Robert  Taft</p>
        <p>262-6797  768-2827</p>
        <p>Red Coward Motor Grader Operator PL 2-5994 P.O. Box 224</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>PECANS! PECANS! ANNOUNCEMENT PECAN GROWERS</p>
        <p>Want to buy 56,060 lbs. ot pecans. Small or Urge. Will pay top price. New Greenville Fruit Market, 710 Dickinson Ave. Located in front of Home Furniture Store. SeU with a man with 23 years experience.</p>
        <p>J, B, Creech Owner and Manager</p>
        <p>PIANO. HAVE PURCHASED OR-gan, piano must go. Call Virginia Taylor, PL 2-2741 for details._____</p>
        <p>NICE COUNTRY SMOKED i hams, oak and hickory, around 1 year old. 12-14 lbs. Phone PL 2-6472, P. W. Majette, Grimes-land, N. C. ___ _</p>
        <p>MAPLE COFFEE TABLE, TWO-end tables. Call 752-6265.</p>
        <p>PANSY PLANTS  STEELES Jumlao, mixed colors. Doz 39 cents-100 $2^5. THREE GUYS FROM DIXIE, 629 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>NEW AND USED PIANOS -terms, rentals, tuning and repairs. Music Arts, 318 Evans St., phone PL 8-2530.</p>
        <p> Puppiee  Hamsters</p>
        <p> Birds  Guinea Pigs</p>
        <p> Monkeys  Other Pets</p>
        <p>BILL &amp;amp; JOES</p>
        <p>PET SHOP</p>
        <p>310 Jarvis St. PL 2-7238</p>
        <p>Let Us Prepare And Fumigate Your Tobacco Plants Bed For You!</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>We do a complete job of preparation, fertilization at prices you can afford. New covers left on all your beds, all work guaranteed. Call us for details and prices.</p>
        <p>HENDRIX-BARNHILL CO.</p>
        <p>TELEPHONE PL 2-4122</p>
        <pb facs="00089201_0010" />
        <p>Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C*^Wednesday, November 21, 1962</p>
        <p>Roast Turkey Is On Their Menu</p>
        <p>RAUQGH (AP) ~ (MCDA) </p>
        <p>Bog prices mostly steady to 25 Ugber. Tops of 16^18.15 Wilson;</p>
        <p>17JO-18 Rocky Mount; 17-18 Gas- Lance Inc. tie Hayne. Nahunta; 16.75-18 Kin- Life &amp;amp; Casualty</p>
        <p>Trans. Gas Travelers Life Wachovia Bank</p>
        <p>ston. New Bern, Bosson, Mrnint ^ve. Newton Grove. Albertsoo; 17J5-17.75 Smithfield; 17 - 17J0 Pembroke; 16.75-17 Spring Hope; 18 Tarboro, Enfield, Scotland Neck. Murfreesboro, Roberson-vilk; 17.75 Bethel, Rich Square. Clinton, Fayetteville, 31zabeth-town. Pink HiU; 17.50 Greensboro; 17 J5 Goldsboro; 17 S i 1 e r City.</p>
        <p>Wilson cash cattle prices steady: Steers and heifers, chrrfoe 1^28, good 23-26, standards 19-23; beef cows 14.50-17, canners and cutters 12-14.50; light buHs 13-16, heavy bulls 16J0-18J0.</p>
        <p>Life of Va.</p>
        <p>LU General Stores Peninsular Life Piedmont Aviation</p>
        <p>23H 25V&amp;amp; 148  152</p>
        <p>34V 36^ 12% 13% 35% 37 116% 121 2 2% 27 SO 4%  4%</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-Noon stocks Prev.</p>
        <p>Cloae No&amp;lt;m</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  (NCDA)  North Carolina egg maiicets st^uly. Supplies barely adequate, to short, especially on mediums and smaUs. Demand good all fdzes. Prices paid producers for clean, undzed eggs cm a grade-yield basis, cases exchanged: Grade A large whites 45-46; medium, whites 32-33; small, whites 24-25.</p>
        <p>Adams Millis  liy</p>
        <p>Allied Ch .............</p>
        <p>The following bid and asked prices are obtained from the Na-tlGnal Association of Securhies Dealers, Inc., and other sources but are unofficial. They do not represent ac^al transacticms; they are intended as a guide to the approximate range within</p>
        <p>which these securities could have been sold (indicated by the 'Bid) or bought (indicated by the Asked) at the time of compilation.</p>
        <p>Ortgin of any quotaticxis will be furnished upon request. Description  Bid  Asked</p>
        <p>Allied Security Life 8%  9%</p>
        <p>Carolina Casualty Carolina Natl Gas Carolina Tel &amp;amp; Tel Colonial Stores Drexel JESnterprises Franklin Life Gulf Life Insurance tDJSJL</p>
        <p>Jackson Minit Mkts.</p>
        <p>Jefferson Std. Life Pie(bnont Natl Gas Psrramkl Life Security life &amp;amp; Tr</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4V4</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>22%</p>
        <p>93</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>194</p>
        <p>6%</p>
        <p>75%</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>15%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>95%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>203</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>6%</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>Colored News</p>
        <p>The Matron Club will meet, at the home of Mrs. Sue Harper, 1407 Washington St., tonight at 8 oclock.</p>
        <p>The Northeast Old Original Free Will Baptist Conference will have a special meeting Friday at Selvia Chapel FWB Church. Sessions will begin at 11 a.nL and the Rev. H. C. Randolph is moderator.</p>
        <p>Services will be held at Holly Hill PWB Church Thursday 4t 11 am. The Rev. Sister Lillian Harris will be the speaker. *1116 Sunshine Band will present the program for the .evening services.</p>
        <p>A Thanksgiving service win be held at Arthur Chapel FWB Church Thursday at 11 a.m. with the sermon by the pastor.</p>
        <p>The foUowlng services have been annoimced by the Rev. W. L. Jones, pastor of Mt. Calvary FWB Church, to be held during the remainder of the week: tonight. official board meeting: Friday night, quarterly conference; Saturday night. Holy Oommunlon, sermon by the BatUe Mae Cobb; Sunday at 11 ajn., sermon by the pastor; at 3 pjn., sermon by the Rev. J. P. McLaurin; and Sunday night, sermon by the Rev. Stephen Jones, music by the Haddock Chapel Choir.</p>
        <p>The Senior Ushers of Sycamore HUl Baptist Church will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at the home of Luke Chance, 411-B Hudson St, for a business meeting.</p>
        <p>AYDEN-Mrs. Felloe B. Garris was honored at a bridal shower given by her co-workers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. David Braxton here Thursday night Her marriage to Christopher Garris Sr. took place Nov. 17. Mrs. Garris is a teacher at Orlfton Elementary School and he is the former Mrs. Felice M. Bryant</p>
        <p>The Mothers Club of Dudley Heights will meet Thursday at 8 pjn. at the Coramimlty Center. All of the old mothers are asked to attend.</p>
        <p>The Home Mission Club of Orimesland will meet tonight at 8 oclock at the home of Mrs. Juanita Johnson, 1310 Mill St</p>
        <p>Meadowbrook</p>
        <p>TONITF ONLY BANKO</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>SEVnWJHS</p>
        <p>IMMSUM</p>
        <p>COLOR</p>
        <p>ud^eMURPHYB^^jSUlUVAN</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>ORIVE-IN THEATRE ENDS</p>
        <p>THIS YCAirS MO EXCITEMENT MOTION MCTUNEt</p>
        <p>Ha^amaiig</p>
        <p>AlUs&amp;lt;Jl*l ............14%</p>
        <p>Am Can Co ..........44</p>
        <p>Am Enka ............54%</p>
        <p>Am Motors .........17%</p>
        <p>Am Tel &amp;amp; Tel.........113</p>
        <p>Am Tob ..............28%</p>
        <p>Atch T&amp;amp;SP ..........24</p>
        <p>Atl Coast Line .........43%</p>
        <p>AU Refilling ..........47</p>
        <p>Avco Cp ..............23%</p>
        <p>Balt &amp;amp; O .............24%</p>
        <p>Bendlx Corp .........54%</p>
        <p>Beth SO ..............08%</p>
        <p>Boeing Air ...........42%</p>
        <p>Borden Co ..........48%</p>
        <p>Burl Ind .............24</p>
        <p>Burroughs Corp .....28%</p>
        <p>Caro P&amp;amp;L ........... 55V4</p>
        <p>Celanese (Torp ....... 357ii</p>
        <p>Chain Belt ..........33%</p>
        <p>Champion :&amp;amp;P  ...... 25%</p>
        <p>Ches &amp;amp; Ohio ........ 58's</p>
        <p>CHirysler ............ 68%</p>
        <p>Coca-Cola ........... 78</p>
        <p>Columbia G&amp;amp;E ...... 24%</p>
        <p>Coml Credit ......... 42</p>
        <p>Con Ed ............. 77%</p>
        <p>Com Prods .......... 47%</p>
        <p>Curtiss Wrt .......... 18%</p>
        <p>Dan Rlv Mins ....... 12%</p>
        <p>Douglas Aire ........31</p>
        <p>Dow Cliem .......... 55%</p>
        <p>DuPraitdeN ..........229</p>
        <p>East Airl ........... 21%</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>114%</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>79%</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>Roast turkey will be on the Thanksgiving Day menu for residents of the County Home and fcH* prisoners lodged around Oreraivllle and Pitt County.</p>
        <p>Like most everybody else, they will all have the traditional turkey with all the trimmings, with meals being prepcu-ed in kitchens of the various institutionsexcept at the city Jail.</p>
        <p>Over 1,500 Attend 4-H Achievement Day</p>
        <p>Major R. T. R&amp;lt;^erson of the Greenville Police Department said he hoped to have an empty jail. If there should be any prisoners, they will get a Thanksgiving meal about 5:39 or 6 oclock tomorrow aftemooo ordered from a local restaurant..</p>
        <p>The County Home menu, announced by Supt. Horace Q. Hardee, includes turkey stuffing and gravy along with creamed potatoes, snap beans, cranberry sauce, corned ham, baked corn bread and tea. Potato pie is the choice for dessert At the N.C. Prison Camp located near Greenville, residents will be served turkey, dressing and gravy with snap beans, mashed potatoes, hot rolls, peach jam, coffee and chocolate cake for dessert.</p>
        <p>County jail prisoners will also get the same turkey and trimmings meal with cranberry sauce and varied vegetables.</p>
        <p>little Jmpact For N.C. Seen In Kennedy Order</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCUTED PRESS President Kennedys executive order relating to discrimination in housing where the federal govern ment is Involved apparently will have no immediate or violent results in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The order actually points up policy in effect since 1950, but</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>31% 56% 229% 21%</p>
        <p>Eastman Kod .......100% 103%</p>
        <p>Firestrae Rub ....... 33%  33</p>
        <p>Ford Motor ......... 45  45%</p>
        <p>Gen Elec ............ 72%  72%</p>
        <p>Gen Foods .......... 70%</p>
        <p>Gen Mot ............54%</p>
        <p>Gen Tel &amp;amp; Tel .......21%</p>
        <p>Gerb Prod .......... 50%</p>
        <p>Goodrich B F .......42</p>
        <p>Goodyear T&amp;amp;R ......32</p>
        <p>Greyhound .......... 30</p>
        <p>Gulf OU Corp ........ 35%</p>
        <p>Int Nickel Can ......60%</p>
        <p>71%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>Traffic Toll</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  The Motor Vehicles Departments tally of highway deaths and injuries for the 24-hour period ending at 10 a.m. today:</p>
        <p>Killed .................... 2</p>
        <p>Injured (rural) ............. 13</p>
        <p>Killed this year ............ 1,148</p>
        <p>Killedt 0 date last year 1,058</p>
        <p>G. A. Crawford, Jr. Dies During Night</p>
        <p>should have more bearing oa builders using federal funds, rather than real estate men in general.</p>
        <p>CTiarles Enin, president of Ervin Construcit(Hi Co. in Charlotte, the largest home builder in the South, said of the order signed Tuesday:</p>
        <p>I dont believe there will be a noticeable effect. The Presidents order, which has been expected all along by the industry, merely underlines federal requirements that have been In effect since 1950. John Crosland. president of Crosland Co., another large Charlotte builder, said, I really drat think this is going to affect us too much in Charlotte, unless a lot test cases are made. That could slow the largest builders.</p>
        <p>The President told his news conference that the order directs federal departments and agen-</p>
        <p>Int Tel &amp;amp; Tel ........</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>Kayser-Roth .......</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>Kenct Ck)p .........</p>
        <p>, 69%</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>Liggett &amp;amp; Ms^rs ...</p>
        <p>. 68</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>Lockh Air ..........</p>
        <p>. 49%</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>Lorillard P ........</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>Martin - Marietta ...</p>
        <p>. 22%</p>
        <p>22%</p>
        <p>McLean Trt .......</p>
        <p>.. 9</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>Mcmsanto ...........</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>Montg Ward .......</p>
        <p>31%</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>Motorola ...........</p>
        <p>57</p>
        <p>57%</p>
        <p>Nat Biscuit .........</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>Nat Dairy Pd ......</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>Natl Distillers ......</p>
        <p>, 23</p>
        <p>23=4</p>
        <p>NY Central .........</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>Norf &amp;amp; West .....</p>
        <p>101</p>
        <p>101</p>
        <p>No Am Avia ........</p>
        <p>65%</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>Param Piet ........</p>
        <p>. 37%</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>Penney J C ........</p>
        <p>4I</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>Pennsy RR ........</p>
        <p>. 12%</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>Pepsi-Ctola .........</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>Phillips Petr .......</p>
        <p>47i's</p>
        <p>4634</p>
        <p>Pure 0 ...........</p>
        <p>, 33%</p>
        <p>33^8</p>
        <p>Radio Corp ........</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>Rep Stl ............</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>35341</p>
        <p>Reynolds Tob ......</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>Seabd Airl .........</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>31% i</p>
        <p>Sears Roebuck .....</p>
        <p>73%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>Sou Railway .......</p>
        <p>. 52%</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>Sperry Corp .......</p>
        <p>. 12%</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>Std Brands .........</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>62%</p>
        <p>Std OU Calif .......</p>
        <p>, 58%</p>
        <p>58%</p>
        <p>Std OU Ind .........</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>Std OU NJ .........</p>
        <p>54T</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>Stevens J P ........</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>Texaco Inc .........</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>55^8</p>
        <p>Textron Inc ........</p>
        <p>2634</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>UnicHi Bag .........</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>Un Carbide ........</p>
        <p>101%</p>
        <p>100%</p>
        <p>Union Pac .........</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>United Airlines .....</p>
        <p>. 30%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>United Aircr ........</p>
        <p>. 523i</p>
        <p>534</p>
        <p>United Fruit .......</p>
        <p>.. 21%</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>US Rubber .........</p>
        <p>. 39%</p>
        <p>3934</p>
        <p>US SU ..............</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>Va-Caro Chem ......</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>Va El &amp;amp; Pow ......</p>
        <p>, 57%</p>
        <p>58</p>
        <p>W Va. P&amp;amp;P ........</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>Western Md ........</p>
        <p>. 17%</p>
        <p>17^8</p>
        <p>West Union ........</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>Westing El ........</p>
        <p>, 31</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>Winn-Dixie .........</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>Woolworth .........</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>65%</p>
        <p>Zenith Rad .........</p>
        <p>. 50%</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>SIX ARRESTS</p>
        <p>Mr. George Albert Crawford Jr., 22, of 804 West Fifth Street, i onf.fu' died 'Tuesday night at 11 oclock.</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Mr. Cravford, son of George Albert and Laura Rasberry Crawford of Greenville, was a native of Pitt County and had spent most of his life in Greenville. He was graduated from Rose High School in 1958. He served in the United States Army from June 1958 to June 1961 and was in Germany for two years. After receiving his discharge he attended East Carolina College and for the past five months had been employed by Carolina Dairies as an assistant supervisor. He was a member of St. Peters Catholic Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his parents; a brother. Al-C Robert P. Crawford of the U.S. Air Force, now stationed at Offurt Air Force Base in Nebraska; two sisters,</p>
        <p>Mrs. W. C. Butler of Greenville and Mrs. Kenneth Jones of</p>
        <p>cies to take every proper and legal action to prevent discrimina-tioQ in the sale or lease of housing facilities owned or operated by the federal government, housing constructed or sold as a result of loans or grants to be made by the federal government and under renewal pr(rams.</p>
        <p>Since 1950 should a Negro desire to buy a house in a sub development where the builder has used federal funds or Insurance, all he need to is make'his down payment.</p>
        <p>Likewise, there is nothing to prevent Negroes from obtaining FHA or VA loans for housing in white areas.</p>
        <p>But few Negroes have sought to buy In white neighborhoods in the</p>
        <p>executive vice president of the North Carolina Associatkm of Realtors, said the new order like-Uy wrait afiect realtors, who act as agents for home sellers.</p>
        <p>He said there apparently was fear in some minds that the NAACP is going to try to force the issue in white neighbortioods. This is possibly unfounded. he said.</p>
        <p>A mortgage broker pointed out the non discriminatory cliauses have l(g been contained in government contracts, including FHA and VA commitments.</p>
        <p>Man Sentenced To Road Term</p>
        <p>James Bichsel of Greensboro,</p>
        <p>Report Loss In Store Break-In</p>
        <p>Approximately $12 In change and merchandise was reported missing from Gardner and Brinson Store near Chicod. School following discovery of a break-in.</p>
        <p>Sheriff Duke Andrews said the intruders broke a front door glass to gain entrance. The store is located on N.C. 43 south east of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Investigation is underway.</p>
        <p>Street Paving Job Completed</p>
        <p>A 12-month road sentence was meted out in Pitt County Superior Court Tuesday to a Route 1, Washington man charged with multiple counts of breaking, entering and larceny.</p>
        <p>Clarence Allen Ball, 35, pleaded guflty to three counts of breaking, entering and larceny and a single charge of larceny before Judge Rudolph I. Mines prescribed the 12-month sentence.</p>
        <p>In a companion case, a Pitt County man, Joseph Vick, Route 1, Box 151, Grimesland, pleaded guilty to similar charges and received a 12-month term suspended upon payment of costs and conditions he return stolen items to the owners. Vick was also placed on probation for five years.</p>
        <p>Lillie Mae Darden Payton, Grifton Negro, was fined $200 and taxed with court costs after she waived indictment and pleaded guilty to drunken driving charges. The fine and costs and a condition that she violate no state-or federal law for three years were conditions for suspending a six-month prison sentence.</p>
        <p>A Greenville Negro, Louis Harper, 50,  1405 Clark St.,</p>
        <p>pleaded guilty to illegal whiskey charges and received an eight-month prison term suspended upon his payment of $200 and costs and the condition that he violate no state or federal laws for three years.</p>
        <p>A Wake County man, Arthur Wake Brady, 44, of Route 2, Wake ' Forest, pleaded guilty to speeding charges and was ordered to pay costs.</p>
        <p>Money Stolen During Break-In</p>
        <p>FARMVHiLB Approximately 1,680 'Negro i-BTera and their leaden attended the annual Achievement Day program held here yesterday at H. B. Sugg High School, with Dr. J. W. Pou as guest iq&amp;gt;eaker.</p>
        <p>Dr. Pou, of the Wachovia Bank Sc Trust Co. Agricultural Department in Greenville, used as his subject To Make the Best Better. He was introduced by Walter^ Council, Bethel senior 4-H Club member.</p>
        <p>Theme for the annual observance was Today Decides Tomorrow."</p>
        <p>Dr. A. A. Best, Greenville physician, presented awards and certificates to numerous club members. County winners in leadership and project wort: were awarded gold pins and certificates.</p>
        <p>Recipients of health awards were Barbara Lock of Wlntcr-ville. Grade Mebane of Farm-villc, Benjamin Gorham of Stokes and Billie Garmon of Ay-den.</p>
        <p>Awards also were presented to the following:</p>
        <p>Canning  Oliva Jenkins and Ruby Dell Ross of Bethel 4-H Club;</p>
        <p>Clothing  Carolyn Suezette Brown of ParmvUle Sr.. Diann Worslcy of Bethel Jr. 4-H dub;</p>
        <p>Dairy PoodsZeddle Hardy of Bethel Sr. and Gloria Jean Roberson of Stokes Club;</p>
        <p>ElectricBarbara Avery and Bertha Avery, of Bethel Sr. and Jaspher Wooten of Ayden Jr. Club;</p>
        <p>Leadership  Amos Mills and Kaye Francis Wilson of Orimesland Sr., Annie Hall of Bethel Sr., Earl Tyson of Parmville Sr.;</p>
        <p>Pood Preparation  Jo Ann Phillips of Parmville 4-H, and Mary Perkins of Bethel Sr.;</p>
        <p>Home Improvement  Debra Ann Redden of Parmville;</p>
        <p>Dress Revue  Joyce Phillips of Parmville, Grade Mebane of Parmville, Gloria Buck of Grifton, Betty Rose Johnson of Parmville, Ethelene Hardy of Simpson, Kay Francis Wilson of Grimesland, Doris Cox and Linda Cannon of Winterville;</p>
        <p>Achievement  Doris Cox of Winterville.</p>
        <p>Other certificates and medals went to the following boys;</p>
        <p>Forestry  John Lee Crandell and Oliver Leary of Grimesland;</p>
        <p>Safety  Miles Wilson of</p>
        <p>The city of Wilmington contains more than half of the population of the state of Delaware.</p>
        <p>Grimesland;</p>
        <p>SwineBillie Thompson Fred Mills of Grimesland;</p>
        <p>Tractor maintenanceMcKin-ley Freeman, Thomas Council, Kelly Bnier Mills Flint Smith, John Hooks;</p>
        <p>Achievement  Robert Brown of Ayden Sr.;</p>
        <p>Club Agriculture  Stlttenous Hemby of Orimesland Sr.;</p>
        <p>Beef-Flint Smith, of Bethel Sr.;</p>
        <p>Dairy  Tyrone Hopkins of Grimesland, Walter Council Bethel;</p>
        <p>Field CropsPrank Anderson of Simpson,</p>
        <p>Certificates went to the following 4-H Clubs: Ayden Senior and Junior 4-H Club Bethel Senior and Junior 4-H Club, Bruce-Palkland Club, Parmville Senior and Junior Club, Grifton Club, Grimesland Senior and Jimior Club, Haddocks Club, Nichols Club, Sally Branch Club, Simpson Club, Stokes Club, Winterville Senior and Junior and Fountain.</p>
        <p>Fountain 4-H Club received the banner attendance award.</p>
        <p>Participating in the program were Johnny Rloherson student at H. B. Sugg High School, who made the welcoming remarks. Earl Tyson, 4-H Club Coimty</p>
        <p>I Council president, presided at and! the meeting.</p>
        <p>Others taking part Included Carolyn Suezett Brown, pianist; Miles Wilson of Orimesland, scripture; Annie Hall of* Bethel, prayer; Zeddie Hardy of Bethel Senior, summary of 4-H Achievements for 1962.</p>
        <p>A skit entitled A Helping Hand for Bill. written by Miles and Kay Francis Wilson was given by the Senior Club of Grimesland. Mary Langley and of Peggy Perskins, Bethel Senior 4-Hcrs, gave a talent number.</p>
        <p>No Word Yet On Aid Application</p>
        <p>AYDENNo word has been received here so far on Aydens application for $37.500 In feu-eral funds for water system improvements and installation )f a new well, Town Manager Cleveland Paylor said Tuesday.</p>
        <p>The application was filed under the Public Works Acceleration Act during the week of C.t. 22. Engineers have estimated cost of the improvements would total $75,000, with the graiH providing half, if it Is approved.</p>
        <p>We Own and Offer</p>
        <p>Subject To Prior Sale and Price Change</p>
        <p>200 ah. Duffy-Mott Co., Inc.Common</p>
        <p>200 ah. Lance, Inc.  Common</p>
        <p>300 sh. New Britain Machine Co.Common</p>
        <p>600 sh. Piedmont Aviation, Inc.Common</p>
        <p>300 ah. Piedmont Natural Gas Co., Inc.Common</p>
        <p>200 sh. Southern. Nitrogen Co., Inc.Common</p>
        <p>100 sh. Wachovia Bank &amp;amp; Trust Co.Capital</p>
        <p>27.08</p>
        <p>@</p>
        <p>13.50</p>
        <p>@</p>
        <p>20.50</p>
        <p>4.50</p>
        <p>14.00</p>
        <p>12.38</p>
        <p>@</p>
        <p>35.50</p>
        <p>For Confirmation, Call Nearest Office or Local Representative, Charges Collect</p>
        <p>CAROLINA SECURITIES</p>
        <p>CORPORATION</p>
        <p>INSURANCE BLDG.  RALEIGH, N.C.  PHONE TE 2-S711</p>
        <p>Charlotte......New York, N.Y.</p>
        <p>Members Midwest Stock Exchange Transactions On All Major Stock Exchanges Handled At Minimum Commission Ratea</p>
        <p>REPRESENTED JOHN T. CLARK, JR.</p>
        <p>146 Longmeadow Rd.</p>
        <p>IN THIS AREA BYt</p>
        <p>Greenville, N. C. Phone PLaza 2-5518</p>
        <p>GRIFTON  Paving of South Street, which extends from Highway 118 to the Grifton Elementary School, was completed on Friday, it was armounced this week.</p>
        <p>Access road funds were used</p>
        <p>AYDE  Local police reported six arrests, all for minor offenses, here during the past weekend. Chief of Police W. D. Brooks noted there had been no serious wrecks, fires or break-ins in Ayden during the past week.</p>
        <p>Greenville police reported a small amount of money was stolen from the Quality Eastern Oil Company building on Hooker Road by persons who broke into the firm overnight.</p>
        <p>Officers said  the break-in was</p>
        <p>reported about  6:10 a.m. Thieves</p>
        <p>gained entrance to the building DIVORCE GRANTED through a rear door, investiga-,  ,  ,,  ,,  . ,  ,  .  .  A divorce,  based  on  grounds  i tors reported.  They opened two</p>
        <p>ous mission  fields  which can  bejof two  years  separation,  was  desk drawers  and took drink</p>
        <p>seen prior to or after the ser- j granted Corrine H. Rodman | money from one.</p>
        <p>MISSIONARY FAIR AT CHURCH FRIDAY</p>
        <p>There wiU be a Missionary  project</p>
        <p>Pair at Mount Pleasant Christian Church Friday, at 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>There will be displays from vari-</p>
        <p>^  .  from  Wiley  Rodman  Monday  ini  Investigation  is  continuing  in</p>
        <p>Richard Gardiner, mmister ofpitt County Superior Court. ithe incident.</p>
        <p>the Zions Chapel Church of Christ, near Plymouth will speak i on the topic, "Missions In the I Local Church. The special feature of the evening will be the showing of a motion picture produced by the Christian Television Mission.</p>
        <p>The nationally known Vernon Brothers Quartet will appear and sing in the film.</p>
        <p>MOST INCREDIBLE TRUE STORY IN U.S. NAVY HISTORY!</p>
        <p>of</p>
        <p>THANKSGIVING SERVICE AT EPISCOPAL CHURCH</p>
        <p>A Thanksgiving Service Holy Communion will be celebrated at St. Pauls Church, Thursday morning at 8:00 a.m. The Rector will officiate. The offering for Thompson Orphanage in Charlotte will be taken at this time. This is an annual accounting by the Episcopal people of North Carolina to help with the work of the children.</p>
        <p>Of all the single-handed exploits of the war in the Pacific, none stirs the imagination more than the story of George Tweed, who made Navy history at Guam. One man alone, he fought the Japs underground for 31 bitter months, and paved the way for the Navy to re-take Guam. -</p>
        <p>THANKS-</p>
        <p>GIVING!</p>
        <p>Lets AH Give Our Thanks</p>
        <p>Many Blessings</p>
        <p>FAMILIES!</p>
        <p>FROM THE PAGES OF HISTORY COMES THE MIGHTIEST ADVEN-TURER OF THEM ALL!</p>
        <p>MARCO POLO</p>
        <p>SEE SPECTACLE BEYOND BELIEF IN GLORIOUS COLOR AND CINEMASCOPE ON THE GIANT SCREEN AT THE . . .</p>
        <p>Shows At 1:003:00 5:00-7:00 &amp;amp; 9:00</p>
        <p>IF ITS A BIG ONE YOULL SEE IT AT THE state GREENVILLES SHOWPLACE</p>
        <p> ENDS TONIGHT </p>
        <p>Fancy Pant BST*^HpeLucllle Ban</p>
        <p>  ,</p>
        <p>IN TECHNICOLOR  STARRING</p>
        <p>JEFFREY HUNTER marshall Thompson Features At 1:15-3:15-5:15-7::^ an^ 9:15</p>
        <p>PICK UP YOUR 1962 CHECKS And Join Our 1963 Christmas Club. You Can Set Your Own Goal and Easily Achieve It By Regular Weekly Payments</p>
        <p>Christmas 1963 WiU Be Merrier!</p>
        <p>STARTS</p>
        <p>THURSDAY</p>
        <p>Ends Tonite  In Color YUL BRYNNEB In</p>
        <p>MAGNIFICENT 7</p>
        <p>PITT</p>
        <p>THEATRE</p>
        <p>ADMISSION PRICES</p>
        <p>ADULTS ................ 65e</p>
        <p>CHILDREN .......... 25c</p>
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