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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0001" />
        <p>I .'1</p>
        <p>WEATHf</p>
        <p>InerfKiltiif cloudlncft and not ' M cold toflifht. and Wednaa-day.</p>
        <p>MUKI HOUSIWORK Ullllli , OiMk ClatsMM nfw Itr ^ buys In mm m mrn Mcnt.</p>
        <p>84th Year NO. 46</p>
        <p>ICEMBBR OF TRB AB80C1ATBD PRBM</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. C</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 23, 1965</p>
        <p>10 Pages Today</p>
        <p>Price 5</p>
        <p>Preparing For $450,000 Project</p>
        <p>Given UN Assignment</p>
        <p>Khdnh Agrees To Destroys Leave S. VietNam(e||ege</p>
        <p>PREPARING/ FOR EXPANSION . . . Jesse R. Moye (right) and O. E. Joyner, 1^ perial factoiy manager look on as workmen demolish loading and unloading docks</p>
        <p>lector Staff Photo)</p>
        <p>in preparatto^ for a $450,000 expansion at Imperial. (Re</p>
        <p>Tobacco Co. Will</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>Begin Expansion</p>
        <p>Construction is to begin this week on a 43,500 square feet addition to the Imperial Tobacco Company here, Branch Manager Jesse  R.  Moye  an</p>
        <p>nounced today.</p>
        <p>Workmen have already begun to remove the existing loading and unloading  docks at  the</p>
        <p>companys Atlantic Avenue plant to make way for the construction.</p>
        <p>Contract for  the  expansion</p>
        <p>wa.&amp;lt; awarded to Dickerson Inc. of Monroe, N C. for approximately $450.000. Work is to begin thus week and should be completed by July 15.</p>
        <p>The addition will come in the form of a two-story storage area which will be used to store green tobacco as well as redried tobacco.</p>
        <p>Moye, in making the announcement, said that the expansion would more than double the amount of tobacco handled by the export company.</p>
        <p>The present plant has about 190,000 square feet.</p>
        <p>Moye said that he anticipated that the expansion would lengthen the companys operation season. During the past year Imperial operated from late August until November 20, Moye said that the expansion will enable his company to operate from the first of August through January.</p>
        <p>The expansion will be used as added storage and will enable the plan to handle more tobacco, It will also have a drive-through loading and unloading dock. The overall project will Increase the daily production and will facilitate the shipping of re-dried tobacco from the Greenville branch.</p>
        <p>* Moye said that in addition to the expansion, an area 100 feet by 30 feet will be enclosed at the rear of the plant for added storage and the entire freight car loading platform at the rear of the building will be rebuilt.</p>
        <p>House Committee OKs Charlotte College Bill</p>
        <p>RALEIGH, ,N.C. (AP) - A bill to make Charlotte College a unit of the Consolidated University of North Carolina won the unanimous approval of the House Committee on Higher Education today.</p>
        <p>Later in the day. the Senate was to consider the measure.</p>
        <p>The committee also adopted an amendment to the bill allow-hiR rthe university to absorb Cliarlotte College as soon as the biH 4 enacted," instead of watt- -Ing until July 1 as stated in the original bill.</p>
        <p>Dr. A. K. King, UNC vice president in charge of institutional studies, said the present facilities at Charlotte College give us a 10-year start toward a good university branch In the area.</p>
        <p>Rep. Thomas Bunn of Wake asked if the states money could be better spent by pourlne it Into exi.stlng branches of UNC,</p>
        <p>Mecklenburg Rep. James B. "Vogler presented figures showing. the annual per-student cost at Charlotte College was $028, compared to $817 at Womans College In Greensboro $1,046 at Cliapcl Hill and. $1,077 at N. C. State.</p>
        <p>King said that the graduate and professional enrollment at UNC Is expected to Increase 306 per cent from 10.600 to 43.-100 In the 1%4.7,'i period He said undergraduate enrollment Is expected to lncrea.se 96.6 per cent.</p>
        <p>Because of the strong support given the bill when it was Introduced In the Senate Feb. 9, It la almo.5t certain to pass the second reading and, if there is no objectjpn from the floor, the third:'</p>
        <p>Sens. Martha Evans ano Irwin Belk of Mecklenburg both predicted* clear sailing for the</p>
        <p>bUllo the Senate.</p>
        <p>There is enthusiasm for this bill on both sidesin the House and in the Senate, Belk said.</p>
        <p>Belk said he was told by chancellor Paul F. Sharp at UNC In Chapel Hill there were 18,003 applications for only 2,600 places in next years freshman clftss</p>
        <p>Its things like this that show the university has to expand, Belk added.</p>
        <p>The bill was given a favorable-. reporL,by the Senate. Higher Education Committee minutes after a- public hearing on the proposal a week ago.</p>
        <p>Dr. William Archie, .state director of higher education, points out at the hearing that the states largest city and the heavily populated southern Piedmont had nine colleges but no university.</p>
        <p>Archie said the demands for a university campus in Charlotte came not from population pressure alone, but from a society growing more complex and needing graduate facilities for engineers, scientists, teachers and bank employes.</p>
        <p>Charlotte College was founded about 20 years ago. but only recently became a 4-year college. It graduates Its fir.st senior college' olas.s this June. It has about 1,515 .students, all commuters</p>
        <p>In Monday night's short se.s-.slon, Rep. Robert A. Collier Jr. of Iredell Introduced a bill to Increase the expense allotments (or members of state boards, commissions and committees from $12 to $20 a day wherever they travel.</p>
        <p>The current law allows an expense limit of $12 a day fo* the state board and commission members when traveling In the stafp and $14 a day for out-of-sUts travei,</p>
        <p>'j V"\ '  .</p>
        <p>Basic .S. Strategy Is Not Upset</p>
        <p>By JOHN M. HIGITrOWER AP Special Correspondent</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  the most profound political change in South Viet Nam in more than a year seems to hav been pulled off so far without upsetting basic U.S. strategy for the conduct of the war there against Communist forces.</p>
        <p>Amid signs that the struggle has reached a critical stage, marked by expanding military action and i?eace probings on both sides, U.S. officials are said to be glad that the revolt which resulted in Lt. Gen. Nguyen Khanhs ouster as South Viet Nams military strong man was not more damaging.</p>
        <p>Concern continued, however, over whether the Armed Forces Council, which removed Khanh, could now stablize the situation or whether the new regime would be harassed and destroyed by such familiar sources of Instability a dissident military leaders, disaffected students and politically powerful Buddhist priests.</p>
        <p>The United States, officials have made clear privately, will work with whatever government can effectively exercise power in Saigon from day to day. Officials here also insist that the United States was not behind the ouster of Khanh, who had held power since he seized control Jan. 30, 1964.</p>
        <p>Half a dozen eruptions"of political strife in Saigon during Khanhs period of supremacy had put a succession of governments Into office but his leadership persisted with more or less effectiveness for almost 13 months.</p>
        <p>His ouster by the council, which appointed MaJ. General Tran Van Minh as commander in chief Monday, distinguishes the present shakeup in Saigon from most of those which have gone.</p>
        <p>This element would be reversed If Khanh returned, but his rejection by Ws fellow generals after they had saved his position from a revolt Friday seemed unlikely to be overcome.</p>
        <p>For the moment, the political developments overshadowed signs that the war is expanding. Authdrities here said the seizure of a huge supply of Communist arms and ammunitlpn on the South Vietnamese coast Friday was evidence the Reds were preparing for a big effort of some kind.</p>
        <p>DALAT, South Viet Nam (AP) Lt. Oen. Nguyen Khanh, ousted as leader of South Viet Nam, said today he is going to the United Nations.</p>
        <p>In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press, he said: I am sad to be leaving my troops In wartime, especially at this critical period. But I shall continue serving my country in other ways. This war must be fought (m the diplomatic and political fronts as well as the military. I am now to be a roving ambassador.</p>
        <p>My first mission to the United Nations is to present the evidence of Viet Cong Infiltration we seized off the Communist ship on our coast last week. The former commander In chief of the armed forces was in civilian sporta clothes with his family at a mansion once used as President Ngo Dinh Diems country palace. He seemed tired but generally resigned to the lightning series of political and military moves over the weekend that ousted him from power.</p>
        <p>The official Viet Nam press announced In Saigon that Chief of State Phan Khac Suu had signed a decree naming Khanh a rovkig ambassador.</p>
        <p>As the Vietnamese military command continued Its political maneuvering, an American en</p>
        <p>listed man was killed Monday night when a Viet Cong terrorist threw a grenade into a command post 35 miles east of Saigon. He was the 276th UJ3. serviceman to die in action in Viet Nam since December 1961.</p>
        <p>Another American was serl- ously wounded In the incident. Nine other Americans were wounded in helic(HXer acticms and in an ambush of a Vietnamese column.</p>
        <p>The Armed Forces Council deposed Khanh over the weekend from command, of the armed forcea, apparently .^ending his 12^-month tenure as the countrys strongman. Khanh tried to rally support, then holed up in Dalat, the mountain resort 140 miles northeast of Saigon. There were indications he was balking at leaving the country.</p>
        <p>Three members oi the Armed Forces Council visited Khanh in Dalat Monday and apparently obtained his agreement to go. The official Viet Nam Press Agency announced that Chief of State Phanh Khac Suu had signed the decree naming Khanh a roving ambassador, the same device used to get Ws predecessor, Maj. Duong Van Minh, out of the country after Khanh supplanted him.</p>
        <p>The Young Turk generals of the Armed Forces Council continued to hold meetings at</p>
        <p>their headquarters at the Saigon airport. Combat troops were stationed around the perimeter of the airport, and antiaircraft guns and recoUless rifles remained in protective positions.</p>
        <p>Extra military units also were stationed at checkpoinU on the outskirts of Saigon. But three paratroop battalions brought into Saigon over the weekend were sent back into the field.</p>
        <p>Air Strikes were ordered today along the ambush road from Binh Dlnh Province into the jungle interior where three platoons of Vietnamese are misshig.</p>
        <p>A military spokesman said 71 Vietnamese soldiers were missing and another 21 had filtered in after an ambush near the border between Binh Dlnh and Plelku provinces.</p>
        <p>A ranger company moving into the area this morning ran into the Viet Cong force and was reported maintaining contact late in the day.</p>
        <p>The military council began changing command of key units of the armed fwces. One of the major shifts reported was the appointment of Maj. Gen. Tran Van Don, 47, to replace Col. Le Van Nhlcu as head of the Central Intelligence Agency. Khanh had put Don under house arrest last year but later (reed him because of Buddhist pressure.</p>
        <p>Fire State Building</p>
        <p>O"</p>
        <p>Explosions In Harlem Building</p>
        <p>See Arson Revenge In Muslim Mosque Fire</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - A Harlem firef bUeved to be arson revenge for the slaying of Malcolm X, gutted today the Black Muslim mosque from which he hftd been ousted as minister.</p>
        <p>Several witnesses, including a policeman stati(ied outside as a precaution agakist retaliation, reported hearing one or more blasts before flames shot Into the sky Just after 2 a.m.</p>
        <p>On the roof of a five-story building next door, investigators found a five-gallon tin which had contained kerosene or gasoline. Police said it was possible that 'homemade firebombs or the fuel could have been tossed from the roof through the barred windows of the masque mec^g hall.</p>
        <p>Earlier, in the same building, a patrolman foimd a kerosene-soaked bag.</p>
        <p>Polict poured reinforcements kito Harlem in an effort to block any further bloodshl,^or vlo-lenoe. They supplemented an extra force patroling the almost all-Negro community since the assassination Sunday.</p>
        <p>The fire Injured a civilian</p>
        <p>passer-by and five firemen, one seriously.</p>
        <p>Both here and In Chicago, headquarters of Elijah Muhammads Black Muslim faith, authorities .had been on edge lest Malcolms death touch off warfare within the black nationalism movement. He was shot down by assassins as he started to address his rebel followers at a meeting of his Afro-American Uhlty.</p>
        <p>But Harlem appeared to accept the death quietlyuntil the hours before dawn today.</p>
        <p>I heard the exploslwi, said</p>
        <p>Retired Justice Felix</p>
        <p>-i</p>
        <p>Frankfurter Is Dead</p>
        <p>Traffic Toll</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The Motor Vehicles departments report of highway deaths and injuries for the 24 hours ending at 10 a.m. today:  4  k*</p>
        <p>Killed2  '</p>
        <p>Injured (rural)10 Killed this year187 Killed to date lut year199 Injured to ^aiK^l .196.5-49.130 Injuicd uto Jaa, 1,</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Retired Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter is dead of a heart attack at 82 and President Johnson in grief has praised him as one of the great figures in legal history.</p>
        <p>Chief Justice Earl Warren in a statement of mourning called Frankfurter a great man of the law and said our nation is much richer because of his long and productive life.</p>
        <p>Frankfurter, who stepped down because of poor health 2Vt years ago after serving on the high court for 23 years, suffered a heart attack at his hrane here Sunday. He was taken to George Washlngtrai University Hospital, where he died late Monday.</p>
        <p>His ailing wife, Marlon, was confined to the family home and was Informed of his death by family doctors. The Frankfurters had no children.</p>
        <p>Frankfurter was bom ki Vienna, Austria, (XI Nov. 15, 1882, and was brought to the east side of New York City when he was 12. His father was a fur merchant. Young Frankfurter atr tended the College of the City of New York and continued his education at Harvard University Law School, where he received his law degree in 1906.</p>
        <p>He returned to Harvard In 1914 as a law professor. Later, he recommended many of his former students as brain trusters for President Franklin D. Roosevelts New Deal.</p>
        <p>Frankfurter delighted in recalling that he was in his underwear. dressing for dinner, when Roosevelt telephoned him on Jan, 4, 1939, to tell him that the next day he would name him to the Supreme Court to succeed Justice Benjamin N. Cardoao.</p>
        <p>At that time Frankfurter waa considered a liberal, but in later years he was considered a member of the conservative bloc of the bench. Frankfurters ! awn view waa that conser5atlsm and liberalism had nothing to do with Judicial decisions.</p>
        <p>Two yeara ago  on his 80th birthday  the Times of London paid editorial trlbyte to him. It aaitt, "If any maa has a right to</p>
        <p>be regarded as a citizen of the world it is he. Whether, when m the Supreme Court, he was a liberal or a conservative, or both, now matters little. He has always been a fighter for truth.</p>
        <p>Frankfurter had no hesitancy about referring to his Jewish religion and once commented in an opinion:</p>
        <p>One who belongs to the most vilified and persecuted, minority in history is 'ftdt likely*to be 4n^ sensible to the freedoms guar-^anteed by our Constitution. He added: But as Judges we are neither Jew nor gentile, neither Catholic nor agnostic. As a member of this court I am not Justified in writing my private notions of policy into the Constitution, no matter how deeply I may cherish them or how mtechlevous I may dceniH^eir disregard.  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>He was credited by some observers with having had a major Influence in the Supreme Courts 1954 decision banning racial segregation In public schools.^ Some said the courts unanimous decision was a result of Frankfurters arguments ki favor of a formula permtttlng gradual desegregation rather than court orders demanding Immediate enforcement.</p>
        <p>Frankfurter waa a peppery figure through his 23 years on the high court, sittin||^-on the edge of ills' chair with his eyes sparkling behind his pince-nei as he rattled off questions to attorneys and fired verbal darts at tB fellow Justices.</p>
        <p>In one of the last arguments he heard, a lawyer called an earlier Frankfurter opinion brilliant." When the lawyer started to explain it, Frankfurter snapped, Ybu may assume I remember it. ^ "</p>
        <p>one elderly Negro woman among the huge crowd at the 8(^ne. I thcmght 'Oh, my God! This is it! and I threw myself down (XI the floor.</p>
        <p>The flames shot 90 feet above the four-story building at 102 W. 116th St.</p>
        <p>Patrolman John L. Waterman. on guard duty outside, described it this way:</p>
        <p>There was a muffled explosion from the top'floor and ev-ei7 window on the fourth floor seemed to &amp;lt;xxne down. About 10 minutes later, the whole floor was engulfed in flames.</p>
        <p>The fire destroyed the fourth-floor meeting hall of the Temple of Islam No. 7, the power base for Malcolm X when he was heir apparent to Elijah Muhammad, the leader. The lower floors hcmse rooms for dances, parties, and smaller meetings; the Muslim-owned Shabazz restaurant: and shop spaces leased from the Muslims.</p>
        <p>Under the direction of Fire CSiief John T. OHagan, the fire fighters kept the (lames at the top of the building.</p>
        <p>Fifteen-degree temperatures created sheets of ice frtxn the firemens hoses.</p>
        <p>The VW collapsed and a fourth-floor wall crunibled, showering bricks on the firemen and injuring five of them.</p>
        <p>With the building still smouldering six hours later, the police bomb squad took over the investigation.</p>
        <p>O^Hagan was asked if the flre waa connected with the assassination of Malcolm X.</p>
        <p>I I wouldnt be surprised, he replied. It seems lofdcal. I Just put the fires out. We have our top investigators working on it. its certainly suspicious.</p>
        <p>Black Muslims by the score had gathered for a meeting earlier at the Muhammad Temple of Islam, Mosiiue No. 7.</p>
        <p>Man, the place was packed, said a nearby resident.</p>
        <p>Nobody was reported in the building when the fire erupted, but several persona In a downstairs bar were evacuated.</p>
        <p>The fire was under control about two hours after it was repcxied.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - An explosion and fire Monday night destroyed Pullen Hall (w the campus (A North Carolina State College, in another of a long series oil (Ires officers said were set by arsonists. Nearby Peele Hall, the administration building, also was damaged.</p>
        <p>Officials estimated damges at $650,000. Two firemen and several students were injured as they fought the fires or helped evacuate records.</p>
        <p>These were the 12th and 13th fires to hit the campus in recent months. Two students have been charged In womt ot the fires.</p>
        <p>Chancellor John C^dwell said There is no doubt this is arson. The Monday night flre was the most recent in a series of blazes on the campus. Police say they were also the work of arsonists.</p>
        <p>Flames from 63-year-old Pullen Hall danced through the chilly night air to Peele Hall, the administration building, and set its ro(rf afire.</p>
        <p>As nine Raleigh fire units fought to ccxitain the (Ires, Pullen Hall fell to ashes and the roof of Peele Hall collapsed.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, another fire was spotted and extinguished in the basement lounge of Brooks Hall, a part ot the School of Design. Brooks is some 1(X) yards from Peele and Pullen halls.</p>
        <p>Women students in nearby Watauga dormitory were evacuated as a precautionary meaa-ure^^</p>
        <p>Pullen Hall, one of the oldit buildings on the campus, was condemned as a flre hazard several years ago, Chancellor (Caldwell said.</p>
        <p>^ Pullen Hall was a tri^ and everyb(xly knows tliat, he said. The building had wooden floors, wooden stairwells and was condemned many yeara ago.</p>
        <p>Caldwell said it was used for musical activities becausa we had nothing else. All the sctuxirs band Instruments and very precious recordings were destroyed by the fire, be said-</p>
        <p>Peele Hall housed the admki-</p>
        <p>Six Weeks' Liquid Diet For Volunteers</p>
        <p>Istratlve records ot the school which were stored In a fireproof vault, Caldwell said. The two story brick structure, which had recently been renovated, waa considered fireproof.</p>
        <p>Thousands of states 8,300 students and other spectators Jammed the area, which is in a triangle near the bell tower oh Hillsboro Street. State Bureau of Investigation agents and Ra* lelgh detectives weaved through the crowd.</p>
        <p>The general alarm (irt could be seen three miles away in downtown Raleigh.</p>
        <p>The flre, which apparently had been under way some time before it was discovered, was reported about 10:30 p.m, by Banks Talley, director of indent affairs.</p>
        <p>Talley said he heard an explosion at Pullen that shook Peele ball from top to bottom.</p>
        <p>Two firemen were Injured. Capt. F. T. Ti{4cin broke his leg while Jumping a fence and fireman C. A. Uoyd suffered a severe cut when his foot was caught between the rungs of an aerial ladder as it was being raised.</p>
        <p>A college oHlclal said a number 0 students were injured as they helped carry filing cabinets ccxitalnlng records from Peele hall. They were treated at the university infirmary.</p>
        <p>Chancellor Caldwell said all transiet records stored on the first floor of Peele Hall were removed. The students abandoned efforts to take any other records from the building when the roof collapsed about midnight.</p>
        <p>PullCTi Hall was also the scene (tf one of the earlier fires. A small blaze was discovered there last Wednesday night and extinguished after it caused only minor damage.</p>
        <p>Two tormer students, David Landon Steel of Raleigh and wrniam Royal Fairchild of Winston-Salem, were bound over to the Wake Superior Court Friday under $1,(XX) bon(L on charges of setting fires at North Carolina State.</p>
        <p>They were charged with burning papers in a storeroom In the basement of Williams Hall and with setting fire in a teleiriUHM booth in Withers Hall.</p>
        <p>Pullen Hall was completed In 1902 and was named for R. 8. Pullen, who d(xiated the land for the original State campua.</p>
        <p>DAYTON. Ohio (AP)  Four college students who went on a liquid diet for space science get solid food  and their first bath in six weeks  today.</p>
        <p>The quartet is the first to test a new licjuid formula, much like a housewifes diet drink, which may someday feed American astronauts on long space flights.</p>
        <p>The young men havt spent sitx weeks in isolation. Half that time they ate only the diet drink  in vanUla, chocolate, cherry and strawberry flavors.</p>
        <p>For 28 days, they have been confined in a space tank to simulate the conditions In a space ship on a long flight.</p>
        <p>The volunteers, all Ohio State University students, are Brooks L. Harrop, 25, Amlin; John T. Kelley, 25, Willoughby; N(xman H. Gary, 22, Delaware, and Gerald P. Petersen, 22, Euclid. Each will get $1,000  less In-&amp;lt;5ome taxes  for the test.</p>
        <p>Results wm be passed along to National Aeronautics and Space Administration planners preparing for the first two-man orbital flight this spring in Project Gemini. A spokesman at the medical research laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base here said the information Uktly would be more useful on longer flights, such as the planned voyge to the moon in Project Apollo.</p>
        <p>Space Glider Successfully Flown Today</p>
        <p>CAPE KENNEDY. FU. (AP)  A polka dot space glider successfully rocketed over a blazing 13,300-mile-an-bour suborbital course toda&amp;gt; to test materials and techniques for the future ^&amp;gt;aoeshlps which will land like airplanes.</p>
        <p>As the sleek Project Asset glider blasted skyward, it shed a unique plastic raincoat which had been placed ever It to protect it from a driving rain.</p>
        <p>A Thor-Delta rocket propeled the craft into a rain-drlpplng sky at 9:36 a.m. and the vehi-&amp;lt;de (]uickly disappeared Into low-hanging clouds.</p>
        <p>The winged research glider, whose surface was speckled-with about 2,000 tiny dots of multicolored heat - sensitive paint, darted to an altitude of about 39 miles and then made a fiery, screaming dash back through the atmosphere.</p>
        <p>A small stabilizing parachute popped out at an altitude of 75,-000 feet and a main chute unfurled at 25,000 feet to ease the six-foot. 1.175-pound gilder Into the AUsntic Ocean about 2,730 miles southeast of Cape Kennedy.</p>
        <p>Dream Of Fantastic Treasure Find Is Near Awaited Climax</p>
        <p>STAYING ON</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - U. Oen. Leonard D. Heaton will continue as surgeon general of the Army until next Dec. 1 when he will retire at the age of 64, the White House announced today as President Johnson extended Heaton'i appointment.</p>
        <p>By MIKE COCHRAN</p>
        <p>SALADO. Tex. (AP) - TreSr sure hunters armed with dynamite and visions of fantastic riches probed deeply today into a legend - shrouded pile of rocks near this central Texas hamlet.</p>
        <p>The small band of explorers believe that deep within t h e 250 - fcK&amp;gt;t - high liin^st(Xie hummock  called a mountain locally  lies a room concealing diamonds, coins and bars of gold and silver.</p>
        <p>They c(tend that only four feet of rock now separates the adventurers from s Span i s h treasure valued at hundreds of millions of dollars.</p>
        <p>If the legends hold true, there should be more here than we've got in the . 8. Treasury, proclaimed one.</p>
        <p>You art standing abO'e a room which contains $230 mll-UoQ In gold bars, inotbtf</p>
        <p>told a reporter.</p>
        <p>With s sweep of his arm, H. D. McCord of Dallas gestured across a map and declared:</p>
        <p>There is gold and metal all through here. Diamonds art over there and In dlffere n t parts.</p>
        <p>McCord, a big, affable man with thick, bushy eyebrows, directs the operation that reportedly has cost $200,000 to blast through more than 100 feet of solid rock.</p>
        <p>According to local lore, Spanish conquistadores mined gold and silver along swift, troublesome Salado Creek which winds anxmd this Jagged he^ of rocks. Reputedly they fashioned the ore Into bars and hid them.</p>
        <p>There are other stories thst gold stolen from the Comsoob-cs was burled in these bills.</p>
        <p>Previo^ fortune huntsrs</p>
        <p>have gouged shsits Into t h e stubboni cliffs without success.</p>
        <p>Drams, plot and cast resenv ble an incredible fairy tale. Principal characters are;</p>
        <p>McCord, a liquor store and restaurant owner who says he personally has contributed more than $40,000 to the pro&amp;gt; Ject.</p>
        <p>R. L. Wells bf Dallas, a rotund. cigar-chewing construction company owner who says, Its there, friend  I'll tell you that or l,FOuldn't be here.</p>
        <p>0 Les Ourra, mustachioed Texas AiOl graduate who says he stumbled onto ths trtasurs .chamber In 1967, q&amp;gt;ent two. days wandsrlng through a mist of tunnsls and barsly osoapod*</p>
        <p>Frands K. Rtohty. a solf&amp;gt; styled soldltr of fortune wbt Joined the party a month ago He is suptrlntendeat tor  Houston  based ttm i intematlenal *api#iea.</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>.J</p>
        <p> i</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0002" />
        <p>MV  Omnvfllt^  N.  C.-TuMitoy  Nbruary  S3,  IfiS</p>
        <p>npiMf</p>
        <p>ansform Box-Like</p>
        <p>ooms</p>
        <p>By VIVIAN BROWN AP NewifealarM Writer Creative genius is popping out aU over the home. The rule of the thumb is the same M in areas fashions and grooming  be different. .</p>
        <p>The architect gave you room like boxes? You dont have to live that way.</p>
        <p>Home furnishings manuf a o* turers say you should buckle up your draperies or put an armolre to your bedroom? Not if you dont want to.</p>
        <p>Time was when being different worried those who had to be  because they couldnt afford to follow the crowd. But now you can put pop fashicms in the home and hang your bed fr&amp;lt;mi the celling, and people wUl adnre your creativity. You can</p>
        <p>^rurnishings</p>
        <p>have a great home iumlshed on family  alcoves, bookcase.</p>
        <p>Calendar Events</p>
        <p>a shoestring if you have good taste and iiiMgination.</p>
        <p>Ons indication of how things have changed is evident In store home fashion promotions. In a cosmopolitan city, for example, we see one store promoting a French country style, anot her going all - out for Mexican, another stlcktog with the old-time chinUs look, big flowers, though deeper cotors. and another store using oak lavishly in Tudor. Renaissance and Regency furniture adaptations In 15 of their model rooms.</p>
        <p>Box - like rooms are being Jaxeed up to practically every home with family-wide participation in planning, buying, installing the functional additions necessary fo r that particular</p>
        <p>EC Formal Rush Held; New Sorority Pledges Announced</p>
        <p>Elffht3sflve ooeds at East Carolina College have entered a pledge period oi about eight weeks which leads to member-thlp in one of EOCTs seven Greek-letter social sororities.</p>
        <p>Tlie women sbidents were pledged during Formal Rush, a highlight of the ooUpge year for prospective members of the nar tiooal sororities.</p>
        <p>Each pledge Is required to maintain a sclwlastlc average of C on an work taken at the college. In addition she will study the chapters history. Icam the Greek alphabet, participate in a phUanthi^e prolect and in ether pertinent work.</p>
        <p>Sororlttea in which the students have pledged are the Delta Omienm Chapter of Alpha Delta Pi (15), the Delta Alpha Chapter of Alpha Phi (7). the Gamma Phi Oiapter of Alpha Xi Del</p>
        <p>ta (15). the Rho Zeta Chapter of Chi Omega (11), the Zeta Lambda Chapter Delta Zeta (14). the Gamma Sigma Chapter of Kappa Delta (8) and the Gamma Beta Chapter of Sigma l^gma Sigma (15).</p>
        <p>New pledges Include: Pitt County. Parmville  N- zy Cti-rol Thomas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Tlxxnas. 406 Home Ave., Alpha XI Delta. GreenviUe  Dorothy Jane Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Brown, 105 S. Eastern St.. Kappa Delta; Phyllis Gayk Clark, daughter of Mrs. Aileen H. Clark. 206 N. Eastern St.. Sigma Sigma Sigma;</p>
        <p>Brenda Carole Cox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Cox, 606 W. Fourth St.. Delta Zeta; and Rebecca Ann Jackson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. ^C. Jackson, Route 6. Alpha Phi.</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLE NEWS</p>
        <p>Dr. and Mrs. Walter Elliott Ward and Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Anderson left Friday morning for Pompano Beach, Fla.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Alton Everett James spent Monday in Hertford as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Skinner.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Starr Busbee of Springfield, S. C., and the Rev. Carlton Roberson from Aiken spent a few days last week with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Roberson.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Nellie Taylor left today for Richmond where she will spend several day with her daughter, Mrs. Ralph E. Wlber. Miss Judy Leggett. Miis Alida</p>
        <p>Tyler and Miss Candy Coe spent Saturday in Raleigh and attended the Farm House Rush Ball at State College. They spent the night In Cary as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Edmondson and returned home Sunday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Nettie Parker was in Enfield Thursday visiting her father, M. F. Roberson.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Muriel Moore arrived here Friday for a weekend visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Wynn. They accompanied her home and visited his niece, Mrs. Tom Rose, to Virginia Beach. Enroute to Rober-sonvllle they were the guests of Mrs. W. L. Stanley In Elizabeth aty.</p>
        <p>Mis Gladys Bailey and Mrs. W. L. Swindell were In Greenville Friday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mattie Gray is convales-efaif ai the home of her daughter, Mrs. Roscoe Downs to Ham-UtOD.</p>
        <p>Mis Millie Roebuck is a sur-fleal patient In Pitt Memorial Bo^tal. Gheenvllle. Mrs. H.L.</p>
        <p>HD Club Hears Mrs. Bullock</p>
        <p>BETHEL  Mrs. W. R. Bullock was speaker at the meeting of the Bethel HD club held Wednesday at the home of Mr. C. E. Brown.</p>
        <p>The U.N. Beig Shorn &amp;lt;rf Btrength was the program topic for the meeting.</p>
        <p>"From the ashes of World War n emerged a vision of one world, a union of humanity for peace which could be made a reality through an organization for international security, but that organizationUnited Nationsseems dangerously sick today. More and more, the U.N. 1 being shorn of Its dignity and powerpower to act, power to vote and Its power to apply moral pressure,* commented the speaker.</p>
        <p>Mrs. H. L. Tetterton, president, oonducted a business session. Following book reports, Mrs. Russel R. James led the group In a contest.</p>
        <p>Refreshments were served by the hostess ssiisted by Mrs. J. B. Moore.</p>
        <p>Everett and Mr. and Mrs. Pitt Roterson visited her Sunday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Herbert Pope spent Saturday in Chatham. Va., and visited the Military Academy.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Bunting have returned from Pompano Beach, Fla., following visit with their daughter, Mrs. Bobby Beach and family.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Earl Van Nortwick and Mrs. C. D. Taylor spent Friday in Washington.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lizzie James accompanied her daughter, Mrs. Hyman Rogerson, to her home in Speed and returned to Robersonville Wednesday evening.</p>
        <p>Mrs. R. Elliott Taylor left Friday for Richmond to visit her sister, Mrs. T. O. Landrum who underwent surgery.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Robert K. Adkins, Mrs. Ethel Little, Mrs. Irving Smith Sr., Mrs. Vance L. Roberson and Mrs. Claude Greene Sr., attended a concert in Goldsboro Friday night.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lurlane Johnson, Mrs. I. L. Smith, Mrs. Mayo Little and Mrs. V. L. Roberson were In Raleigh Monday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lillie Wynn. Mrs. Clarence Taylor, Mrs. M. F. Van Nortwick and Mrs. Ferd Taylor spent Thursday in New Bern.</p>
        <p>Mrs. C. X. James has returned to her home after undergoing treatment for several days at Pitt Memorial Hospital. Greenville.</p>
        <p>Jimmy and Janet Emery of Richmond spent nine days with their grandmother. Mrs. J. P. House. After a weekend visit in Robersonville, Mr. and Mm. James Emery and Lola Mae accompanied the t^'/lns home. Mrs. Mack Rogerson from Edenton, Mrs. Gwdon Purvis and sons, Andy and Cllf. of Raleigh were the Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. House.</p>
        <p>Birth</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Steele of Reseda. Calif., a daughter, Pamela Jo, on Feb. 7, 1965. Mrs. Steele Is the former Eva Ann Cobum of Roberson-ville.</p>
        <p>built . in furniture or a second level. Many families devel o p ideas to the point where they can give Intelligently sketched plans to architects, interior designs or materials manufacturers who provide design servic-ee.</p>
        <p>Character rooms are becoming popular, for example. These can be anything from a rugged Teddy Roosevelt room to a Three Bs room for the musi-caUy inclined  Bach, Beethoven and Brahms. Fimneling Ideas toto a single fela Simplifies it. Some people lik Jiigional ideas  Western Rarfeh, Southern Plantation, Hawaiian and so on.</p>
        <p>If an artistic student decides to have a Mlchaelanelo room, for example, where a travertine  marble wall would be -flU lag. panels of Masonite could be substituted. Available at lum her dealers, it can provide a similar appearance at quick - to - Install budget prices. There are directions available, too. These and other hardboards provide wide latitude when planning structural changes.</p>
        <p>The remodeling of one wall can do wonders in setting a new mood for an old tired room. A new background will make your room look refreshed and give it a touch of individuality if it is creatively planned.</p>
        <p>The success o a small project may impel one to a larger project  adding a rocmi or enlarging one. A room may be wanted for billiards or handwea-vlng on a loom or one that ail the family can share for play and hobby. One should not become stymied by an idea just because he hasnt seen it daie before. It just becomes more intriguing.</p>
        <p>When considering a major project, an architect or one experienced in remodeling should be consulted. The counsel o a designer qualified in the utilization or materials may be helpful, and even essential to c u t costs. Costs of this service can range from nothing to a small amount. Consultation can often be bouht by the day or project if one inquires at local lumber dealers.</p>
        <p>Oncena project has JeUed and specifications for structural materials are listed, the family will be ready to take bids for the work. If it is a do-it-yourself project, all that remains is to contact a building products supplier and present him with a list of your needs.</p>
        <p>^ ^TUBSOAF 6:10 p.m.AJplia Iota Chapter of Alpha Della Kappa meets at Kenland Rest.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.Miss Marauerlte Taylor wUl be bonorta at a shower given by Mrs. Wanda Wiseman and Miss Pat Diokiii</p>
        <p>6:00  p.m.Pitt County</p>
        <p>Cosmetologist Association meets at th OreenviU Beauty School |</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Naval Reserve meets in basement of Austin Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Mrs. Carl Pierce will be hostess to the Aries Book Club 8:00 p.m.Wlthla Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m.Alcoholic Anonymous meets at the AA Bldg. on Farm ville Hwv.</p>
        <p>. WEDNESDAY 10:00  a.m.Girl Scout</p>
        <p>Leaders meeting will be held at the home, of Mrs. Wyatt Brown 1:45 p.m.  Wednesday Afternoon Duplicate Bridge Club weekly game at Community Room, third floor, Wachovia Bank. (Please use Fifth St. entrance)</p>
        <p>7:00  p.m.TPA supper</p>
        <p>meeting at Respess Brothers.</p>
        <p>THURSDAY 9:30 a.m.Newcomers Club meets at Planters Bank.  10:00 a.m.Adult classes are held at Greenville Art Center  ^</p>
        <p>To Con(duct Sewing Class</p>
        <p>PARMVUiLE  Miss Elsie Seago will teach a sewing class to be held In the Parmville High School home ecwomics once a week.</p>
        <p>Interested persons may enroll for the class at Rollins Fabric Shop in Parmville.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Williams Gives Program At Club Meet</p>
        <p>Mrs, Herschcl Williams presented the program at the meeting of the Greenville Garden C^ub held Friday at the home of Mrs. Guilford Worsley.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Williams showed slides and spoke on the newest project of the N. C. Federation of Garden Clubs The Nature Trail of Brunswick. Included with the slides were color slides' ' Orton Plantation.</p>
        <p>She noted that the town of Brunswick only lasted 50 years and was destroyed by the British. The restoration by the Garden Clubs will include the sites of the buildings and restoration of the natural beauty.</p>
        <p>Mrs. R. E. Laughtr announced that a tour to the Elizabethan Gardens would be held after Easter.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Charles A. Pope, chairman of the clubs fashion show, luncheon and card tournament, noted that the show would be held March 18 at the Greenville Golf and Country Club.</p>
        <p>The club voted to contribute to the Daniel Bowie Projecf! and to have a memorial project for the late Mrs. Raoh e 1 Maxwell Moore.</p>
        <p>Preceding the meeting, a social hour w'as held. The appointed table was centered with an arrangement of dried flowers In a silver bowl flanked by white candles in silver candelabra.</p>
        <p>Hostesses were: Mrs. Worsley; Mrs. Wellington Gray; Mrs. W. I. Wooten; Mrs. Martin Swartz; and, Mrs. E.L. Baker.</p>
        <p>'i-, / '</p>
        <p>4-</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; %</p>
        <p>CHOCOUTE</p>
        <p>ECLAIRS</p>
        <p>Diener's Bakery</p>
        <p>Miss Wicker Is Honored</p>
        <p>Miss Ann Wicker of Monroe and Greenville, bride - elect, was entertained at a shower on Monday night at the home of Mrs. James E. Lewis.</p>
        <p>Upon arrival Miss Wicker was presented a white mum corsage, which complimented her navy lace dress. Guests were greeted by Mrs. Lewis and Miss Doris Moore, co - hostess.</p>
        <p>The living room mantle was decorated with a bride and groom doU and a bridesmaid doll, which was dressed as Miss Wickers wedding attendants will be. Games were directed by Mrs. Lewis and Miss Moore.</p>
        <p>The dining table was centered with a silver bowl of white stock and mums and pink tapers, Mrs. J. C. Wicker, mother of the bride  elect, served individual party squares and Mrs. Earl Flake, mother of the bridegroom - elect, poured punch.</p>
        <p>Good - byes were said by the hostess, the bonoree, Mrs. Wicker and Mrs. Flake.</p>
        <p>IN ADDITION TO OUR RtOUlAR SPECIALS</p>
        <p>^ WE NOW FEATURE AN</p>
        <p>8oz. SIRLOIN STEAK</p>
        <p>2.50</p>
        <p>LATIN LANGUOR  NewItaHantwTmfasMonby Naka of MTTan features Knitted bathing dress cover costume with larqe matchlna sunshade hat of orang cotton mash*</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY'S</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>DAN RIVER</p>
        <p>SEERSUCKER</p>
        <p>WITH 2 VEOHABLiS BREAD B BUTTER</p>
        <p>SILO RESTAURANT</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>TOWNl HOUSE MOTOR LODGE Leati M Manorial Dr.</p>
        <p>75t-54t4</p>
        <p>White's Stores Inc.</p>
        <p>Th Big Stor On Dickinson Avnu \</p>
        <p>r 7:00 p.m'vavitan GSiib meets at flUo Reit.</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m^WintervlUn Xh wants Club meets in C^mi-munity Bldg.</p>
        <p>7:00 pjm.Class in oulp-ture. water color and drawing are held at Greenville Art Center</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Chapter 130g of the Women of the Moose</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.VFW Auxiliary meets at Post Home</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.American Legion Auxiliary meets at the home of Mrs. Alfred Kennedy FRIDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.Klwanls Club meets</p>
        <p>8:30 p.m.Exchange Club</p>
        <p>meets</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.Redmen meet</p>
        <p>7:30  p.m.Regular ses</p>
        <p>sion of Faculty Duplicate Club meets in' Planters Bank</p>
        <p>7:30-9:30 p.m,A floating shower honoring Mrs. Barbara Parker will be held at the home of Mrs. E. T. Allen Jr. Co-hostesses are Mrs. Bobby Bullock, Mrs. Howard Bullock, Mrs. Fred Nobles and Mrs. Durwood Tyson.</p>
        <p>Scholarship Committee Names Winner Saturday</p>
        <p>District 15 North Carolina Federation of Womens Clubs district scholarship contest was held Saturday at the Greenville Golf and Country Club.</p>
        <p>The Scholarship Committee announces the selection of Miss Mary Ann SumrpeKin of William-ston as winner and Miss Lint^a Tetterton of Greenville as alternate.</p>
        <p>The contest was held to select a high school senior girl from District 15 to compete in the State Scholarship Conte.st for the $750 scholarship given annually by the N. C. Federation.</p>
        <p>Miss Summerlin will compete In the state contest with entries from the other 15 district to be held March 13 at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Judges for the contest were: the Rev. W. J. Hadden; Dr. John Reynolds of ECC; and Mrs. Vance Perkins, all of Greenville, Mrs. C. Thomas Hicks Jr. of Walstonburg was scholarship chairman for District 15.</p>
        <p>Let Youngsters Try Baking With Homemade</p>
        <p>Degrees Of Order Presented Friday In Ceremonies</p>
        <p>Degrees, of the Order were presented In ceremonies held Friday night at a special meeting of Greenville Shrine 7, Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Rosella Taylor Edwards. Mrs. Mary Vanderburg Lynch, John William Lynch of GoldSr-boro. Miss Annie Mildred Turner and Mrs. Julia Twiddy Harris of Greenville were recipients of the degrees.</p>
        <p>The meeting was held at the Masonic Temple with Mrs. Thelma Maxwell, W.H.P., presiding.</p>
        <p>Following the ceremonial, a reception was held in the dining room honoring new members this year.</p>
        <p>Refreshments were served from a table cornered with a white organdy cloth and centered with a cherry tree and red hatchets, flanked by lighted red tapers in crystal candelabra,</p>
        <p>Mrs. Louise Wells and her committee were hostesses for the meeting.</p>
        <p>By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor HERE WE come with a bdfttiB-made oatmtal oookie mix. This do  U  yourself combination is convenient to mix up. have on hand and use.</p>
        <p>The cookie mix is based on a recipe, Alexanders Oatmeal Cookies, named tor our preschool nephew becau, when h visited us last summer, we mad up that email - quantity recipe and he gobbled up the result.</p>
        <p>Now that Alexander Is back in his Chlcagq home, we sent him a half-batcE of the mix to bake himself. If you want to delight some youngster by doing likewise. berea how we managed it: '  _</p>
        <p>We measured 8 cups of the mix into a plastic bag. Then, so Alexander could make up chocolate  coconut drop cookies, we added scml  sweet chocolate pieces and flaked coconut (aa suggested in the following recipe). We secured the bag. Inserted it  with the necessary mixing and baking directions  in one of those padded mailing bags and sent it off.</p>
        <p>According to a report, there was great joy In that Qiicago kitchen when Alexander, following our directions (read to him by his mother), turned the mix into a tx)wl, made his "hole in the bowl, added an egg (cracked by himself) and poured in the necessary milk and vanilla. He did the atining, too. and spooned thecookies (to cootoe aheets so his mother could put them in the oven.</p>
        <p>Last word from Chicago: Alexander ate 12 of "hia cocdcies at one sitting! If something sim-'ar should happen at your house, take comfort in the fact that these cookies are the nutritious oatmeal variety.</p>
        <p>HOMEMADE OATMEAL COOKIE MIX 2lz cups sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking soda IV4 teaspoons salt 1 cup granulated sugar 1 cup firmly - packed dark brown sugar, aifted if lumpy Hz cups shortening 31z cups rolled oats (quick-cooking or old fashioned)</p>
        <p>Sift together the flour, baking soda and salt. Stir in the granulated and brown sugar. With a pastry blender cut in the shortening until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Stir in t h e oats, mixing thoroughly. Stored in a tightly covered container at room temperature cookie mix may be kept for several weeks. Makes 10 cups. Use to make one of the versions of Oatmeal Drop Cookies and the Date Oat meal Squares following the procedure given In the following recipes. OATMEAL DROP COOKIES (from Homemade Mix)</p>
        <p>5 cups Oatmeal Cookie Mix cup chopped raisins cup chopped walnuts 1 egg</p>
        <p>1-3 cup milk</p>
        <p>HOAAEAAADE COOKIE AAIXAAakw up^ betch and uM half of it for a drop cookies, the other Hetf lor date squares.</p>
        <p>After-Skiing Becomes 'More Important'</p>
        <p>cmANS-SUR-SIERRE. Switzerland (WNS)  After skiing has become more important than skiing with fashionable ladies at this elegant winter resort.</p>
        <p>Aa a result, the latest fashion Is plastic ^is with gold monograms that are used only for transportation from one crowd- | thodist ed bar, restaurant or nightclub Friday, to the next,-*</p>
        <p>Half Refuse Candid Showings On TV</p>
        <p>PARIS (WNS)  Jacqueline ! Dubois used an invisible camera to film interviews at Mile. Leroys matrimonial agency with single people seeking niates. Half the people interview e d agreed to allow their scenes to be shown on French TV.</p>
        <p>Those who refused included a lady who wanted to find a new husband before divorcing her current one, a 67-year-old woman who wanted to advertise her 27-year-old bosom, and a 30-year-old man who had been Introduced to 130 aspiring brides without being able to please any of them.</p>
        <p>Xj:-</p>
        <p>% teaspoon cinnamon V4 teaspoon nutmeg ^ teaspoon vanilla</p>
        <p>Turn the co(Aie mix Into a mixing bowl; stir in the raisins and walnuts. With a wooden spoon, make a "hole in the center; into the hole drop the egg, milk, cinnamon, nutmeg and vanilla; mix thoroughly, gradually stirring in the dry ingredient^. Dxipp by teaspoonfuls (Xito ungreased cookie sheets. Bake in a moderate (350 degrecr) oven for 12 to 15 minutes. Remove with a wide spatula to a wire rack to cool. If desired cover top of cookies with orange - flavored confectioners sugar frosting. Makes 3H dozen. Store in a tightly covered c(Xitainer.</p>
        <p>For chocolate coconut cookies, omit the raisins, walnuts, cinnamon and nutmeg; instead use ^ cup semi - sweet chocolate pieces and cup flaked coconut.</p>
        <p>DATE OATMEAL SQUARES (from Homemade Mix)</p>
        <p>1 package (8 ounces) pitted</p>
        <p>Dr. Thomas Is Speaker</p>
        <p>Dr. David Thomas was speaker at the meeting of the Home Pride Garden Club held Thursday at the home of Mrs. R, S. Monds.</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. J. White Jr. and Mrs. Fred Middleton were co-h^tess-es.</p>
        <p>History of Furniture in North Carolina was the program topic for the meeting.</p>
        <p>Dr. Thomas explained how small factories were started and the progress of furniture making. In the 1960 census. North Carolina led the nation In the manufacturing of furniture.</p>
        <p>He was introduced by Mrs. White.</p>
        <p>Mrs. W. N. Leitch conducted a business session and the club voted to make 50 Easter baskets for needy children.</p>
        <p>Devotional was given by Mrs. Bruce Baker,</p>
        <p>detes. eut up V4 cup sugar</p>
        <p>1 teaspoon grated erangt rtiid I tablespoon lemon Juice H cup plus V4 cup water 5 cups Oatmeal Cbokle Mlz Put the dates, sugar, grated orange rind, lemon Juiea and ^ cup water into a eaucepan; cook and stir over moderately low heat until thick; cool. Thoroughly stir together the cookie mix and the V4 cup water. Firmly pack half of the oatmeal mixture into a well - greased square baking pan (9 by 9 by 2 Inches), spread with the cool date mixture. Sprinkle the remaining oaU meal mixture over the top and pack lightly with a small fi&amp;gt;atuU or your fingers. Bake in a moderate (350 degrees) oven for 80 to 35 minutes. Place pan on a wire rack to cool; cut In squares and remove with a small spatula. Makes 3 dozen. Store In a tightly covered container.</p>
        <p>Wemorm</p>
        <p>Ten</p>
        <p>/or 10 seconds cntrate on the nanoa In the eqnere below</p>
        <p>Now, sot the newe&amp;gt; paper aside and oay the name over a few tlmee to yourself, it wont be leng btforw WE WILL know Iff yon have passed the test.</p>
        <p>S03 Evans Street</p>
        <p>OreeavUIe, Alse Raleigh, Charlette m Greensbere</p>
        <p>BAKE SALE</p>
        <p>A bake sale, sponsored by the women of the Bell Arthur Me-Church, will be held Feb. 26, at One Hour Modernizing on Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>PERSONAL</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mary E. Skittletharp Is a patient in Pitt Memorial Haspital.</p>
        <p>For a company buffet; garnish potato salad (made with an oil and vinegar dressing) with cooked frozen artichoke hearts and canned pimiento.</p>
        <p>'...</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>'p-'</p>
        <p>New drugs by the hundreds</p>
        <p> Each year gbout 400 new prescription medications are inUroduced.</p>
        <p>Keeping up with them is a time-consuming job for your physician and us. As part of your professional health team, we keep in constant touch with physicians . . . and thpy with us ... to make sure we carry the latest medicines in quantitiea needed.</p>
        <p>You can be sure well have the medications your physician prescnbea.</p>
        <p>BIGGS DRUG STORE</p>
        <p>Open Every Nlfht *TU 10:0 Prescription Plckap A Delirery Pharmacist On Doty At All Tlmee Me Evana Hi.  PL 2-2138</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>HANES MAKES &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>THE KIND OF IINHERWEAR AN ACTIVE BOY NEEDS!</p>
        <p>Boys need underwear that won't bind. Hanea makes it thet way Take the T-h1rt|. Atait that st^y^tucked In. A reinforced no-sag neckband. Soft, strong, whitest-white cotton thet launders perfectly. And Hanes briefs. Springy elastic waistband Is heat-raslttsnt, keeps its give after countless washings. And theres a double panel seat for extra wear.</p>
        <p>79c J, o'riy $2.35 79c 3^ only ,42.35</p>
        <p>Hinss briefs, 2-20,</p>
        <p>Hanes T-shirts, 2-18,</p>
        <p>Mflil and Phone Orders .Promptly Filled</p>
        <p>:HAREY</p>
        <p>BOYS DfPARTMENT</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0003" />
        <p>/.</p>
        <p>i </p>
        <p>*  .  I</p>
        <p> Washington (Api \-. Rrp. Pichaid Ichord^ D-Mo., qiiutfd H:riTtnr.v oI Uefp.uM; Robert S. McNamitra Monday a aayltiR</p>
        <p>Congrcft the lUial dcrlKlon mi hiis proposal to</p>
        <p>Reserve into llif National Guard.</p>
        <p>A I)efcn.^e Department ap' e'iUHn, however, said Me-Namara ha.s not diaoRed lil.s Posll.on that CMiRrera would</p>
        <p>thia agency," he aid Monday during a committee hearing. "IJaviUK Chtabilfthed It, to do ro would damage ouraelvcs and the (Ufiife o peace."</p>
        <p>The Hoii-e pasaed a year, $4d-mlllion auihor ^or\the agency. The adml tloii Is srekln;; a iour-jjr miHicti meaftuif.</p>
        <p>WA8H1NGT0N (APi</p>
        <p>Uti-</p>
        <p>HaiTlman l.\ expected fo go on a 'apeclal m-^sloii to Israel lor |re,ident Johnson iliH week Officials Raid Harriman la expected to inert with Israeli Premier, Levi fctfjikol and other oiflcjal.s on the efiect of West Germany R recent caoceUatlon of an arms supply program for Israel. The cancellation followed Egypt,'s objection to the</p>
        <p>have lo votr!,''fnnds to carry out ! dersecretary of Slate W. Averell t  program as It does for all d'-len.-r prnaam.s and that CVu-grtrs rouid require that the Gisrr) he kept at Its present elliuR of 700,(KKI men railier tian Hf I lie 5.)0,000 level contem-iVafPfl for the combined Guard ^ ruif Rpf.rr\e.  |</p>
        <p>Iiipliord told a reported that Me- i amara had given the word to j Il^ I!ou.*^e Armed Services Com- j mlttee during i cloBcd sesfito'.i ; at V hich he presented his an-  rual review of the nations mill- , tai-y po.sturc.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON &amp;lt;AP ~ Sen Pourke B. Hickenloopcr of Iowa, ranking Republican mem-her of the Senate Foreign Rela-ticr.i.s Committee, plans to op-povp mere than a tw'o-year au-thqri/atlon for the Arm.s Control and Dlsarmamnit Agency,</p>
        <p>I dont propo.se to alwll.'h</p>
        <p>Eye Repair For DukeOfWindsor</p>
        <p>Greenville boy Carson was reci the Nathan Hale w'ard from the Freedoms Pomidttion of Valley Forge, Pa., by the R'v. W.K. Quick of St. James Methodist Church.</p>
        <p>The award W'as given In recognition for an e.s.say written by</p>
        <p>Combine Effort</p>
        <p>To Determitie Driver FHness</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Department of Motor Vebkiles and the N, C. Medical Society have worked out a joint program to aid In dctcmilnlng ff driver license applicants are physically or mentally Incapable of safe driving,</p>
        <p>James Gr0dy of District A of the Driver License Division of the 'Department of Motor Vehicles reported that the program 1 working cut very well. The program has Ijeen in use throughout ! the slate for the last eight! months.</p>
        <p>Applicants arc advised on their quallfcatlon from the Raleigh office of the departmeut.</p>
        <p>When a question arises alKUit the phy.slcal or mental alnllty of an applicant, or if the applicant's record Indicates a need for medical examination before a nor--mal renewal dale, the Department of Motor Vehicles can request the applicant to have his family physician submit a medical report.</p>
        <p>In the Raleigh office copies of the Tport. Identifiable only by niui.ber, arc prepared and mailed to a medical review board made up of five physleians. There are .six such bcjards In North Carolina wdio work under a committee of the N. C. Medical Society to tlie Department of Motor Vrhlclc.s. Dr. S. L Pat-ricl: of Kinston Is committee chairman.</p>
        <p>Board menil^ers review the re-</p>
        <p>fha Dally iaflacfor, Ortanvilla, N. C.Tuatday, Nbrvary 9$, f9^</p>
        <p>fm</p>
        <p>^urvivJifg Charter Member</p>
        <p>/ J, B. Kittrell, 8r,, only/mir- in late 1920 and dedicated on In the Greenville Club. Kit</p>
        <p>/ . . . ..    4 a. A  4 a 4M4  m.rn.  A#  *Ka</p>
        <p>vlvlng charier member of the Greenville Rotary Club, honored by the club last bight In connection with the 60lh anniversary of Rotary International.</p>
        <p>The Greenville Ro^ry Club was organized with 22 charter I member on September 8. 1919.</p>
        <p>I Special guests for last nlght/s meeting Included Mrs. J." Klt-</p>
        <p>March 14, 1921, to be used for Rotary\ and fiommunlty fune-tlons lb Greenville.</p>
        <p>The Orwnvllle lub. he said, was Instrumental In the organization of Rotary Clubs In Farm-vllle, Ayden, Robersonvllle and ricthel In Its earlier ^ years.  It aisc sponsored a county  wide track meet and literary meet for</p>
        <p>trell. Sr.. Mr, and Mrs, J. Knott i youngsters In schools throughout Prwtor, Jr.. Mr. and Mrs. J B. pRt County. It took an early Kittrell, Jr., President Robert D. legfj m sponsorship of Boy Scout</p>
        <p>KlttrtU</p>
        <p>served as president of the Oreen-vllle Club In 1921-22 and again In 1936-37. HU ion, J. B. Kittrell, Jr. served aa tiffit-dent of the Greenville Rotary Gub In 1963-64</p>
        <p>Rouse. Jr. of the FarmvlUe Rotary Club. President Joe Whitaker of the Ayden Rotary Club and President James A, Manning of the Bethel Rotaf7 Gub.</p>
        <p>A quartet composed of Rotar-lans Bancroft Moseley. Fred En-glehart, Johnny Overton and A E Dubbcr presented several vocal selections.</p>
        <p>^NGLEDACTI^'W-m</p>
        <p>tn h-w f  !--  |jy  fu  yrt</p>
        <p>N cloH|) rruft  into  tu-n  pf  1  -l',  Wl.</p>
        <p>Local Woman Named To Assist N.C. School Of rt</p>
        <p>temational program^ sponsor the establishment of an orthopedic clinic In Greenville In President-elect Kenneth Har- connection with the local health rls. master of ceremonies ipxth* department, established a stud-meeting, recognized past presi- enl loan fund for college stud-dcnts of the Greenville club who ents, and was a sponsor of Camp are still active In Its membership, and presented Kittrell who addressed (he club.</p>
        <p>Cushing Now In Hospital Room</p>
        <p>BOSTON (AP)  - Rlchgrd</p>
        <p>Cardinal C*ushlng has been moved from a  postoperitlvo</p>
        <p>he Gmnvlllc aub, Kittrell j pointed out. alK) orllflnated the</p>
        <p>Idea o( Inler^^lly meetlngh  o  Ro-  " '  .....  .</p>
        <p>tary Gubs,  an  activity which  has  The 69 year-old  Archbishop of</p>
        <p>become a part of the Rotary In-1  Boston  was  transferred  Monday</p>
        <p>It helped '  from  the  Intenstye-care  unit  tU</p>
        <p>and Olrl Scout organizations in Greenville,</p>
        <p>St Elizabeths F.'spltal.</p>
        <p>A growth kriown as polypn was removed from a* portion of his intestine Saturday. Attending doctors said they w'ere satla-fled with the outcome of the</p>
        <p>Hardee, a Olrl Scout camp on operation. They said It would</p>
        <p>take .several days to determine If malignancy wae Involved.</p>
        <p>LONDON &amp;lt;APt - London! nrw.spaprr.s reported today that i the Duke of Wlnd.sor ha.s a de-taclipcl retina in hi.s left qye. The Daily Expi-e.s.s said it i^as con- I Ridcred certain that he would j have an operation to refix the i retina to the inside of his cye-/i ball.  I</p>
        <p>A spoke.sman at the I,ondon clinic said the 70-year-old duke had a good night and Is "very cnmfortablf^." He .said he could not confirm the diagnosis reported by the papers.</p>
        <p>A friend .said the dukes ailment Ls "serious but not catastrophic.</p>
        <p>The former king und hi.s American-born duchess arrived from Paris unexpectedly Monday and the duke moved into a i finite at the clinic. The clinic said he probably would remain several dy.s.</p>
        <p>A few hours after his arrival, tlie duke was examined by Sir ; Carson in connection wdth a const ewart Dukc-Elder, an old ! test sponsored jointly by Free-</p>
        <p>CHARU)Tf|l Mrs. Dibrell .fcentatives.</p>
        <p>Ficklen of GreenvITTh'-b,^ been  rcprc.srntatives,  who will</p>
        <p>named a.s a regional reprrsqU^. ^pi-yp v(^iinfprr.s ha e receiv-llvc of the North Carolina Schobhj  ^cTwckgrounTHiiatPria 1 about the j</p>
        <p>.  .of Art which will opcni in  Win-  school  and  will  pass</p>
        <p>ports  Individually  and provide  i ston-Salem this September.  i</p>
        <p>their  opinions  according to .  the  I The new r,chool will ^ive  prc&amp;gt;  ;</p>
        <p>the Pamlico River,</p>
        <p>K. B. Pace paid tribute to Kittrell traced briefly the de-, KittreU for hi* leadership in Ro-velopment of  Ro-  ;  the  yir, and for hi* ! - A riot In the Panama Canal</p>
        <p>^ tary Gub and the highlight* w contBbutlon to Rotary acUvltle* Zone la*t year cost 24 Uvea.</p>
        <p>I Its actlvltle* during the past 4.5 ; years. He pointed out that the I Greenville Rotary Gub was the j first Rotary group to own It* own building. It was constructed</p>
        <p>Sally Branch HD</p>
        <p>Reorganzie</p>
        <p>tooricaii Mcilical A.saMlatlons |  (easloaal training to exccpltonal-  j    organizations  In thrlr com-</p>
        <p>*Guid?line for Physical Fitness j  ly talented students In mus i c,    munltic.s</p>
        <p>to Operate a Motor Vehicle."  drama and dance.</p>
        <p>The boards opinion Is then reviewed by the Department of Mo- I  lolte, who is a member of the</p>
        <p>tor Vehicles which determines if !  schools Board of Tni.stces,' Is</p>
        <p>the driver meets licensing .stand- j  chairman of the regional repre-</p>
        <p>ards. In many cases the board provides a guideline w'hich enables the department to issue a Ucen.sp con.slstent with the persons ability to drive safely.</p>
        <p>Awaiting Trial InArsenic Death</p>
        <p>PrintsDisplayed By Arts Major</p>
        <p>FRANK CAR.SON</p>
        <p>TARBORO, N.G^,(APi-- Mr.s.</p>
        <p>.Shirley Slmnis, ^charged , with I</p>
        <p>murder in the airenic death of ;  .  .p--  '</p>
        <p>her hu.shand, Is expreled to i  /</p>
        <p>tried during the April 1!) term</p>
        <p>TTip Sally Branch Community Development Club  will  meet</p>
        <p>Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the 1</p>
        <p>Mr. Paul Mnilnmiirtr of Char-^  -^oin  o t h e r Sally Branch Elementary School.!</p>
        <p>representatives In a luncheon  -jSe purpose of the meeting U</p>
        <p>this Saturday to discuss specific j to I re &amp;lt; - organize the  group for:</p>
        <p>ways in whi(|h the regional i-ep-</p>
        <p>re.sentative.s can help the school !  Leroy James and  Oncal D, I</p>
        <p>find profc.s.slonal talent among ^ rurs of the Agricultural Exten-hoys and giris of elementary. I slqn Service . will conduct t h e high school and college ages. ' mfeting.</p>
        <p>Dr. Vittorio Giannini. prcsid- ! All families in the community  ent of the new' .school, v 111 give  arh urged to be present at thi* j the representatives a general. } mtreting,</p>
        <p>over-all concept of how the .school i  ----------------</p>
        <p>will operate and what it hopc.s .  MASONIC NOTICE</p>
        <p>to accomplish. Mrs. Julia Muel-1  William Pitt Lodge  UD A.F.</p>
        <p>'    ,  u  !  Ip*- a- professor at Duke Univer- ,and A.M. wall hold an emergent</p>
        <p>Srventeen graphic prints by an  j  ^.jjj p^piain the academic  1 communication Wednesday, Feb.</p>
        <p>East Carolina College  c^d are  i  program  which will be fully ac-  24, at  7:30 p.m.  All  Master</p>
        <p>on display thi.s w^i^ in  the Kate    credited  according to  re q u  1 r e-   Masons  are invited</p>
        <p>Lew'is Gallery of Rawl  Building  i  j-ppnts set up by the  North  Car-  | W  Herman h</p>
        <p>on the campus.  I  Board of Education,</p>
        <p>The exhiiiilor. Virginia Milli-  |</p>
        <p>cent Carra way of Pinetops, is the</p>
        <p>W. Herman Nobles, Master W. Bradley Gray, Secy</p>
        <p>friend w'ho is his eye specialist ' doms Foundation and the Boy igj Edgecombe County Superior'  senior  art  shows.</p>
        <p>and al.'so snrgeon-oculi.st to Scouts of America.</p>
        <p>Onren Elizabeth H. Another i car.son W'a.: one of 36.hUO .scouts examination was made today. * across the nation who coinnoted Tlic duchess .stayed six hours tlie Foundations Nathan Hale with her husband at the clinic, aw'ard by submitting 100 - vord</p>
        <p>Court.</p>
        <p>Her display Is .scheduled to i</p>
        <p>Mrs. Simm.s, a former ho.spi- r c^mue through Sunday the ^ tal laboratory tcclr.iicial, wa.s , arrested Monday in the court-I room immediately after the.</p>
        <p>show' is under the direction of</p>
        <p>un nrr nu.suaiiQ at ii.e eiiiuc. aw'ard by submitting 100 - vord ; room immernaLeiy aiu-r uu-. ,  ,  cpv-,,ipr  rhairman  of  the</p>
        <p>then .spent the night at Gar- statements on patriotic themes. Edgecombe County Superior</p>
        <p>Idgc.s Hotel.    grapnics  aeparinieni  in  me  H.V...V.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Mr. Quick reported | Lount Grand Jury returned the</p>
        <p>LAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>Oreensilles reliable Jeweler. Diamond setttac, remounting and repair* done on premlM^</p>
        <p>fxi.';tkkei), .ewe1;Er "'W .a.meiuc.an cem siiciet</p>
        <p>N'IN'rKRN.T'O.VM. OK(IA.\&amp;gt;/.ATON F IH, I* K Ml \ H I.'l. I  W M I</p>
        <p>The duke will be 7! on June ; that Carson, who is the .son of |</p>
        <p>2.". Surgeons In Hou.=ton. Tex., m,.  Mrs. John F. Carson</p>
        <p>IT moved a swollen section of an 2013 Tryon Drive, received an ailcry from hi.s abdomen two i jn.scribed medallion from Free-</p>
        <p>She is accMsed in the Jan R death of Fi'ed B. Simms. 29-</p>
        <p>School of Art.</p>
        <p>A 1961 graduate of the We.st Edgecombe High School at Route</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>NOW IN REVIVAL</p>
        <p>EVANGELIST</p>
        <p>BILLY SUNDAY MYERS</p>
        <p>OF</p>
        <p>CHARLOHE</p>
        <p>7:30 NIGHTLY</p>
        <p>Same Sound Scriptural Messagea' GREENVILLE CHURCH OF GOD</p>
        <p>Comer Skinner &amp;amp; ' Spruce St. REV. R. W. TEDDER PASTOR</p>
        <p>year-old factory worker. A path- i 2, Rocky Mount, Mi.&amp;gt;s Carraway</p>
        <p>monlhs ago. Ho and the duchess iTturnrd from the United States to th^ir home in Paris early this i month.  ^  !</p>
        <p>John Utter, the duke.s private ' ficcrelary, said the Dukes rnch doctors advised him to i fl.v to London for the examination.  i</p>
        <p>"The eye has been giving fiome trouble since la.st Saturday." Utter .said. "We have i been worried about it and that's ' why* w'e came here for examina- ' tions and consultations. Other- i W'ise. the duke is In good physi-  cal condition.  I</p>
        <p>dom.s Foundation. Last year Car.son, who is active in both St. James Church and Troop 340 .spon.sored by the church, won the scout God and ^Country Award.</p>
        <p>The Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, Pa., Is a non-profit. non political, nonsectarian organization which honors individuals. organization.s and .schools for their w'ork in preserving the American heritage of freedom.</p>
        <p>Grimesland Club Making Plans For Talent Show</p>
        <p> ^ j-  '  </p>
        <p>GRnViESLAND - The ^Grim-c.;land Home Demonstrat 1 o n Club, meeting last Monday, made plan. for the Talent Show to l&amp;gt;e pre.sentcd March 21 at White Oak Baptist Church,</p>
        <p>Club members and non - mei-y-bers Will participate In this program.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lillian Gatlin. Mrs. Lillie Mills and Mr.s. Jc.ssle Pay ton reported to the club on the recent County Council Meeting in Greenville.</p>
        <p>They told the group that the annual HDC Banquet will be held p,Trly In March and also announced that the State HDC Federation will ^be held March 24 in Dorton Arena on the N.C. State Fairground* In Raleigh. Full participation In these activities was encouraged.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Pa.yton presented a dem-on.stration on the "Art of Shopping.</p>
        <p>Mr.s. Llllle Wilson, club president, presided over the meeting.</p>
        <p>Some historians believe that the baronial a*.id royal parties assembled on oppo.site sides of the Thames and met on a .small Island in the river to seal the Magna Carta. .</p>
        <p>M-   </p>
        <p>i ologists report showed he died ; of a massive dc.se of arsenic poison.</p>
        <p>' Tl-jca.se was further cornpll-I cateci last' month when it was I believed that the couple. twO i children had also died of arsenic poisoning.</p>
        <p>Their bodies were exhumed and first tests showed traces of arsenic in their bodies. A recheck disclosed, however, that contaminayon of a pathologi.st.s equipanent w'as responsible for the first report.</p>
        <p>Seven</p>
        <p>is a candidate for th BS degree here next winter.</p>
        <p>Among her collection oi' prints assembled in the show' Is The Pond," a graphic painting in light tones of orange, yellow' and green. Other W'orks by the student artist .include Fiery Tulips" in green and reddish colors and "SlTiwly Fades the Auturrm Rose in black.</p>
        <p>~ STATE religion</p>
        <p>COLOMBO. Ceylon &amp;lt; A P &amp;gt;  The governments cabinet has month-old Kimberly j approved a proposal that Budd-died last June 8 of .suffocation ihlsm be made the state religion and her sister. Pamela. 3. died | m Ceylon. Parliamentary Icgis-last Oct. 8 when she choked on lation w'ould require amending a piece of cheese.^  the countrys constitution.</p>
        <p>Art Of Shopping Shown Clubbers</p>
        <p>Members of the Greenv 11 le Home Demonstration Gub. meeting last night, saw' a demonstration on the "Art of Shopping."</p>
        <p>The program wa.s presented by Mls.s Addle Gore, home agent for Pitt County.</p>
        <p>Member,s pre.sent participated in the buslne.ss .se.s.slon that followed which wn.s lead by President Annie R. Moore. /</p>
        <p>Recreation and refiv.shments followed.</p>
        <p>The Capitol Dome of Colorado 1* covered with 24 carat old totaling 250 ouncrN,  </p>
        <p>Now Many Weor</p>
        <p>FALSE TEETH</p>
        <p>With LIttI* Worry</p>
        <p>at, talk, laugh or sneaza without faar of inaaoure fU tooth dropping, allppLng or wobbling. FASTCKTH bolai plotM Ormor and moro com-forubly Thla ploaoont powdor hoo no gummy goooy pait.r taota or fooling. Dnoon' rouoo nouoro (t o olkalliio non-orldi (horkii 'pKito ortof* df.nOiro brootht Oot'FAITMrtH al &amp;gt;0 itrUO</p>
        <p>f fWhew, that was close!</p>
        <p>To think I almost bought that car with a 'low-price name before I found out you can buy a full-size Olds 88 for less!</p>
        <p>Now going on at your Olds Dealers...</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>auos fefstur</p>
        <p>'umboree</p>
        <p>J9tttr 88... pricat atari bo|low 1.0 modalt</p>
        <p>Your chance to step out in stylo and saye!  whh  low-prict  namwai</p>
        <p>Try a flocket in Action! * G 5 [ j O LD S M  BI LE</p>
        <p>-SIC YOU* LOCAL AUTHORIWO OlOSMOBIlt QUALITY DtALII... WHIIt TNI ACTION It t-</p>
        <p>HEALTH INSURANCE for people 66 or over</p>
        <p>The loWCost, bfoad-eoverage medical-hospltalplans</p>
        <p>T~</p>
        <p>If yon are 65 or over, or responsible for someone who b, this is the good news tif the year. Virginia-North Carolina 65 protection is being offered again in 1965 as a public service by a voluntary association of leading insurance companies. Made possible through .special law's passed for the purpose by both states, this plan offers senior citizens the broad medi-cal-hospital coverage they so urgently need, at a modest</p>
        <p>monthly prcmiinn they can readily afford______________</p>
        <p>No medical examination, no long health questionnaire. Even previous illnesses or conditions arc covered after a reasonable waiting period. Even more important, there will be no cancellation due to long or recurring illness. Vir^nia-North Carolina 65 gives real security, not just fair weather protection. Once you arc enrolled, your coverage mav not be individually modified or cancelled.  /</p>
        <p>In the pWs first eight months, over 4,300 Insored needed its help. Over one million dollars in claims were paid. Do you wonder that a plan that performs such a vital public .service has earned the enthusiastic support of civic leaders, hospitals and medical associations in both states.</p>
        <p>Citizens of either state, 65 or over, are eligihle. So are their wives, or husbands regardless of age. They con enroll thcm-selvM. Or their s(Mis and daughters or relatives can enroll them, without even getting their signatures.</p>
        <p>The need is great, the time is short Based on past experience, chances arc one in eight youll need Virginia-North Carolina 63*s help in the, next 12 months. So dont delay. Get this broad, low-cost medical-hospital coverage effective April 1. ,4. Security Enrollment Month..  Feb. 22 - Mar. 22 only. CALL ANY INSURANCE AGENT T&amp;lt;AY!</p>
        <p>Stafford Oldsmobile Co., Inc., Hooker Rd, &amp;amp; Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>rhoncii 7M-34I6  75S-S4I7  7.5S-.I4IS  N  T.  Dralrr  l-lrrmr  No.  801  GrrrnTlllo.  N.</p>
        <p>___  rOK  IMI  a!ll  IN  U510  CAR...  Ill  YOU*  OIOS  OIAIIR  fOR A lAfl MOPIL VAlUl RAIlO USII fAl</p>
        <p>  tr   V  ----------</p>
        <p>  ..  'A,'</p>
        <p>[/se/Aif btkl^Qraik  viroinia-north Carolina 65 health insurance Depi e*i8p. o. bok 365 RkSMMS. vs. |</p>
        <p>e r. UIWK /f a JR. uny Oinilcmen: Pkue semi coraplele infomistioB on Virgkiia-NorUi Caroliaa 6S HaalUi liMuraM at M |</p>
        <p>itcensea tn^urnct agent ^ obi,tion u me. ^    .  j</p>
        <p>^forfuil elttails atidntlp I =</p>
        <p>Nuoa.</p>
        <p>^ .1*</p>
        <p>Henrolling.  ,      v..  |</p>
        <p>^ .  ^_-......- Rmee......  .  .  ,'  :  -  .Wp*lN.   I</p>
        <p>f'</p>
        <p>Ji-,</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0004" />
        <p>'Numbr On Boy</p>
        <p>ications In Scotts Proposal</p>
        <p>There will be u great deal of discussion in Raleigh and elsewhere about Lt. Gov. Robert Scotts suggeatlon that consideration be given to making the post of lieutenant governor a fulMime job in North Carolina.  r</p>
        <p>.. As it is now the Lieutenant Governor is the second highest office in the state. But the position is more a position of title than authority. The primary duty of the Lieutenant Governor is to preside over the biennial sessions of the Senate. Other than his legislative duties, he has no administrative re Donsibility or authority, and is in fact a member of the legslative rather than the executive branch ol government. And beyond that, he is a part-time employe of the state during the four years he</p>
        <p>holds office.</p>
        <p>We concur with Lt. Gov. Scott that consideration be given to up-grading the states number two office. Any change in the authority or responsibility of the office, however, would be accompanied by</p>
        <p>Work Load Is</p>
        <p>Barely Touched</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM A. SHIRES</p>
        <p>SORATCHED  In session for three weeks now, the 196S General Assembly has barely scratched the surface of its hupe workpile.</p>
        <p>No major statewide legislation has been enacted and, in fact, not a very large amount has even been introduced. But this is not surprising because there is no real urgency at this point. Hasty enactment of anything of major import would have been totally unexpected.</p>
        <p>Thus it is evident that there is a great deal of painstaking work ahead for the state's lawmakers.</p>
        <p>It is conceded generally that ^he 1965 session is off to a fast, smooth start in the way of organization and taking car of preliminaries.</p>
        <p>Committee organization is complete and certain of the major committees arc on busy schedules. Joint Appropriations, for example, is more than a third of the way through its initial schedule of agency hearing.s. This is in the way of clearing decks because this committee will have most of the headaches on budget matters later on.</p>
        <p>VILLIAM</p>
        <p>8UIKCS</p>
        <p>LEL.iLATxOi, only a dozen or so measures of major importance have been submitted to date.</p>
        <p>Thi? list includes the administration's S300 million highway bond issue bill and Gov. Dan K. Moores requested reorganization of the State High-Way Commission.</p>
        <p>But there has been little ee toward implementing the governors outlined legislative program.</p>
        <p>In education, legislation , to restore continuing contract provisions for school teachers is in the mill. The measure to establish a fourth campus of the Consolidated Universitj of ^ l^orth Carolina at Charlotte has cleared a Senate committee and is ready for floor action.</p>
        <p>The House Higher Education committee has a bill to rename the Raleigh branch of U N C * North Carolina State University at Raleigh.</p>
        <p>ITEMS - It is unlikely that there wilT be any action for another month or so in the Finance committees on legisla tion to Increase state income</p>
        <p>tax exemption for dependents.</p>
        <p>A House judiciary committee has handed a bill to put North Carolina under daylight saving time to a subcommittee for treatment and the arranging of public hearings. Committee action ,also will be delayed on a bill to add 300 troopers to the State Highway Pat r o 1 force (luring the next tw'O years.</p>
        <p>Some other items already include Rep. Arch McMillans bill to increase penalties for highway racing. Rep. Steve Lolleys measure to ban horror and narcotics movies, and Sen. Ed Kemps proposal to change the primary voting day in North Carolina from Saturday to Tuesday. A bill to boost legislators expense allowances from $12 to $20 a day is being reworked to Iron (WJt its legality.</p>
        <p>MESSAGES  In the offing, of course, are at least two mcs-;  ges now being drafted by the governor  one on budget recommendations and another on highway safety measures.</p>
        <p>Moore disclosed last week that he is working hard on details of his budget proposals and remains hopeful that he can submit specific spend i n g recommendations to the General Assembly in about 30 days. It may be later. The governor said he does not want to delay this unduly but emphasized the magnitude of the task.</p>
        <p>The governors legislative program put before the General Assembly on Feb. 4 contained items which will cost at least $60 to $75 million more than the Advisory Budget Com-missiB-iecommended. Thus it has been clear that quite a bit of budget revision would be necessary and Moore confirmed that he has been conferring* daily on specifics.</p>
        <p>He added that as of last week he had reached no difinite decision on budget particulars including whether to recommend a capital improvements bond issue.</p>
        <p>COMING - Still to be worked out. too. are the specific provisions of a periodic motor vehicles inspection law which Moore has recommended. No legislation to imolement this has been offered.</p>
        <p>There is built-in resistance In the legislature to any form of mechanical auto inspect i o n. However, Moore said he is confdent that the Assemb 1 y will approve some reasonable plan. The problem, he said, is coming up with a reasonable bill  one that is both workable and effective and which would be acceptable to the public.</p>
        <p>Chanc^.s are that some sort of inspection law will be proposed in an administration package of highway safety measures.  ^  _</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED</p>
        <p>AVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of The Boar&amp;lt;$</p>
        <p>Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday Established 1882</p>
        <p>JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers</p>
        <p>Entered at Post Qfflce. QieenviUe. N- C.. as second class mail matter</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier  (In Towns)  Week  30e</p>
        <p>By Carrier  (Motor Routes)  Week  35c</p>
        <p>By MAIL Payable In Advance</p>
        <p>Greenville Post Office. Pitt County. Robersonville. Vanceboro, Washington and Chocowlnity.</p>
        <p>Tiiree  Months  ................... $ 3.76</p>
        <p>Six Month .......................... 7.00</p>
        <p>One  Year   UOO</p>
        <p>Vorth parolina (other than listed above)</p>
        <p>Three  Months  ...... ......| 4.00</p>
        <p>Six  Months   7JW</p>
        <p>One Year  .   14.00</p>
        <p>Plus 3*!% N C Sales Tall All Other Outside North &amp;lt;jaroilna</p>
        <p>Three Months  .. ................ $4.28</p>
        <p>Six Months .............................. 8 00</p>
        <p>On#  Yr   1500</p>
        <p>ilEMBER A8bOC'lATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclu.MveIy entitled to use for publication all news dispatche.'t credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also tht local news published lercln All rights of pubUcstion. of special dispatches here are else reserved.</p>
        <p>Member AUdit Bureau of Circulation</p>
        <p>All advetifainf ropy must be received as least one day before (MbiicatMb' dsta .  i  L</p>
        <p>considerable change in the political achema In the</p>
        <p>/For the moat part in North Carolina, there ii no connection between the man who holds the top office of the state and the one in the second office, except that they are members of the saipe political party. Only rarely can a candidate fdi* the gubernatorial nomination and a candidate for nomination as lieutenant governor be linked together in a state-wide primary. Each is his own man with his own program s(i&amp;amp; far as the primary campaign is concerned. At the national level, by contrast, the party candidate for second place on the ticket is the hand-picked choice of the top candidate.</p>
        <p>If the lieutenant governor were to become a part of the admini.^^tration with full-time duties in North Carolina, ^there would almost have to be some connection between the respective candidates for the two posts in the state-wide primary. Otherwise a governor may find himself with a lieutenant governor who failed to share his political views even though they were members of the same political party. And the lieutenant governor, rather than being somewhat independent as he is now, may find himself in effect an assistant to the governor, with political obligations-other than just partv loyaltyto the chief executive.</p>
        <p>As North Carolina considers changing the role of its lieutenant governor it will find the political implications much more complexand probably more difficult to resolvethen the mechanics of giving its second highest official a full-time job in the state government.</p>
        <p>Dropouts Now Know Somebody Interested</p>
        <p>We arent quite^sure what Judge Allen H. Gwyn learned in his talks with some 45 parents of school dropouts, but at least the parents and their youngsters know now that someone is interested in why they stopped school before getting their high school diplomas.</p>
        <p>Judge Gwyn had the parents and the younp sters appear in court in Salisbury because he said last week that almost all the young offenders he has had to deal with lately have been school dropouts.</p>
        <p>The practice is not likely to become normal procedure of Superior Court Judges throughout the state, but it does indicate one judges interest in the problem. If North Carolina is to succe.ssfully cope with the dropout situation among its young people, encouragement for youngsters to continue their education at least through high school must come from many sources.</p>
        <p>Few, if any, communities in the state are fully utilizing their resources to encourage dropouts or potential dropouts to remain in school at least through high school.</p>
        <p>HardComeback</p>
        <p>Endina</p>
        <p>Proven</p>
        <p>System</p>
        <p>By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN Copyright, IMS, King Feature! ^ Syndicate, Inc.</p>
        <p>IndlanapoiLfi, Ind. -F &amp;lt; v e yeara ago, when hardly anybody had heard ol Barry Go.d-water. this city -i the center of a big conservative revival. Hooaler pride in self-help was riding high. The cay Redevelopment Commlsa n had rejected the Idea of t d-eral aid. yet it was busy with ^ local funds clearing up slur.is and providing new housing that lower income families could actually afford to rent. Ralph Husted, a big wheel in the Indiana Power and Light Company, was working hard as the leading spirit on an autonomous school board to give the schools some honest text books in the field of history, The local Citizens Gas and Coke Utility, a publicly owned body, ran its own good non-political show under five trustees, as free of political patronage as is the federal TVA.</p>
        <p>By HAL BOYLE</p>
        <p>?ity The Modern Chile,</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP&amp;gt;  Pity the poor modern child:</p>
        <p>He is becoming the most prominent victim of our fumbling attempts to create a more livable world.</p>
        <p>Most of us ag i n g codgers trend to low - rate the youngsters of today.</p>
        <p>We enjoy the pleasant assumption that life was tougher when we were children. We love to bore our own young with all the hardships we knew in childhood  how many miles we had to walk to school, how many chores we did around the home, how early</p>
        <p>in life we earned our own spending money by delivering newspapers, selling magazines or sacking potatoes all day Saturday for the comer grocery store.</p>
        <p>To hear us tell it, the fabled labors of Hercules were as nothing to the work we accomplished in adolescence. And each of us, looking nostalig-ically back at those ardu o u s times, never forgets to add piously:</p>
        <p>But hard work never hurt any kid. It w?ls good for me. It made a man of me  not a cry baby.</p>
        <p>Most of this is pure piffle.</p>
        <p>?0r Republicans other Editors Saying..</p>
        <p>By JAMES MARLOW</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON lAP - The idea of political parties worrn ed George Washington and in his farewell address he warned against the danger of them. I he were alive today he might not like Democrats or Republic^ans.</p>
        <p>But it's the Republicans who would puzzle him more. They look just as disconnected now as they did in the 1964 campaign.</p>
        <p>The Democrats, at least, are organized and know what they stand for; big governmetit and government responsibility for the general welfare. The voters gave them overwhelming approval.</p>
        <p>iAMEB</p>
        <p>MARLOW</p>
        <p>Sen. Barry Goldwater was against that. So when Tie lost, in one of the worst defeats in history, the Republicans, badly divided over him. had the job of trying to resurrect the party and decide what they stand for.</p>
        <p>They wont resurrect the party unless they can unify it. It Isnt clear they have achieved that. And It certainly Isnt clear they're agreed on what they stand for.</p>
        <p>Last year Goldwater and his handpicked brain tru.st were the constant critics of things as they are but were almost totally lacking on the constructive .side in offerhig sped f i c solutions for what ailed the country.</p>
        <p>Before he got into the race Goldwater was positive on</p>
        <p>many things. Once in, he became vague, hedged on some of his unpopular previous statements. and used an extraordinary amount of time insisting he was not irresponsible.</p>
        <p>This didnt add to the voters, enlightenment.</p>
        <p>Last week some prominent Republicans discussed the partys future at a four - day session of the Young Republican National Leadership Training School. That wasnt very enlightening, eitheb.</p>
        <p>Sidny Captain,  GOP finance chairman from Baltimore, had .some suggestions on how to raise campaign funds.</p>
        <p>Successful political fund raising, he said, begins at a cocktail party with plenty of booze and plenty of charming girls floating around so ther-11 be no arguments.</p>
        <p>Captain is a fund-raiser, not an idea man. But one of Goldwaters idea men, in fact his right - hand man. Republican National Chairman Dean Burch, tried his hand at resurrecting the party.</p>
        <p>He told the Re pub 11 c a n i, among other things, to establish them.selves In the South but he warned against racial appeals. Instead, he suggested the party appeal to t h e economic conservatism of the average Southerner.</p>
        <p>Who the average Southerner Is, he didnt sav. Nor did he offer proof that the average otie Is an economic conservative. But in an area where so many are poor Negroes, along'^tde many poor whites, there isnt much for them to con.serve, although all are political voters.</p>
        <p>So Burch's Ideas at this ffifftr" Ing didnt illuminate the partys problems.</p>
        <p>The GOP House leader. Rep. Gerald R. Ford Jr. of Michigan. didnt criticize Burch but he blamed an unfortunate Image of the party for lack</p>
        <p>* Continued on page 5&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Not</p>
        <p>ine</p>
        <p>Answer</p>
        <p>(Washington Daily News&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>The pr(H30sal by the Mecklenburg legislative delegation to the North Carolina General assembly that by the drink sales of liquor in restaurants and hotels be allbwed, could, if passed, open up an entirely new concept of what we call alcoholic beverage control in this state.</p>
        <p>We have heard It said many times over the past few years that until our beach areas in North Carolina allow by the drink liquor sales In hotels and restaurants might a 11 r i c t some people who otherwise would not come. By the same token such a concept might cause some who ordinarily would come not to do so.</p>
        <p>We well remember a few years ago when ABC stores first came into existence. If memory serves us correctly, the first such store was set up in Wilson, county. Since that time over the state scores of ABC stores have come into existence. A few years ago there was quite a demand for a statewide referendum on ABC stores. At the time of that great demand It was felt that on a statewide basis the ABC stores would be voted out.</p>
        <p>No longer do we hear that demand because it is generally felt today that If such a referendum could be called, that the entire state would approve of the ABC system.</p>
        <p>All ^pf us know very well and hotels, along with taverns, and other similar places in New York or in most large cities of this country and be served alcoholic drinks. Then one is asked what is the difference between serving liquor by the drink in New York and in Charlotte. N.C.? From the social side there might be no difference. From the practical side there is a great deal of difference. North Carolina people, we feel, are not ready to accept such sales.</p>
        <p>Now. if Mecklenburg county goes through with the idea and asks for by the drink sales of liquor, other counties either immediately or In the future will do the same thing. One day we might have a general picture where restaurants and hotels, along with taversn. will be engaging in this business. But right now it would appear that we have to deal with the "control of drinking or the "encouragement of drinking.</p>
        <p>It might come one day In the future, but to offer by the drink salee now would radically change our ABC system as we know it within a few years. North Carolina Ls not ready for such a step at this time. We cannot believe that the Mecklenburg delegation will ever get around to offering such a bill In the North Carolina legislature at this session. If It is offered, it is our opinion that it will not get very far.</p>
        <p>Every generation as it grows older likes to brag about how much rougher a time it had than the generation that succeeds it.</p>
        <p>When we recall the ordeals of our youth, W'e forget one advantage of that prlvUeged time. Kids were left on their own more. They had more freedom to make their own fun.</p>
        <p>America was less crowded then. There w'ere more woods to explore, more room f Orr digging caves, more creeks to fish in, more ponds to swim in.</p>
        <p>The blessed innocence of childhood laster longer. Boys and girls didnt ape adulthood It such an early age.</p>
        <p>We often complain about the Ingratitude of young people today. Well, If we were honest with ourselves, we could readily find reasons why t h j y should resent us rather than feel grateful.</p>
        <p>If they were pamperea and overprotected, who Is responsible? They arent. We are. If we do too much for them In some ways, In .other ways we do too little for them.</p>
        <p>One of the worst crimes against our young Is that we rob them of security In childhood. We make them old too soon.</p>
        <p>Almost as soon as a baby learns to toddle, his parents start dinning into him the importance of ifettlng into the right college.</p>
        <p>Modern children -.re tense and insecure because they have a. schedule as tight as that of a busy executive. All their activities are arranged for them. They are supervised almost to death. They have no time left for one of the chief Industries of childhood  wonder and idle dreaming.</p>
        <p>What we are doing Is transferring our own fears and pressures to our children. V/hat we need to do now and then Is to let up on them, give them a day off to themselves, and let them enjoy their childhood while they still have It.</p>
        <p>Quote</p>
        <p>"Crime Is Increasing four times faster than the population. At that rate the thieves will soon be stealing from each other.  Port Myers (Pla.) News-Press.</p>
        <p>joim</p>
        <p>CHAMB^CRLAIM</p>
        <p>It was explained to me during a visit to Indianapolis in he early Nineteen Sixties that local insistence on nai-politl-cal autonomy for the towns various boards, commissi o n s and authorities dated back to the Nineteen Twenties, when the Ku Klux Klan threatened to engulf Indiana. The local citizens, horrified at the idea that the Klan might take over in politics, decided to put their community services beyond the reach of partisan officials. What followed was a histoiT of municipal adminis-tratton that has been singularly free of patronage grabs. And the Indianapolis schools have been among the best in the country.</p>
        <p>Now. however, all this may be in process of chang i n g. Indianapolis Is in Maiion County. which is the seat of so-called Young Turk movement In the Democratic Party that Is bent on sweeping away the whole tissue of state and local independence. The " o u n g Turks of Marion County got a lot of seats in the new Indiana legislature last Fall as a result of the Lyndon Johnson sweep. They have declared war on the elaborate check-and-balance system that has kept Indianapolis health and welfare activities out of city hall politics, and are currently sponsoring a group of "grab bill that will turn control of practically everything in the town over to party rule. That the nature of a city government can be changed by a vote in the State Legislature may seem strange, but Is Js apparently a fact of Indiana life.</p>
        <p>The first Independent municipal body to feel the teeth of the "Young Turks In the Legi.*-lature is the Citizens Gas and Coke Utility.</p>
        <p>In less than thirty minutes of floor activity the Young Turks in the Indiana House voted the other day to give the mayor of Indianapolis the power to appoint and remove the five trustees of the utility and to seize the companys earned surplus for the citys general fund. Passage of the bill in the State Senate seems absolutely certain as this column 1 being written. The pre.s-ent Mayor of Indianapolis, John Barton. Is not a partisan character, and even the opposition newspaper editors call a conscientious public servant. But the point Is that mayons come and go, and if city hall has the power to change the guard In municipal serv Ices every time there Is t new regime, th( worst sort of patronage sandals Is apt to flower. Remflfmberlng the day.s when the Kii jKlux Klan threatened to donpnate everything, some of the wder citizens of Indlana-(Conf^ued on page S)</p>
        <p>PoDulation' Gains Outpace Fooc.</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>tk</p>
        <p>By EARL L. DOUGLAS THE UNKNOWN WASHINGTON</p>
        <p>It sceni.s strange that a man V who contributed as much to ' world history as did Geor g e Washington should be so little known to the nation her served. Hundreds of biographiesof Abraham Lincoln have be e n written; comparatively few ,biographies of Wa.shlngton h g'v e been written. Yet this man Wa.shlngton wa.s responsible for a form of govcinment W'hlch has spread all over the world, and the standards he set up as our first President have been copied by most of the free nations ov|;r the entire globe.</p>
        <p>Washington was not a man wh&amp;amp; life was characterized by brilliance. He was a good general. bill theie were plenty of goMd geueials in the 18th cen luriLv He was a man oK unusual</p>
        <p>judgment. His courage and determination could not under any circumstance be tur n c d aside. He realized that the logistic problems were such that air the Continental troops had to do w^s to hang on a few years and they could win the war which started with a little skirmish at Concord and Lexington. Wa.*!hlnKton knew only a few thmg.s but he knew them thoroughly, and he had an unflinching and uncompromising wiy power which kept at any project once he started It until  it was accomplished.</p>
        <p>Everything we have i/lhe United States today goes^'^back to this man. He was definitely a man of his time. If he had been born fifty y^PR^later he would probably n r have been heard of Iri' world history. He was what the colonie.s ncel-ed in a period of desperation and dciusiou. i ^</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER World food production is not keeping up with the rise in the worlds population.</p>
        <p>The world population Is estimated to be rising at about 2 per cent a year.</p>
        <p>Aggregate production of major crops in the 1964-65 year Is about 1 per cent above pro-uction for the previous 12 month.s.</p>
        <p>Furthermore, Increases In production since the five-year period from 1985 to 1959 Ibve been less than the increase In population since then.</p>
        <p>The gain the current year would have been even less had It not been for a record wheat crop of 9.2 billion, bushels, a 9 per cent 1*i8e over the pre-vlou.s year.</p>
        <p>WIIEAT-KATER.S EXCEED WHEAT World production of rough rice, not incljding communist Asia, is currently estlmaterl at a record of 164 million metric tons, .slightly above the previ OUK crop "Increases rice prodiic^oii ate .slill 'not keep Ing up with llw rapidly grow lug poplatlota* in the tice coii-suxning counti tes of the woiid.</p>
        <p>observes the U. S. Foreign Agricultural Service.</p>
        <p>The current combined output of major feed grains Is down a per cent from the previous crop year. This was largely due to less com produced in the United States because of drought, and a continued decline in world oat production. However, the world barley cror set a new recorjJ ot 4.2 million bushels.</p>
        <p>ELMER</p>
        <p>ROESSNER</p>
        <p>World sugar production has started upward again. P o o r crops in Europe and lagging production in Cuba caused sfiimi.s declines. But good weather in the crop year, plus a girit expeiisUNi of sugar beet Ht n sflr In the U 8. and oihi*r ccMintilcs, lias resulted ip an Bii imm recurd.</p>
        <p>FRUIT STEADY,</p>
        <p>SPUDS DOWN</p>
        <p>Production of major fruit Items was about the same as last year. Potato production was down, but there were no serious shortages. Hop production was below last year, but well above the average. Nuts were j. Meat was down 2 per cent.</p>
        <p>The olive oil crop was down sharply, 34 per cent below the previous year^ However, other fats and oils, were near the previous production or slightly better. Soybeans set a new record.</p>
        <p>World food production can be increased to a  great extent. This was shown after Castro bungled the Cuban output. Other nations stepped up eduction and In the current year the world Is producing 73.2 million short tens, compared with the 1956-1966 sveraae of 57 mlllleii tons.  ^ ,</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, the world Is spproachtng a time when the arable land will not produce enough for the swelling population. A gain of 2 per rent a year meana doubling of tpe vofid population 4s lass than</p>
        <p>50 yeara.</p>
        <p>Unleaa the world takes gigantic steps in Increasing agricultural productivity, or steps to limit the increase in population, the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypae will charge about the earth.</p>
        <p>SHORT Sc SIGNIFICANT BUSINESS NEWS ITEMS Growing industry will convert the Tidewater section of Virginia, from Richmond to the sea, into one megalopolis, predicts Gov. Albertis S. Harrison Jr.</p>
        <p>Alexanders, a clothjpg discount chain now invading mid-town Manhattan, says it cant afford charge accounts.</p>
        <p>Based on a statistical sample, from 1,560 to 1,730 new supermarkets were,.opened l-tst year, Fairchild News Servlet says.</p>
        <p>A new quick-freezing syslcnn using liquid nitrogen is mak-:Ing frozen tomato slices, avocados. melons and papayas pos-ilble, the Department of Agriculture reports.</p>
        <p>Thla years rlierry crop jglU break alJ jotodrdSb</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0005" />
        <p>Welsh Colony</p>
        <p>WINTERS JUST LARK TO THEM Youngster on Ice sled gete merry rldi</p>
        <p>on a Chicago park lagoons icewith German shepherd providing Impetus. The. Ice sled looks like a garbage can lid with handles where no garbage can lid would have 'em.</p>
        <p>(AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>In Argentina</p>
        <p>Th Dally  Oraanvllla,  N.  C.-^|ilcwMliyr  Nimigfy  2$  Ifil  #</p>
        <p>IIS. Oifidals l^cm International Canal Control</p>
        <p>Snow, Cold, Winds Move Into Midwest</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>A major storm, with snow, subzero temperatures and strong winds, swept wide areas In the West and Midwest today and cold weather spread across mo... of the eastern half of the nation.</p>
        <p>Snow fell from Montana and northeastern New Mexico to southern Minnesota and northwestern Illinois. The snow belt was expected to extend across the upper Great Lakes region, with two to four inches expected from the central Plains northeastward.</p>
        <p>Driver Insists She Was Pushed</p>
        <p>OAKMERE, England (AP) -Britains best-known woman driver has reached the end of the road, for a year at least.</p>
        <p>Magistrates slapped the years ban on Margaret Hunter, 66, &amp;gt; Monday after finding her guilty of colliding with a tree.</p>
        <p>Miss Hunter agreed the tree was stationary and that the 100-foot skid marks on the road were probably hers. She blamed the accident on .- a mysterious propelling force that took control of her car.</p>
        <p>Cosistable Thomas James said he had asked what sort of force that was and she replied: "It was as if a jet force pushed me off the road.</p>
        <p>I just felt something from behind. Miss Hunter told the magistrates.</p>
        <p>Id like to know who is doing It and why. The police should find out.  ,</p>
        <p>Miss Hunter first came to public notice In 1962 when her driving instructor jumped from her car in a busy street, yelling, This is suicide.</p>
        <p> She failed a series of tests for a license but eventusdly got one by establishing residence in Ireland. where no test was then needed. It w'as this license that the magistrates confiscated.</p>
        <p>Miss Hunter demanded that the clerk of court be arrested for theft of her license. She said she would appeal her sentence.</p>
        <p>The nation will not believe all this rubbish. she declared.</p>
        <p>Winds up to 50 m.p.h. cut visibility to near zero in parts of western Kansas and eastern Colorado. The Weather Bureau issued blizzard warnings for the central Plains and hazardous driving and local blizzard warnings for northeastern New Mexico and the Oklahoma-Tex-as Panhandle.</p>
        <p>Arctic air Invaded the storm zone and temperatures dropped to below zero from Montana and northeastern Wyoming to northern Lower Michigan. Readings were more than 20 below in northern Minnesota.</p>
        <p>. It was cold in most of New England and upstate New York with readings near zero in many areas. A storm, fanned by strong winds Monday, dumped up to a foot of snow off Lake Ontario on an area of about 250 square*'miles in an easterly line from the Oswego-Henderson harbor area. Stiff winds caused severe drifting of snow, reduced visibility, * slowed traffic and caused many highway accidents.</p>
        <p>The cold air frpm the North dipped southward into northern Florida with freezing marks reported in Atlanta, Ga. Early morning temperatures ranged from 21 below at International Falls. Minn., to 73 at Key West and 72 at Miami, Fla.</p>
        <p>Local Woman Aids Navajo Boy</p>
        <p>NORWALK. Conn.  Mrs. Albert J. PertaUon of 124 North Eastern, Greenville, North Carolina is * sponsoring Herman, a nine year old Navajo Indian boy in Tuba City, Arizona through Save the Children Federation, international child welfare organization of Norwalk, Connecticut, it was announced today by Dallas Johnson, Director of the organizations American Indi a n program.</p>
        <p>The ^sponsorship will provide the clothing, school supplies, personal books and spend i n g money which will enable the child to take part in school activities. The average Indian youngster leaves school before the eighth grade, often for lack of these bare essentials.</p>
        <p>Part of the sponsorship contribution will be pooled with funds donated by other spcwisors to help the members of the tribe accomplish self-help projects of theiiN&amp;gt;wn choosing. Indian men, womeh . nd young people are contributing all the labor to such projects as builfi-ing health clinics, libraries and community centers. Sponsoreship funds are supporting Federation summer camps where boys and girls learn vocational skills while they earn back-to-school funds.</p>
        <p>An AP Special Report</p>
        <p>By ROBERT BERRELLEZ TREVELIN, Argentina (API  Here on Argentinas southwest frontier you expect any minute a crowd of horsemen wUl ride through the dusty main street crying, They went thata-wayl</p>
        <p>But wait, what are those English types doing in there, some in baggy pants, sneakers and berets?</p>
        <p>Thats just Trevelln, the last outpost Welsh Immigrants established in Argentina in a 19th century bid to found a colony devoted exclusively to the preservation of the Celtic tongue, customs and traditions.</p>
        <p>The mission failed in its ultimate objective. Little cA what they brought with them remains. But the Welsh will use what remains in July when they celebrate the centenary of a pilgrimage to the new southern world.</p>
        <p>Many of Tevellns 2,000 Inhabitants are descended from the original Welsh colonizers. That accounts for the English characteristics of the population.</p>
        <p>Argentines describe this part of their country as Par West,"" using the American term. Cowboy-type pants are advertised as pantalones Par West in shop windows.</p>
        <p>Except for the electric guitar, rock n roll, bubble gum and a few other 20th century amenities, Trevelln and Ite sister city Esquel, 30 minutesi up the road, are living somewhere In that period called the roaring 20s. Nearly everyone wears a luxuriant mustache. Why? Most of the men shrug off the question but Dante Brozzil 41, co-owner of a local bar-restaurant, says: Maybe its because we have such large noses.</p>
        <p>Trevelln And Esquel stride the lower, fertile foothills of the snow-capped Andean boundary between Argentina and Chile. Bun^s Aires is 1,000 miles nortl^t. This is rugged mountain territory, with emerald lakes tucked away in lush green 130 zyyczzc d42 ec 18 forests.</p>
        <p>By FRED 8. HOFFMAN WASHINGTON (AP) - Ky U.S. officials are leaning toward the idea of international/control for a propoited new sea-level canal acroes the mldsectUm oi the Americas,</p>
        <p>Such control might be vested in a board made up of repro-sentatlves of nations which contributed toward the cost Of constructing and maintaining the new canals A major aim would be to assure that the canal was run for the benefit of all seafaring pow</p>
        <p>ers and that rates for using U were reasonable.</p>
        <p>Top State Department an^ Army officials hav.. visited four countries through which a new canal could run. when it replaces the present Panama Canal as the malTL transit for shipping between'tbe Atlantic and Pacific  The present canal is</p>
        <p>t(^arrow to handle mwiy U.S. drcraft carriers,*super tankers and other big ships.</p>
        <p>No firm decisions have yet been ma^ on the route, the method of construction, or the</p>
        <p>Muslim Leader Closely Guarded</p>
        <p>political and finanbial arrangements. Much diplomatic discussion lies ahead.  r</p>
        <p>Officials are hopeful, that engineering surveys may be started in about a year. The surveys, which may take at long as four years, a/ould examine four possible routu)  two in Panama, including the present one; one in Colombia: and one partially in Nicaragua and partially in Costa Rica,</p>
        <p>Counting the' survey time, work on the sea-level canal might cover 15 years, even if nuclear explosives were used to</p>
        <p>By JOE DILL</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP)  Police Intensified security measures over a six-block area of the cltye South Side today amid reports that the leader of the Black Muslims was marked for death.</p>
        <p>Detectives were posted at airports, bus depots and train stations looking for six men reported en route to murder Elijah Muhammad.  &amp;lt;4^^</p>
        <p> Squad cars cruised the area of Muhammads 18-room mansion. The six blocks between the home and the Black Muslims Mosque No. 2 were kept clear of suspicious persons.</p>
        <p>The soft-spoken Muhammad! expressed no fear of reprisal ! and denied that the Bla^k Mus-1 11ms were hivolved in the fatal shooting of Malcolm X Sunday in New York City.</p>
        <p>New York investigators have speculated that the slaying of | Malcolm may have resulted from the 15-month feud between the leaders of the Muslims and Malcolms splinter black nation-1 alist group.</p>
        <p>Slimming Down The Old Mail Box</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - One of  the nations. best-known landmarks  the corner mail box  may soon appear in a slimmed down version. According to Steel Facts, published by American Iron and Steel Institute, two new designs are being tested for possible adoption by the postal department. One, made of gleaming stainless steel, weighs only 83 pounds (half as much as the traditional box), needs no painting and can be shipped knocked down.</p>
        <p>The second prototype is a py-ramidal-topped collectim box ^ made of sheet s^l with mail slots on three siqe\J</p>
        <p>The most receht-4mwvation prior to-these test models was the"'steel snorkel box placed at curbside fbf mail .drop^ by motorists.    </p>
        <p>Teeth Awaiting Their Claimant</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE  The Varina i Builders Supply Co. here Is of-jfering some merchandise at no cost. However, the merchandise I has little to do with building materials.</p>
        <p>"its a set of false teeth,</p>
        <p>Floyd Daugherty, store manager, reported that shortly after the store opened yesterday morning a customer spotted the teeth on the front steps and brought them inside. Daugherty said that the partial plate is being held for the owner who may picked them up at the store.</p>
        <p>Safe Burglar Is A Professional</p>
        <p>JONESBORO. Ark. (AP)  Prosecutor Todd Harrison of Jonesboro wasnt getting anywhere while he was helping question a suspect in connection with a safe burglary.</p>
        <p>Finally Harrison asked If the man knew whit it meant to burglarize a safe; break Into a place of business.</p>
        <p>Yes sir, came the reply.</p>
        <p>Just how do you know? Harrison asked.</p>
        <p>Because tha4.s what I am. the  replied.  Im a safe</p>
        <p>burglar.</p>
        <p>AS SCHEDULED</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (AP)  The controversial meeting of Coimmunist parties called by the Soviet Union despite strong opposition from Peking will open Monday as scheduled. Soviet and East European communist sources say. How many of the 25 parties invited wiU attend is uncertain.</p>
        <p>Bit Of Brooklyn In Havana, U.S.A.</p>
        <p>MIAMI (AP) ~ A little bit of Brooklyn in Havana. U. S. A., says a sign in front of a Miami restaurant.</p>
        <p>Displayed in a window of the restaurant are street signs such as Flatbush Avenue. They make former Brooklynites homesick.</p>
        <p>Surrounding the estalishment operated by Julius Grossman, an ex-Brobklynite, are Cuan stores, which abound in this exile haven.</p>
        <p>Find Police In Fatal Shooting</p>
        <p>CARACAS, Venezuela (AP&amp;gt;  Paraffin tests have identified the police w'ho fired f'eir pistols In the burst of fire that killed U.S. Peace Corps member Joseph R. Rupley, justice ministry police report. .</p>
        <p>Investigators said 14 regular policemen are under investigation in connection with the fatal shooting,</p>
        <p>Rupley, 24, of Orinda. Calif,, was killed Friday night, and David Glover, 25, Grosse He, Mich., was Aj'ounded whch they came out of their Jeep with hands up after police ordered them to halt. The police had been having trouble with demonstrating Venezuelan students.</p>
        <p>Cfhicago police verified reports that six followers of Malcolm had departed on separate missions to avenge Malcolm's death.</p>
        <p>Muhammad said the police werent requested. Black Muslims do not approve of carrying weapons.</p>
        <p>In a newf conference Mcmday, Muhammad, 67, said, We are innocent of Malcolm Xs death. We have been making an investigation to find where the assassin came from. We cannot find him. He is not one of ours,</p>
        <p>I dont believe any of my followers were there.</p>
        <p>The Black Muslims claim the Negro race is the superior race and call the whites white devils. Muhammad preaches separation of races, and in his teachings abhors integration.</p>
        <p>Tl;e exact membership of the organization has never been released.</p>
        <p>Malcolm X broke with, the Black Muslims when he-was the heir apparent to Muhammad.</p>
        <p>Malcolm was a victim of his own preachings, Muhammad said. He preached violence.</p>
        <p>Try Airman For Killing Filipino</p>
        <p>CLARK AIR BASE. Phlp-1 pines (AP)  A Michigan airman went on trial before a U.S.</p>
        <p> military court today for the fatal shooting of a Filipino boy,</p>
        <p>! an Incident behind recent antl-I American demonstrations In the Philippines,</p>
        <p>The defendant. Airman l.C. Larry D. Cole of Marshall, Mich., pleaded Innocent to the charge of unpremeditated murder. The maximum penalty is life Imprisonment.</p>
        <p>Cole is accused of killing Rogelio Balagtas, 16, at Clark : Bases Crow Valley bombing I and gunnery range last Nov. 25. The Air Force paid the boys father $787 as compensation.</p>
        <p>Kappa Alpha</p>
        <p>Inducts Eleven-</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>The EMt Carolina College chapter of Kappa Alpha Order, national social fraternity, has Inducted 11 new brothera.</p>
        <p>The new members, bef o r  their initiation, visited KA brothers, performed dally duties at the fraternity house and passed required fraternity tests, A scholastic average of C on their college work was required.</p>
        <p>New members include:</p>
        <p>PITT CXIUNTY, FarmviUe  Thomas Shipley Ryon Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Ryon; Greenville -- William Mor ton Johnston, son of Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>M. Johnston, 200 Arlington Drive.</p>
        <p>blast it out.</p>
        <p>One viewpoint is (.that the best route might lie warou the lslh&amp;gt; mus of Panama east of the present cankl. About 70 iRilei or so long it would cost about I77S million to build using nuclear exploiNves for excavation,</p>
        <p>However, there are indications that the political and diplomatic complexities in reaching agreement with Panama might detract from the desirability of this route.</p>
        <p>Certain U.S. authorities have gotten the impression that Panama might try to hold out tor ownership of the new canal after it was paid for, and that Pan-smtnians would be inclined to charge as much as the traffie would bear for crossing the waterway. '</p>
        <p>Chamberlain.. . .</p>
        <p>Marlow ...</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4)</p>
        <p>of wider appeal to various segments of the electorate, including young people and mnority groups.</p>
        <p>I do not think, he said, we have been able, or tried hard enough, to sell t!.e people on the fact that we do care for their problems.</p>
        <p>This may sound human enough but one of the bfit ways for a political ptriy to tell people how much its cares for their problems *s to offer programs and Ford didnt offer any.</p>
        <p>Goldwater talked to the Young Republicans but he sounded like the Goldwater of 1964, still on the defensive at home but very militant abroad, while deriding President Johnson.</p>
        <p>Charles H. Percy, a Chicsr go businessman who last year narrowly lost a race for the Ulionis governorship, had more the view of Ford, suggesting one way to broaden the partys base is to propose and initiate measures to meet the countrys human needs. Judging by the disorganized thinking of the Republic a n s since their 1964 defeat, their comeback road will be long and tough unless Johnsons presidency falls on Its face.</p>
        <p>(Continued Fr^jm Pagt 4)</p>
        <p>polls shiver,</p>
        <p>What U starting In ttm business of whlplng out checks and balances in Indiana can hardly be stopped unleu there Is a resurgence of the atatai traditional conservatism. The Indianapolis Redevelopment Com-mlssfon, which has raised $1S million in entirely local money is put through twelve renewal projects over the past twenty years, is threatened by bilbi Introduced by the Young Turks at the State V legislative session. What will happen when the bills are passed is aJore-gone conclusion: the Redevelopment Commission will , practically be commanded to take federal funds to bulldoze stretches of Indianapolis into rubble at a much faster pace -than plans and capital for re* building can be had.</p>
        <p>So the old Hoosler eplrtt ti kidependence Lsbelng eroded away. Maybe It was Inevitable. But nothing ever moves In a straight line for long, and local conservatives are warm 1 n g them.selve.s with the hope that the Young Turks will overlay their hand.</p>
        <p>NOT A HEARING AID</p>
        <p>An amazing new scientific development may help yea to better understanding of speech, phone calls, radio and television . , . more clarity of sound In groups, and. noisy places.</p>
        <p>Weighs less than two aspirin tablets.</p>
        <p>MIRACLE</p>
        <p>INVENTION</p>
        <p>WRITE FOR FREE BOOK R. Cator'Msddroy 21 W. Hargott St. Raleigh, N.C.</p>
        <p>Half the worlds coffee grows in Brazil.</p>
        <p>PRINCE GETS HIS KICKS  Pilnce Albert of Monaco right foreground son of Prince Rainier and Prlnce.ss Grace, hKWts soccer ball as he plays with oUier boys in the Lou s II SUdlum in Monaco The prince will be seven years old</p>
        <p>next month.' (AP Wirephoto)  ..  i  ___</p>
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        <p>CANADA DRY BOURBON</p>
        <p>FIFTH</p>
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        <p>His masters 65 Ford......rides quieter than</p>
        <p>his masters Rolls-Royce</p>
        <p>If you want one of the wnrWs finest hanlcnrftcd Wxwrj cars, look to Rolls-Royce, But if you want a popular-priced car. consider this: By test,* Fords rode even quieter than a Rolls-Royce. And quiet means qualitythe *65 Ford h exceptionally strong, well designed, solidly bnilt. Prove it, firsthand, with a test drive ...</p>
        <p>Feel Ford's Solid Quality</p>
        <p>n  bodystrongest ever on a Ford</p>
        <p>n Frame tunes out vibration</p>
        <p> New suspension puts a big ultrasoft coil spring at each wheel</p>
        <p>Inspect Ford's Luxurious New LTD's</p>
        <p>n Decorator interiors, thick nylon carpeting n Walnutlikc vinyl inserts on doors and instrument panel</p>
        <p> Rcar-scat center arm rests, five ash trays (4-door hard-tops), padded instrument panel, and more</p>
        <p>Twaarca</p>
        <p>h Elegant nylon-vinyl upholsteriestreated with Scotcb-gard to resist soiling, pleated for luxury appearanoa</p>
        <p>Test Ford'i New Power</p>
        <p> Big, new 289-cu. in. V-8 standard in XLs and LTD's</p>
        <p> New Big Sixbiggest Six ia any car. Not-availablc in XLs Of LTD's. Tt-drivc a 65 Ford,</p>
        <p>acoustical eonaaltaiits coadactcd tciSs ia wWrt 1945 Fw* (Gahixie 500 Sedan, XL aad LTD Hardtopa) with 289-cu. ku engines nnd aotoiiMitk tranamissions rode quieter than  RoBi-</p>
        <p>Royca. These teats were certifted by the Uik Auto CUib.</p>
        <p>Test Drivt Total Perfomiaiice *65 Best year yet to go Ford!</p>
        <p>FORD</p>
        <p>AfOQOUU U  (XMNY</p>
        <p>JENKINS MOTOR CO., Inc.</p>
        <p>GreerfVille, . G.</p>
        <p>V LEO VENTERS MOTORS, Inc</p>
        <p>^ IIw7 II North, F.t&amp;gt;. Bi Itt '  ATOIH*  M.  4</p>
        <p>' " -H .</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0006" />
        <p>A</p>
        <p>*; OfMfivili*. N. C.-Tusdy, Nbruary 23, 19*3Grifton, Bel voir Girls Belvoir Boys Advance</p>
        <p>Giimesland, Stokes Girls Are Eiiminat^d; Mobley Hits 27</p>
        <p>SHOT ATTEMPT An unidentified Stokee-Pactolus player attempts a shot in the final game of the opening</p>
        <p>_ ^  ^  ^  ^  #.    0%  I  M_  ^11   A.^  ^  Iaa  CabA  I  A  /K\</p>
        <p>^n\Ji Ml IcmrIwium^uiiiijw   ^    lT  /\</p>
        <p>night of the Pitt County Tournament. Grifton's Barbara Powell attempts to block the shot, while Sue Lambert (5) and Stokes' Linda Harris wait for a possible rebound. Also pictured is Gay Garris (25). (Reflector Photo)_</p>
        <p>Two teams' seaison without a conirrence victory came to an end last night as the Grimes-land girls and the Stokes-Pac-tohis beys were eliminated from the Pitt County Tournamciit.</p>
        <p>Belvoir's girls downed Orime.s^ land, 29-20. Belvoirs boys took Stokes. 36-31. and Griftons girls rolled to a 40-19 victory over Stokes.</p>
        <p>Thus Stokes is tlie first sctiool to be fully eliminated from the tournament.</p>
        <p>In the opening game, between Belvoir and Grimesland, the Lady E.tgles finally broke the storing ice with 4:59 left in the period for a 2-0 lead on Jean iStancils .shot. It was the only 1 field goal of the period. Beverly Pierce added another point to Belvoir on a free throw and Virginia Mills hit one for Grimesland to make it 3-1 at the end of the frame.</p>
        <p>In the second period, Belvoir made the move which won the game. With Linda Morris leading the way with five points, the Lady Eagles scored 11 points, while Grime.sland could manage onlv tw'o, for a 14-3 lead.</p>
        <p>From that point until Uie final goal of the period, Belvoir was never less than 10 points ahead.</p>
        <p>In the second half, Belvoir picked up two more points to tack onto Its lead, and held a 23-10 lead going into the la.st</p>
        <p>Hetzel Snyder Top Voting For All-Southern Honors</p>
        <p>period.</p>
        <p>Grimesland finally found the range in the last period, but was too far back to do anything about it.</p>
        <p>Linda Morris led Belvoir with nine points, while Virginia Mills had eglht for Grlmealand.</p>
        <p>Grimesland, 0-16, during the regular season, surprised In the opening game last year, but couldn't do it again this year.</p>
        <p>In the only boys game played. Belvoir had its hands full getting a win over Stoke.s, which not only lost all 16 conference games, but tw'o non-conference ones also. Repairs on the Stokes gym have hurt the team in practice and have^ allowed no home games the entire season.</p>
        <p>But Stokes got only a one-man effort from its team, as Phillip Mobley .scored 27 of the teams 31 points. The other foiu- were divided between two others.</p>
        <p>Belvoir took the lead with 6:20 in the flr.st period on Roy Peadens shot, but Tommy Ed-W'ards hit to tie it up for Stokes.</p>
        <p>Tommy Meeks' shot put Belvoir into the lead again with 5:51 left, and Stokes never headed them after that</p>
        <p>Belvoir pulled away to a 9-2 lead before Mobley finally found his range and cut It to 9-6 at the end of the period.</p>
        <p>In the second period. Stokes pulled to within two, but Bel-</p>
        <p>Thompson Closes Home Cage Career</p>
        <p>By ED YOUNG Asi^oclated Press Sports Writer</p>
        <p>Richmond. Va. (APi Nationally ranked Davidson collected a dividend on its brilliant basketball .season today by landing two players c-u the 1965 All-Southern Conference team.</p>
        <p>Fred Hetzel and Dick Snyder, the twin destroyers who led the Wildcats to a 23-1 regular season record and 22 consecutive victories, topped the voting for the all-.siar club.</p>
        <p>Joining them ki the line-up are Charlie Schmaus of Virginia Military Institute. Mickey Mc-Dade of Virginia Tech. and Tom Tenwick of Richmond.</p>
        <p>For the first time since the conference was realigned in 1953, West Virginia didnt put a player on the team. The onetime Titans of the league this year had their first losing record in 20 years.</p>
        <p>For Hetzel. a 6-foot-8 senior from Washington, D.C., who has</p>
        <p>Northwestern In Final Contests</p>
        <p>Northeastern Conference cage mark. They're the be.st high action heads into the final week'school ball club in the itatc. ; before tournament action starts.jbounced back to defeat Eliza-: Headlining the action will be theibeth City on Friday.  .  .u :</p>
        <p>aecond meeting between Kins-; And Roanoke Rapids kept the ; ton s leaders and New Berns i pressure on in the race for second-place Bruin.s. This game third with victories over Eliza-j</p>
        <p>will come on Friday night at the New Bern gym.</p>
        <p>Roanoke Rapids and West</p>
        <p>beth City and Greenville during j the w'eek.  j</p>
        <p>The conference tournrment:</p>
        <p>Carteret are .still battling forjpairngs will be announced fol-the third place finish.  'lowing a meeting to be held in</p>
        <p>The conference tournament j Washington on Wednesday will open at two different sites j night, at which time the pair-on Thursday, March 4. with two i kigs will be made according to games being played at the New: the standings as of that night. Bern High School gym, and two i The schedule for the week: j at Kinstons Grainger High! Tue.sday  Greenville at Eliza-; gym. This wdll complete the | beth City, Jacksonville at Kins-opcning round of play.  ton. Roanoke Rapid.s at New? </p>
        <p>The semifinals and finals will Bern, Tarboro at Washington,! be played at the East Carolina and West Carteret open. Friday</p>
        <p>College gym on Friday and Saturday nights.</p>
        <p>Reason for the opening-night</p>
        <p>Elizabeth City open. Jacksonville at Greenville, Kinston at-New Bern, Roanoke Rapids at</p>
        <p>led the conference In .scoring f since his sophomore year, it is j the third successive appearance I on the All-Southern.</p>
        <p>More than any other player,' Hetzel has been responsible for j the transformation of Davidson  from conference doormat to nar; : tional power. As a sophomore : i he averaged 23.5 pokits a game; , as a junior,; as a senior this*</p>
        <p>: year, 26.2 and a league-leading  ; ^5 rebounds.</p>
        <p>I "And although the conference championship, decided in the I annual tournament which this , year stars Thursday at Char- ; lotte, thus far has eluded David-, son, during Hetzels career it has W'on 65 to 77 games.</p>
        <p>Snyder, a 6-foot-5 junior from i North Canton. Ohio, trailed only Hetzel In conference scoring i this winter wdth an average of j 20.2 points per game and stood i ninth in rebounding. In addition, ' his defensive feats are becom- ? ing legendary. He is the team's  most versatile player.</p>
        <p>A second junior on the All- j Southern is Schmaus, VMIs 6-foot-2 scoring and rebounding demon from Ford City, Pa., who tumed into one of the leagues best competitors in a poor year for the Keydets.</p>
        <p>Schmaus was the conferences No. 3 rebounder with 10 retrieves per game and its No. 4 scorer with an average of 18.9 points. ^</p>
        <p>Tenwick, a 6-foot-4 .senior from Lakewood. Ohio, trailed only Hetzel and Snyder in scoring ith an average of more than 19 points a game and also ranked high in rebounding. Notable for his fiery aggressiveness and accuracy from the foul</p>
        <p>line. Tenwick led Richmond to its be.st season in six years.</p>
        <p>McDade Was the take-charge guy and clutch shooter w'ho sparked Virginia Tech to a second place finish in the conference and 10 victories in its last</p>
        <p>13 games aftti the Techmen had finished December with a 2-6 record. A 5-foot-ll senior from St. Albans. W.Va., he averaged</p>
        <p>14 points a game and is the All-Southerns smallest player.</p>
        <p>The All-Southern is picked in voting among sports writer, ra- j dio-television sportscasters. and i conference coaches conducted  by the wire services and the | SoutheiTi Conference Sportswri-ters Association.</p>
        <p>Ball Is Fourth Of Kegler's Weight</p>
        <p>LOUISVILLE /.P)  Mark Snipp, 5. w'elghs in at 35 pounds and used a 94-pound bowling ball and hes averaging 89 in his I league. He once rattled off a 160, game,  !</p>
        <p>Mark Is on a junior league team and hi.5 teammates are older  all the way up to 11.</p>
        <p>Mark, son of Lou Snipp, a bowlkig lanes manager, has been bowling since he w?as 2 years old. He started with a ball that weighed only two pounds, five ounces.</p>
        <p>Earl Thompson bows out In basketball at his last home game tonight as the Eppes High Bulldogs host the Atkins Pirates of Kinston.</p>
        <p>Thompson has scored a remarkable 1,459 points for three seasons of varsity basketball. His sophomore year he averaged 16 points per game; his junior year he averaged 25 points per game; and as it seems the more he plays the better he gets, in his senior year in spite of the fact that he was double-teamed all season long, he pushed his average up to 35.8 points per game. His credentials for three years read: sophomore  320 points in 20 games; junior  529 points in 21 games; senior  610 points in 17 games, with one game remaining tonight.</p>
        <p>Thompson s success comes from a dedicated attitude and most of all hard work. He did not inherit shooting ability but made it through sheer determination. by practicing count less numbers of hours, summer and winter, with only one thought In mind, being the best. He is never satisfied with his game, no matter ho'w great it Is; he drives himself "to exhaustion everyday in practice; he out hust</p>
        <p>les everybody," according to Coach Osborne Meteye.</p>
        <p>Last season Thompson was elected to the all Eastern N.C.-H.S.A.C. by every coach In the east. He also made the All East Tournament Team. He made All State his jimior year and Is sure to receive All State honohs again this season. He has been the main reason for packing gyms w'herever Eppes plays. The question asked more frequently this season wherever Eppes plays is which one is Earl Thompson?" After a game, win or lose, everybody is aware that number 7" w^as there. One fan of Thompsons said, he is everywhere, all the time.</p>
        <p>v'oir moved out again, gninlng a 17-13 half timo ndvantag;'.</p>
        <p>In the lliird period, Stokes again cut the margin to two, but could coine^ no ilu:^er, as, Belvoir pulled out again for a seven-polht lend, at 25-18 at the end of the period.</p>
        <p>Stokes cut the lead to two again, but with only Mobley hitting, they didn't have enough steam to catch up</p>
        <p>For Belvoir, Peaden was high with 11 point.s.  ^</p>
        <p>in the final game of the evening, .second-seeded Griftori had litUe tjj-ouble with Stokes, taking an easy win.</p>
        <p>Linda Bow'en gave Griffon the lead at 1-0 after a minute, but Stokes came back to take the lend on a .shot by Gay Garris W'ith 6:28 left.</p>
        <p>Then Barbara Powell hit with six minutes left for a 3-2 Gi'if-ton lead, and Stokes never led again.</p>
        <p>Miss Bowen hit again, followed by a free throw and a basket by Miss Powell and a bucket by Donna Reel to pu.sh the i score to 10-2 before Stokes i came back to trail, 10-6, at the end of the period.</p>
        <p>In the second period, Grlf-ton continued to pull again, finally gaining a 10 point lead on two free throws by Miss Bowen with 6:20 left in the half. By the end of the half, Grifton held a 27-10 lead.</p>
        <p>In the third period, the lead held and the score was 32-14.</p>
        <p>Then in the final period, Grifton added three points more to their margin for the final 21 point victory.</p>
        <p>Miss Powell led Grifton with , 14 poinUs, while Miss Bowen had ; 11. Jayne Coward was high for Stokes w?ith eight, i Play resumes tonight at 6:30 p.m., with Parmville meeting  Bethel, followed by Winter-villes girls and Farmville, and I Winterville and Grifton.</p>
        <p>First GameGirls</p>
        <p>Belvoir ......... 3 .11 9 629</p>
        <p>Grimesland ,  1  2 7 1020</p>
        <p>Belvoir: Morri.s 9, Pierce 4. Everett 4. Garrett 4, Beaman 5, Mozingo 1, Sumeilin, Stancil</p>
        <p>Belvoir</p>
        <p>Scott , Coburn Harris Meek.s</p>
        <p>Bullock</p>
        <p>Stokes-Pttctolua</p>
        <p>Edwards</p>
        <p>Buckiiam .  </p>
        <p>Wealherington</p>
        <p>F(i</p>
        <p>FI</p>
        <p>TP</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>-'2</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>i-2</p>
        <p>U</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>2-2</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>5-H</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>2-3</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>. 2</p>
        <p>3-6</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>16-21</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>5-8</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0-2</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>5-11</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>Belvoir ......... 9  8  8  1138</p>
        <p>Stokes ........ 6  7  5  18II</p>
        <p>Third GameGlrla Grifton  10  17  8  840</p>
        <p>Stokes .......  6  4  4  810</p>
        <p>Grifton: Bowen 11, Lambert .5. Reel 6, January, Miller. Hubbard, Crawford, Wade, Burch, Talton 4. Powell 14, Orlowaky, Carroway.</p>
        <p>Stokes: Evans 1, Perklna 2, Coward 8. Garris 5, James 1, Barnhill 2, Davenport, Harris, Langley, Hardison, Gray, M. Perkins, Somer.</p>
        <p>Grimesland: Sumrell 6, Hardee. Payne 1. Mills 8, Elks 5,! Heath, Morgan.</p>
        <p>Second GameBoy.s</p>
        <p>AMERICA'S LARGEST SELLING CWAR</p>
        <p>Dartmouth basketball captain, Vic Mair, a six - footer from Canton, Ohio, has been switched from gaiard to forward this season.</p>
        <p>EXPERT  CAR CARE</p>
        <p>Saad's Shoe Shop</p>
        <p>Prompt Expert Service All Work Guaranteed Service While You Wait Located In College View Cleaners Main Plant</p>
        <p>TAKE THE SHIMMY AND SHAKE OUT OF YOUR CAR WITH</p>
        <p>The other boys on the team I would like Mark to be captain 'but he cant, becaiuse he cant check .scoresheets and sign them. Thats left to the oldtimers who 'have started school and can write.</p>
        <p>shift Is because of a conflict of; Tarboro, and West Carteret at activity at the East Carolina, Washington.</p>
        <p>eyni-</p>
        <p>Last weeks Northeastern cage action saw Kinstons undefeat-ed Red Devils extend their! streak to 18 .straight tliis s son without a loss. They def ed west Carteret and Wash ton during the week.</p>
        <p>Ne&amp;gt;v Berns Bruin,s rolled c Tarboro and Jack.sonville dm the week. The only loss on blotter in conference play , the Bruins was at Kinston | earlier in the sea.son. and they're itching for revenge this Friday night in what shapes up a | real classic.</p>
        <p>West Carteret, after bowing to Kinston and causing Patriot, Coach Gannon Talbert to re-1</p>
        <p>Wa.shlngton.</p>
        <p>The Standings</p>
        <p>Conf.</p>
        <p>All</p>
        <p>W L</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <p>Kington ........</p>
        <p>14 0</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>New' Bern ......</p>
        <p>13 1</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Roanoke Rapids</p>
        <p>8 5</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>West Carteret</p>
        <p>. 8 6</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>fi 7</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>Elizabeth City</p>
        <p>5 9</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>Wa.shington</p>
        <p>4 10</p>
        <p>.5</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>Jacksmiville ...</p>
        <p>3 10</p>
        <p>3 13</p>
        <p>Tarboro ........</p>
        <p>2 12</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Rose Swimmers Host Chapel Hill</p>
        <p>Rose High School closes out its home swimming schedule Wednesday at 5 p.m. as Chapel Hill invades.</p>
        <p>The Kose swimmers are currently 0-2-1, losing to Myers Park of Charlotte and the University of North Carolina Eresliinen. while tieing Chapel IIII in the first meeting of the two.</p>
        <p>Roses next venture Into the Wi.ter will be at the state meet beginning March 6.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLES NEWEST</p>
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        <p>VAN C. FLEMING</p>
        <p>105 E. SECOND STREET</p>
        <p>Occidental</p>
        <p>or Nonsf Carolina i mmk oericc</p>
        <p>OLD</p>
        <p>CROW</p>
        <p>Ok</p>
        <p>86</p>
        <p>PROOf</p>
        <p>Kentucky</p>
        <p>Straight</p>
        <p>Bourbon</p>
        <p>Whiskey</p>
        <p>OLD CROW</p>
        <p>WOmJCKT STBAIORT</p>
        <p>bourbon WHISKCT</p>
        <p>y I'.n 1,0</p>
        <p>*1 OW .*</p>
        <p>KdiostL ojiTJLLiri pfoo,;;ts coi'fisi:, mis at fioof</p>
        <p>Why run out when</p>
        <p>its so easy to own a weeks supply of famous Hanes underwear</p>
        <p>Swiss rib Knit Undershirt</p>
        <p>A mans favorite for smooth fit. Plenty long to stay tucked in. Reinfjorced neck and shoulder seams for long wear. S-M-L-XL</p>
        <p>Still  3  for</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>2.95</p>
        <p>Seimleis-seat Givvies^ Shorts Bias-cut to g-i-v-e with your stride. No.hifid, ^</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>no creep, naseam in the seaL Sanforized cotton broaddpth, t\pat resistant elastic ^ast Sizes 2?44.</p>
        <p>Still</p>
        <p>3fo'</p>
        <p>V.OO. .,--2:95</p>
        <p>HANES</p>
        <p>Mail and Phone Ostlers Promptly</p>
        <p>BLOUNT-HARVEY</p>
        <p>Mr,ii4 Dcpaitinmii</p>
        <p>FROHT END SAFETY SPECIAl</p>
        <p>FkHIT EID UimEn</p>
        <p>  '  I    -  T</p>
        <p>FRONT WHEpL BAUUjlX $-1 A.50</p>
        <p>f^OR  ^ V  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>AH  Trkidxp^rht</p>
        <p>FREE SRAI^&amp;amp;PEeilOr;^^ SHOCX^Ettl^ ^</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>M *</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>' '.A</p>
        <p>Tire ROTAltON</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>UP to fie^9 Mone</p>
        <p>n^E i^LEJiQ1E&amp;gt;:</p>
        <p>.. )u&amp;gt;, -</p>
        <p>' InclHdss;</p>
        <p>5-,Tire TRotalion</p>
        <p>;''iCeaky Cores  'c</p>
        <p>V-''" f^issing VatvCv</p>
        <p>_ Inspection^ $ T.00</p>
        <p>sunoH'S</p>
        <p>SERVICE CENTER</p>
        <p>nor. 1,'irKI.XAYLVUF.</p>
        <p>Pbonr Il. z.flin</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0007" />
        <p>/</p>
        <p>Mi</p>
        <p>VHIU OUOHTA II A UWI</p>
        <p>ly PAOAiY and</p>
        <p>AmD 9Mg</p>
        <p>600* WITCNEP, 'GUISS WHATM OP KAME $ME</p>
        <p>HOOWFD PWlTHf</p>
        <p>ANPPO'OU. EUSTACE M0CkEl4-EIH0C&amp;gt;(l&amp;gt;J-UH- FLOCkEKl-'Wi^T</p>
        <p>f)in e\&amp;gt;/ s/Ann</p>
        <p>JUSTICE</p>
        <p>V THE</p>
        <p>^EACE</p>
        <p>nociE^iPijOTreE H'O-c-k-e-n-e-l-OTZER-MOCKCNnotZiR </p>
        <p>*40RTENk</p>
        <p>CUj^^la^</p>
        <p>i, i ^</p>
        <p>Pressure Rise</p>
        <p>For New Help</p>
        <p>* 1</p>
        <p>For Taxpayers</p>
        <p>Tha Daily Raflacter, Oraanvitlar N. C.~Manday, Nbruary 23#</p>
        <p>Aircraft-Aerospace Industry Sees Changes To Meet Modern Demands</p>
        <p>Dodd Urges U.S. Act To Save S. Viet Nam</p>
        <p>By ERNEST B. VACCARO WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. ' homas J. Dodd called today l&amp;gt;r stepped-up U.S. efforts to I ive South Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>In a speech prepared for Sen-f te delivery, he waraed that a</p>
        <p>the United States to look Into the possibility of a cease-fire and a negotiated settlement to the Vietnamese war.</p>
        <p>Dodd gave five steps he thought would help win the war without a major escalation.</p>
        <p>1 egotiated settlement in South ; They are:</p>
        <p>' iet Nam would lead to a gi-I antic bloodletting that would  dwarf the agony and suf-1 ring already under way t lere.</p>
        <p>ITie Connecticut Democrat's (ffice estimated it would take</p>
        <p>1 im 2*/4 hours to read the | Vietnamese liberation front Ipeech;</p>
        <p>Dodds speech marked a new I ound in the continuing Senate r ebate over the U.S. course in f outh Viet Nam. A number of rsnators,  including Frank ( hurch, D-Idaho, and George S. ilcOovem, D-S.D., have urged</p>
        <p>5. Collective action by members of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization.</p>
        <p>In my opinion, Dodd said, the consequences of an American defeat in Viet Nam would be so catastrophic that we simply cannot permit ourselves to think *bf it.</p>
        <p>He said abandonment of Southeast Asia to communism would bring the disintegration of alliances and the total eclipse of America as a great nation.</p>
        <p>McGovern, said Monday night under which South Vietnamese ABCs radio program From</p>
        <p>1. Better liaison with leaders of various sectors of the South Vietnamese community:</p>
        <p>2. An improvement in South Vietnamese political warfare and propaganda efforts</p>
        <p>3. Establishment of a North</p>
        <p>could carry guerrilla warfare into the north;</p>
        <p>4. Actions to hold key cities on the Viet Nam-Laos frontier through which Viet Cong guerrillas have filtered into South Viet Nam;</p>
        <p>ludge Convinced That )ropouts Due Parents</p>
        <p>SAUSBURY, N.C. AP)-Su-I prior Court Judge Allen H.</p>
        <p>( wyn says he is further con-i inced that ^ lack of eticourage-r ent and discipline by parents It ads to school dropouts.</p>
        <p>The 71-year-old Jurist hailed 1 ito court Monday dropouts and t lelr parents from Salisbury { nd Rowan County for an in-t Mvlew session.</p>
        <p>School dropouts and parcmts I om 26 families gave the ] eidsville jurist varied reasons 1 &amp;gt;r the youngsters leaving / Miool, but, he said, I wasnt {1 eatly surprised at what I 1 'amed. It was apparent the (ropouts had been losing intcr-</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; st over a period of months t nd years.</p>
        <p>Interest cant be main-t lined, he said, unless the c lild is encouraged and prop-(rly disciplined in the home. I concluded that the parents f idnt maintain interest con-6 antly and didnt stay in touch ' ith progress or lack of it.</p>
        <p>' /hen they worh up to the facts cf the situation, it was too late.</p>
        <p>In many &amp;lt;inMances the par-</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; nts were working on different e lift* and admitted it was al-1 iot Impossible to keep an eye (n the activities of their chil-( ren.</p>
        <p>It seems we now have the f )urth shift, the shift to the ftreets, automobiles and away f ora school, Gwyn said.</p>
        <p>The judge told a crowded courtroom that the rearing of a fimily is a full-time job.</p>
        <p>He also cited statistics of the 1 orth Carolina prison system \  lowing that of th entire pris-&amp;gt;n population only four per cent 1 ave compteted high school. He fald that in the states Youthful</p>
        <p>0 fenders camps with 679 of-f( nders now serving time, 635 y ere school dropouts.</p>
        <p>The judge said that dropouts</p>
        <p>1 re a social problem and that T ew legislation is needed. He iild that he and the solicitor</p>
        <p>may recommend that the age limit for staying in school be raised to 18 except in cases where the child had already finished his education or was required towork.</p>
        <p>the Capital that he did not think that the exploration of a peaceful settlement given the present circumstances in Viet Nam is running up the white flag. I think its the position of rea.sonable men.</p>
        <p>The South Dakota senator said that he opposed abrupt U.S. withdrawal from South Viet Nam. All Ive ever suggested is that we explore through diplomatic channels the possibility of some kind of a settlement, he said.</p>
        <p>Another view came frinn Sen. Gale W. McGee, D-Wyo., who suggested Monday night on Westinghouse Broadcasting Cos Washington Viewpoint that the United States serve -n ultimatum on North Viet Nam to stop infiltrating the south or face stepped-up bombings.</p>
        <p>By EDMOND LE BRETON</p>
        <p>WA8HINOTON (APi - Pre*-fures Mte mounting In Con-gfess to help taxpayers owing Uncle 8am more than was withheld* from their wages even though the Treasury says their plight has b^n ex^erated.-</p>
        <p>Several bills hiCw been introduced to allow extra time, beyond the legally fixed April 15. for such deficiencies to be made up.</p>
        <p>I' The House Way and Means Committee, which handles such legislation, said no bearings have been set on any of these. However, it was understood the committee was Informally checking to see whether the situation might call for acUon next month, after work on President Johnsons health-care bill is completed.</p>
        <p>Appearing before another committee Monday, Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon said technicians of his department believe the underwithholding may total $400 million to $500 minion, In contrast with eai Iler guesses of more than twice these figures.</p>
        <p>DlUon said he does not think this Indebtedneas is a threat to the still-rising economy or a serious hardship to many persons.</p>
        <p>There is a certain amount of underwithhplding every year because the pay-check eductions are based on a flat per^ centage while Income tax r; increase as an individuals come rises. Last year special circumstances resulted in still more.</p>
        <p>The full percentage reduction in withholding, to reflect the income tax cut voted by Congress, was put into effect In March. The tax reduction went into effect in two stages, the secon(!l applying only this year,</p>
        <p>Dillon said It appears that many taxpayers realized the situation they might find themselves in and voluntarily arranged to have their withholding stepped up. Total taxes withheld by employers and paid in to the Treasury, he said, were $700 million more than had been expected.</p>
        <p>By ROGER LANE AP Business News Writer NEW YORK (AP)  Aircraft factories in the United BtaUs built 295,000 plane#all military for $^ billion during World War II.</p>
        <p>Uncle Sam has spent roughly half that much in the past JO years on three basic flight vehicles for national defensethe B52 bomber and Minutemai. and^ Polaris missiles. He took deUv* ery on just 2,350 units.</p>
        <p>In todays commercial flight, the standard jet transport does the work of 20 of yesteryears redoubtable Douglas DC3s, carrying six times aa many passengers 3'/^ times as fast.</p>
        <p>The comparisons bespeak an enormous telescoping ol striking power in the one case, of economic iwoductlvlty in the other.</p>
        <p>And they focus attention of problems ol the evolving aircraft-aerospace industry, one of the nation's vital resources,  This sprawling industry beam little resemblance to the heydey of Rosie the Riveter when autostyle assembly lines filled urgent orders from the government.</p>
        <p>Great energies were diverted starting in the early ltOs to the then novel art.s of missiles, and in the late 1950s to manned space flight, each calling for custom work of extreme reliability.</p>
        <p>In its present stance, the alr-</p>
        <p>noftlng downwartl after a four-year surge and blg-scal- pfOtfUQi. lion programs ^pering off. an old debate recurs:</p>
        <p>Is serious trouble ahead for aerospace? Or Is this feas^or-famine Industry just hitting another downward dip In a roller coaster course? j Theres tongue clucking among' management consultants, analysts In Wall Street, the government and universities over prdlcted cutbacks In defense spending.</p>
        <p>But heads of the aerospace giants. men toughened by</p>
        <p>craft-aerospace Industn^ draws  laches  In the  past, njV</p>
        <p>nearly $7 of every $8 Income  &amp;lt;l*nc  in their  own  companies,</p>
        <p>from the U.S. Treasury, the Uons share for defensc-space projects.</p>
        <p>Now, with defense spending</p>
        <p>Steel Industry Finds Recruits In Jobless</p>
        <p>Schools Closed In Robbinsville By Flu Epidemic</p>
        <p>exaer Wins lew York Prize</p>
        <p>ROBBINSVILLE. N.C. &amp;lt;AP) All schools in Robbinsville are closed for the week because of an influenze epidemic.</p>
        <p>Supt. Kenneth Barker said Monday that nearly one-fourth of the school enrollment had been out and we were taking them home right and left. Te said teachers had also been fighting the symptoms of the illness.</p>
        <p>The outbreak seems confined to Robbinsville with no reports of any extensive absenteeism at Secoah or Mountain View, the other schools i Graham County.</p>
        <p>Dr. Jacob Koomen, assistant state health director, said in Raleigh the Robbinsville outbreak is the first his agency has heard of in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>He said a representative of the Health Department will go to Robbinsville and take specimens of the virus.</p>
        <p>By SEYMOUR M. HER8H</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP) - Desdltc determined efforts, the steel plants in the Chicago-Gary, Ind., area are still plagued by a shortage of skilled workers. But lelp is on the way.</p>
        <p>Industry officials, uhAbl lo recruit workers in and around Gary, where only 2 per cent o the labor force is unemployed, have stepped up hiring efforts in Cook County  Chicago  where more than 265,(X)0 persons are on relief rolls.</p>
        <p>Eighty-five per cent of the welfare recipients are Negro and most of them dont have the high school diplomas the steel Industry has required.</p>
        <p>- Two industry giants, U.S. Steel and Inland Steel, have lowered education requirements and are seeking employes from .such groups as the Chicago Urban League, the Illinois State Employment Service and the Cook County Department of Public Welfare.</p>
        <p>Were going after them from every available source, William G.. Capes, a vice president of Inland Steel, said Monday in an interview. Were not holding to the higher standards.</p>
        <p>Job testing at Inland, Capes said, only calls for basic literacy and the ability to handle simple hand tools.</p>
        <p>Inland and U.S. Steel spent thousands of dollars la.st fall recruiting in the Midwest and Pennsylvania. Both companies</p>
        <p>Yet unwritten history In Viet Nam, Moscow, Berlin, Africa or Red China may supply a firmer answer, something not clearly discernible now.</p>
        <p>Since early 1963, employment has gone downhill about 7j.per cent annually. The Aeroepace Industries Association of America now estimates employment will have decline?! by June to J,045,0(), down about 200,000 from the peak. In this period dollar volume ha* held nearly steady.</p>
        <p>But more than jobs is at stake in the long run, because the aircraft-aerospace Industry:</p>
        <p>1. Stands as the foundation of</p>
        <p>say the programs were disappointing.</p>
        <p>Recruiting has problems that are hard to solve, said  ^  a w</p>
        <p>Capes, Md the bSgest one Is I ,tional defense. transportatlOT.  2.  Harbors the countrys rich-</p>
        <p>^Inland s be.st source for cm-,  p^j  gclentlfic and tech-</p>
        <p>ttI^ nolt^lcal talent, men who chart ^d, has been the Chicago Ur-  tomorrows  wonders2H-  hour</p>
        <p>  tran.satlantic  flights,  farming the</p>
        <p>people J uf ^  1  making  fresh  water</p>
        <p>workliig out all right je  ,  ^</p>
        <p>haven t gotten many, he saW.;  moon.</p>
        <p>gan with signs of relixtog Casi West tensions two years ago. ^Worry increased am former Deputy Secretary Of Defensa Roswell Oilpatric said a eutbaek of 25 per cent In defense spend* ing was possible by 1970.</p>
        <p>North American Aviation Corp., famedas producer of World War n m flghtcra and other warplanes, now draws half its Income from research and developmentover a billion dollars a year. North American la playing a leading role In the moon landing effort.</p>
        <p>In 1963, Lockheed Aircraft de* rived 40 per cent of revenues from this source.</p>
        <p>Renewed focus on the industry comes at a time when such leaders t* North American. Lockheed. the Boeing Co. and Mo-Donnell aircraft were at or neaf peaks in profits, employment or both.</p>
        <p>But It was noteworthy, too. that buUders of World War II aircraft such aa the P4? Thunderbolt fighter by Republic, tha B26 Mtfaudef medium bomber by Martin, and the B24 Uberator heavy bcmiber by Consolidated Vultee, vlrUially or eompletely had abandoned aircraft manufacture. ,</p>
        <p>In the commercial airliner field, only Boeing remained an unqualified success, although Douglas, hard hit a few years back, was rallying.</p>
        <p>Inadequate sales of passenger planes in recent years knocked Lockheed and General Dynamics out of the fkld.</p>
        <p>\/-</p>
        <p>This morning we had 382 open requisitions (jobs) at Indiana Harbor (which employs 21.-000).</p>
        <p>A spokesman for U.S. Steel said the company has stepped up in-plant training programs because we still need skilled laborers and there just arent enough to go around.</p>
        <p>To help meet the demand, the Chicago School Board and the</p>
        <p>3. Forms the backbone o U.S. commercial aviation supremacy, and, as a seller of planes abroad. Is a major plus factor^ in the nation 8 balance of international payments.</p>
        <p>4. Ranks No. 1 as an industrial employer, and generates sales of $20 billion a year.</p>
        <p>5. Malntain.s 120,000 engineers and .scientists, consumes possibly 60 per cent of federal spend-</p>
        <p>ment have increased vocational training and adult education courses.</p>
        <p>tai o( research and accoirats for 35 to 40 per cent of all research and development funds spent within the entire economy.</p>
        <p>6. Swings a heavy weight In the economie.s of Southern California, Connecticut, the San Francisco area, State of Washington. Kansas, Texas and New York, and is climbing In importance in the South.</p>
        <p>Concern about the future be-</p>
        <p>WINTER'S COVER  The aftermafh of  fTeree</p>
        <p>nowsform is pJessing to the eye In the* Chrfstmas-cartf effect It oroduced on the orounds of the D-nver CoTtntry ri'**</p>
        <p>'./e;</p>
        <p>,,.NEW. YORK  An intaglio p prize, by East Carolina (. nige artist Donald Sexauer, V dn a $100 anonymoiw prize at \ le 240th. annual exhibition of t' 0 '"National Academy of De-5?'-.s'gn ftere,^ .  ,</p>
        <p>5^rhe print., rectangular ren-</p>
        <p> , d-tlon&amp;gt; of it' boy and a bird done</p>
        <p>i ton^s of green, was part of 'redfeht Greeiisboro exhibit of . -a le A)oclated Artists of North r u onna. It woii S^ttuer a maj-f  (I ' award la.st Vear at the J5th</p>
        <p>\ Ui2,ionl Exhibition In' Sprlng-</p>
        <p>' ' t rid, .mAss. &amp;gt; ' J ., ^</p>
        <p>.1  . Also .representing East Caro*a</p>
        <p> jVia Cjiege in tile' National i  /' 'ad^my* of .Design "exhibition,</p>
        <p> .f &amp;lt; rv liich opened hei'c last, Tiiiirs-</p>
        <p>ls the work of^ Dr. Francis</p>
        <p>t-: iclgilt, N.A </p>
        <p>Tie current ' exhibition -. In-r. ude* JAf works hi oU. sculnt. e aphlc art and water colors by a.trata D*om*$ state# and the I tstria V Columbia.</p>
        <p>...in addition....to'fudging, con-,(inporary Itrt exhrottlojVi In Its V. Ilerlea, the Natldnal vA^ad^niy 0 ferales the oldeef i,arfrchopl h New York Cifjt,  ^  </p>
        <p>" '' The first Russian state.</p>
        <p>ci on Kiev in the*9lb oentTU#</p>
        <p>4 . . _  ...  .  4;..</p>
        <p>Sweet dreams of</p>
        <p>CASH!</p>
        <p>Theyre the only kind youll get when you go to sleep on a full wallet. Fill yours with a personal LOAN at our office. Then, get rid of piled up hills ... or u.se the extra 4 cash (or current exjxen.sos.</p>
        <p>Just tell UR how much MONEY will do the job when you stop hy. Well try to make your dreams come true!</p>
        <p>HOir MUCH CAN YOU</p>
        <p>USE?</p>
        <p>Cesh</p>
        <p>Monthfy Payments For</p>
        <p>You Get</p>
        <p>36 Mo.</p>
        <p>24 Mo.</p>
        <p>18 Mo.</p>
        <p>$:iO()</p>
        <p>______</p>
        <p>$14.45</p>
        <p>$18.65</p>
        <p>(too</p>
        <p>28.70</p>
        <p>37.02</p>
        <p>1000</p>
        <p>47.7.3</p>
        <p>61.66</p>
        <p>1200</p>
        <p>$40.92</p>
        <p>67.24</p>
        <p>73.P2</p>
        <p>1500</p>
        <p>61.14</p>
        <p> 71.48</p>
        <p>92.19</p>
        <p>2000.</p>
        <p>H.ia</p>
        <p>95.28</p>
        <p>122.8;j</p>
        <p>Loam Up To $3500</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN</p>
        <p>A service offered by Commercial Credit ^  , Corporation </p>
        <p>Credit Llfa~and Ditability Inaurenca Available to Eligible Borrowers</p>
        <p>DECIDING ON SEIZURE</p>
        <p>JAKARTA. Indonesia (AP^  President Sukarno Is expected to decide soon whether the government will sanction seizure of Amq'lcan rubber plantations in North Sumatra by Indonesian werkers.</p>
        <p>Robber Feared For His Victim* </p>
        <p>CLEVELAND. Ohio (AP)  A considerate robber thought Joseph Finger, 75, had a heart attack, so he drove him to a hospital, police reported.</p>
        <p>The gun-toting robber had invaded Fingers Cleveland Heights home and was tying Mrs. Finger to a kitchen chair. Finger said. Finger feigned a heart attack.  ^</p>
        <p>The robber used Fingers car to drive him to the hospital, put Finger out at the hospital entrance and drove off with ^Fingers wallet and $90, police w'ere told. Finger went inside and called police.</p>
        <p>Hunger Strikers Set pff Uproar</p>
        <p>MONROE, Wash. (AP)  Hunger strikers In the state reformatory set up a clamor and threw papers and magazines from a cell block Monday night.</p>
        <p>The uproar was in one cell block holding 200 inmates. Supt. Roger MsLxwell said three other cell blocks were quiet.</p>
        <p>Maxwell said two to four state troopers have been at the reformatory since the inmates started boycotting the dining room Saturday morning. About J8 extra troopers were called in when the demonstration started.</p>
        <p>The hunger strike is in protest about the quality and preparation (&amp;gt;f food. Only 1.54 of about 800 appeared for the evening meal Monday.</p>
        <p>Figures Canary Got Dirty Deal</p>
        <p>FORT WORTH, Tex. (AF)  Mrs. F. A. Parham figures her canary named Joey Boy foi a i dirty deal.</p>
        <p>The teleph(xie rang as aha ' was vacuuming his cage. She wheeled to pick up the phona and  whoosh  up the vacuum cleaner nozzle went Joey Boy.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Farham jerked the bat open, grabbed her canary and shook off a little of the dust. Joey Boy still was unrecognizable, so she put him under the faucet.</p>
        <p>Then, to be sure the bird didnt catch cold, she put him under her hair drier.</p>
        <p>He hasnt been singing since then, Mrs. Farham said Monday, but hes eating well.**</p>
        <p>Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops ItchRelieves Pain</p>
        <p>Tm4. M. W , (Selel&amp;gt; - Per Om time adewe hsa fond  new hMling subetnnca with the aston-Inhing ability U ehrink henor-yhoids. stop itching, nad rellrm pun  withont enrgery.</p>
        <p>In ease eilter case, whfle gently alinViag pain, sctunl rrdnetion (dlrinfciiea) toolc place.</p>
        <p>MwdenieRingegeB ewlliwi</p>
        <p>so thorewffh that anfferert</p>
        <p>aatonishinf etatemcatn like * her* eeesedl te be e probleest**</p>
        <p>The secret la a new heellaf eo^</p>
        <p>eUaee (Ble-Dyne)-diieevefp 9 a werid-iamone leseareh lastltat^ This sobstaaee Is now aTailahla in $upp9titmtif or intimfU /ewji nnder the Beaie P*</p>
        <p>AtaU</p>
        <p>A freak cypress forest In California and a habitat of rare lizards in Colorado are among the first tracts of public land to be set aside as scientific sanctuaries by the Interior Department.</p>
        <p>205 EVANS STREET PL 8-2139</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>SI</p>
        <p>Have I seen what...?"</p>
        <p>7h8</p>
        <p>Nelson's</p>
        <p>new  -</p>
        <p>Dodge Polara 500? You mean the white car that's parked in the middle of their driveway...</p>
        <p>"with the</p>
        <p>red all-vinyl interior, bucket seats, thick carpeting,, padded dash and shiny center console?</p>
        <p>'No. ^</p>
        <p>1 didnTnotic8.7</p>
        <p>OELSKA</p>
        <p>'J</p>
        <p>FIFTH 3.3 PINT *2.05</p>
        <p>OISTItUO F80II6MIII lY L. KL8I0 I CtE.. HAHFORO. CONN</p>
        <p>If you havent seen the Polara 500 ...it's probably because there was a crowd around it. ^</p>
        <p>Hera'i iha line ort Polara 500 2-door hardtop or convertiblR; smooth-riding 121 in. wtieelbisi. Almost 4,000 poundi of body beautiful. Potent 383 cii. in. V8. Alsj) from bucket seats and full carpeting. Options include i floor-mounted, 4-speed stick shift or 3-speed suiomatic. tachometer. Sure Grip differential. 426 cubic inch V8. end more, foil more.</p>
        <p>'BS Dodge Fo/ara,-</p>
        <p>JIM DANDY MOTORS' INC.</p>
        <p>\ ,</p>
        <p>1M2 North Greene Sireel</p>
        <p>CITY MOTOR SMVICI</p>
        <p>76S t. Lm St</p>
        <p>Aycton N. C,</p>
        <p>N, C. Dealer Ne. IMt WATCH THI 60i HOPI SHOW." NBC-IV. CHICiH4oU6 LOCAL LiSTlNb</p>
        <p>OrMnvllU, N. C.</p>
        <p>N. C. ' Dealer No. 477S</p>
        <p>i-</p>
        <p>V-</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0008" />
        <p>iitfy  arMfivtlto,  N.  C-TiMfday,  Nbruary  13,  IfS</p>
        <p>Thf tuspcn**  Qordon Asha</p>
        <p>advntur by (John Creasoy)</p>
        <p>A PROMISE OF DIAMONDS</p>
        <p>fVoin th Dodd. Mead Rd Bad Detectito Novtl. Oopyricht tt ASM hr JobaOrwMyt dteiributod hr XlnM  Srudicat</p>
        <p>'COLONEL Voort, Chief ot Police It Pretoria, was an edlerly, quiet-voiced, watchful individual the type whom Scotland Yard would dub "Uncle. In ten minutes he convinced Patrick Daw-lish that he had a complete grasp of the situation.</p>
        <p>He sat at one side of the large pedestal desk, with the blond lieutenant and a dumpy-looking shorthand writer by his side. Pawllsh and Van Woelden and Harrison sat on the oth.. side of the desk, Van Woelden In the middle.</p>
        <p>DawUsh had feared a long preamble and time-taking formalities. Once In here he lost those fears but sensed something else: A kind tension, perhaps over-eagemess, in the lieutenant. It showed In his quick glances at every man who spoke In the tension of his hands as his fists clenched.</p>
        <p>"The two matters which worry us most concern the theft Itself and the disposition of the diamonds, Colonel Voort said. "I do not need to labor any point In Van Dleseks report. I am sure.,</p>
        <p>It couldnt be more concise, Dawll^ agreed.</p>
        <p>"If Its all right with you. Ill go back over the later thefts. Harrison did not wait for either of the others to say his piece for him. "If anyone can take away three himdred milliwi dollars worth of diamonds, thats bad security.</p>
        <p>"The mine authorities wont agree with you, Voort said dryly. "But they will welcome anyone who can help them to strengthen it. Will you start at the mines, gentlemen?</p>
        <p>The lietuenants lip moved, as If he wanted to protest. Voort almost certainly saw him but took no notice.</p>
        <p>"Id rather like to concentrate on the man who killed Van Die-ek, Dawlish said.</p>
        <p>The lieutenants eyes seemed to snap approval.</p>
        <p>Voort gave a benevolent little imile and turned to the younger man.</p>
        <p>"Lieutenant Bukas will un</p>
        <p>doubtedly agree with you - wont you, Lieutenant.</p>
        <p>"With the colonels approval. said the lieutenant.</p>
        <p>Dawlish wondered hov old he was; he looked In his early twenties but must be thirty or so. He had very fair, almost snowy hair, pale-blue eyes and pale lashes.</p>
        <p>"You have Voort said dryly.</p>
        <p>"Thank you, sir. Lieutenant Bukas drew himself to attention and stared at Dawlish, as If oblivious of Harrisons half-amua-ed, half-cynical appraisal and Van Woeldens critical expression. "It was my duty recently to investigate an atempted murder In a small dorp in the southern Kalahari. In the course of the routine InvestlgatlcMi I found certain fingerprints.</p>
        <p>He leaned forward, opened a manila folder on his desk, and revealed two sets of fingerprint photographs. He turned these so all three members of the Conference could see not only the prints but some red lines and numerals.</p>
        <p>"You see. gentlemen? 3ukas pointed with his forefinger he had a long, well-shaped hand. "There are eleven points of similarity, proving conclusively that these are the fingerprints of the same man. These  he stubbed his finger at the darker print  "were found at the house where an attempt W'as made to strangle a young woman and to suffocate her husband, who was at one time a diamond cutter.</p>
        <p>Dawlishs heart seemed to contract at the word sitrangle, and in that moment he sensed what was coming. </p>
        <p>Bukas stabbed at a light e r print.</p>
        <p>"And that is the print of the man Donovan, whom you killed after his attack on your w^lfe.</p>
        <p>mined, to solve a case. The twin motives, of revenge for Pellclty and of the neeer to find the criminals who had employed Donovan, were inextricably mixed up In his mind.</p>
        <p>He was aware of sUence. He broke through the tension which had gripped him and realized that the others were all staring at him  even Voort. He made himself speak equably.</p>
        <p>"Where are the man and woman?</p>
        <p>"They are in an Isolated town In the Kalahari."</p>
        <p>Area Television Log</p>
        <p>WNCT Ch, 9</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 6.00Ohayenne 6:00Local News 6:10Sports 6:25Weather 6:S0-News. CBS 7:00Best of Hollywood 8:30Red Skelton Hour, CBS 0:80Petticoat Junction, CBS 10:00Doctors and,Nursea. CBS 11:00Pinal Report  \</p>
        <p>11:30Movie ,</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 6:30Carolina Today 8:30My Little gargle 9:00Capt. Kangaroo, CBS 10:00News, CBS 10:301 Love Lucy, CBS 11:00Andy of Mayberry, CBS 11:30The McCoys, CBS 12:00News with Debnam</p>
        <p>...---------- 12:15Farm News ^</p>
        <p>How soon can we get to this,</p>
        <p>12:30Search, CBS 12:45Guiding Light, CBS 1:00Love of Life, CBS 1:25Timely Tips 1:30As the World 'Turns, CBS 2:00Password, CBS 2:30Houscparty, CBS 3:00To Tell the 'Truth, CBS 8:25News, CBS 3:30Edge of Night. CBS 4:00Secret Storm, CBS 4:30Bozo</p>
        <p>5:00Cheyenne  __^</p>
        <p>6:00Local News</p>
        <p>NOW Dawlishs heart began to thump. He felt for thefirst time that there seemed a prospect of real progress: f '. fairhaired youngster was giving him the starting .x&amp;gt;lnt he needed so desperately. He had never felt more intent, more grimly deter-</p>
        <p>ACROSS 1. Misjudges 5. Dcdinc 8. Anecdotage.</p>
        <p>11. Course of eating</p>
        <p>12. Injure</p>
        <p>13. Day book</p>
        <p>14. Tending to Increase</p>
        <p>17. U.S. general</p>
        <p>18. Glance ^ over</p>
        <p>19. Funeral pile</p>
        <p>21. Foe</p>
        <p>24.Vedlc doud dragon</p>
        <p>26. Away</p>
        <p>BQO </p>
        <p>28. Snick or</p>
        <p>29. Information</p>
        <p>SI. Youth</p>
        <p>33. Half score</p>
        <p>34. Dwarf'</p>
        <p>56. Immature</p>
        <p>insect</p>
        <p>38. Burden</p>
        <p>40. Process for SOLUTION OF YESTERDAYS PUZZLE</p>
        <p>coloring fabrics</p>
        <p> a</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>lislfRlAlv!</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>p</p>
        <p>kl</p>
        <p> BQOI </p>
        <p>43. liberation</p>
        <p>46. Decompose</p>
        <p>47. Dander</p>
        <p>48. Accent</p>
        <p>49. Astonish</p>
        <p>50. Social</p>
        <p>51. Again</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Cheese</p>
        <p>2. Pood staple</p>
        <p>3. Summarize</p>
        <p>4. Den</p>
        <p>5. Ratlte bird</p>
        <p>6. Dances: Fr.</p>
        <p>7. Thicket.</p>
        <p>8. NouTishment</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>r-</p>
        <p>r-</p>
        <p>s</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>IX</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;$</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>/4</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;6</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>d</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>2i</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>2F</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>ti</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>2f</p>
        <p>fr</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>3/</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>ii</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>4'</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>d</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>4/</p>
        <p>dX</p>
        <p>U</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>di</p>
        <p>9. Fall month; abbr.</p>
        <p>10. Mature</p>
        <p>15. Grouper</p>
        <p>16. Baking pans</p>
        <p>20. Newt</p>
        <p>22. E.Indian tree</p>
        <p>23. Hankering: slang</p>
        <p>24. TV commercials</p>
        <p>25. Chapeau 27. Dude 30. Later 32. Wind instrument</p>
        <p>35. Silent 37, E.Indian, turban 39.' Dreadfid 41. Land formation In' Calif.</p>
        <p>42. Understood  43. ^och</p>
        <p>44. Cut grass</p>
        <p>45. Legume</p>
        <p>place?</p>
        <p>"We can fly to Buckingham, where there is an airstrip. Prom there it is three hours by road to Kangamiie, vBUkas said. There was a puzzled expression in his eyes when he spoke, as he looked at Dawlish. The others were still staring at him too.</p>
        <p>"When can we catch the plane? DawUsfiT asked.</p>
        <p>"One is available at any time at the airport, Voort sMd. "We expected you would wish to go there today. He stood up "You have my assurance of ihe utmost co-operation while you are here. If you can help us find any quantity of the diamonds, and those who stole them, we will be forever in your debt.</p>
        <p>He sounded as if he meant it from his heart.</p>
        <p>"Now, I have luncheon arranged for you in a private room where you can have any private discussion you wish.</p>
        <p>PAT, said Wade Harris o n quietly, "how often do you kill vital witnesses?</p>
        <p>"Now, Harrison. . Van Woelden began.</p>
        <p>"Stop protecting the guy. Hes a big boy now. He can speak for himself. Harrison said laconically.  mean ^witnesses such as Donovan.</p>
        <p>"I must ask you   Van Woelden began.</p>
        <p>I'm just asking if Major Dawlish knows his owm strength, Harrison went on. "Its a fair question. Youve known him a long time. I havent been indoctrinated yet.</p>
        <p>Dawlish pushed his coffee cup away.</p>
        <p>"If Donovan had lived, he mifcht have talked. he said. "So I didnt help the cause by hitting him so hard.</p>
        <p>"You certlainly did not.</p>
        <p>"And if I get near enough to someone else, you want to know if theres a danger that I might hit him too hard, too?</p>
        <p>Thats my question, Harrison agreed. "I dont think I would have asked if you hadnt reacted the way you did when you heard that Donovans prints had been found in this desert what-did-he-call-it? </p>
        <p>"A dorp. Dawlish frown e d. Was I as bad as that? "Youw'ere worse.</p>
        <p>Dawlish turned to Van Woelden.</p>
        <p>"Worse than usual?</p>
        <p>"I don't like to say so, Van Woelden answered, "but you looked as if you couldnt wait to kiU.</p>
        <p>Harrison let out an explosive little laugh.</p>
        <p>"I always did appreciate straight talk.</p>
        <p>"Yes, Dawlish said. "So did I. I still do. Ill watch myself. He could have added that there was so much in extenusation: the awful pressures of th: moment. the agonizing decision he had been forced to make In a fraction of a second. There was no point In sucH excuses. He wanted to find these criminals as he had never wanted to find criminals In the past. There was indeed a danger that if he caueht up with them he would be tempted to deal out summary justice.</p>
        <p>Only it wouldnt be justice. He had to guard against himself as well as the cpemy.</p>
        <p>Methodisis To Meet In Raleigh</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  Methodists of eastern North Carolina have set a conference on Christianity Confronts Communism at the Edenton Street Methodist Church in Raleigh on March 1.</p>
        <p>The conference, expected to draw between 800 and 1,000 ministers and laymen from fifty-six eastern and Piedmont counties, will begin at 10:30 a.m. Sponsored by the Board of Christ i a n Social Concerns of the Methodist conference in cooperation with the Board of Lay Activities and the Womans Society of Christian Service, the meeting will feature a number of outstanding speakers.</p>
        <p>The chief speakers for the morning and evening sessi o n s are Arbor W. Gray, a special agent of the FBI of Washington, D.C. and Frank R. Barnett, president of the National strategy Information Center, a nonprofit, educational corporation in New York City. Dr. Franklin H. Llt-tell, professor of church history ?t Chicago Theological Seminary. and Dr. Creighton Lacy, professor of World Christian 11 y at Duke University Di^dn i t y School, are also slated to address the conference.</p>
        <p>Others appearing on the daylong program Include Gov. Dan K. Moore, former Gov. Terry Sanford, Dean Robert E. Cushman of the Duke Divinity School. Dr, Cecil Robbins, president of Louisburg College and David Watson, Sr., a FBI agent of Raleigh. Devotions will be led by Bishop Paul N. Garber, who will also moderate the morning session. Roy L. Tumage of Ay-den will be moderator for the afternoon session.</p>
        <p>Purpose of the conference, according to the Rev. Ralph L. Fleming of Raleih, chairman of the Christian Social Concerns group, is to "examine Communism from a Christian perspective and to show how re,sponsl-ble Christians can effectively challenge the threat of Communism and the conditions that breed it.</p>
        <p>aporl 6:28Weather 8:80News, CBS 7:00Peter Gunn 7:30Mr. Ed, CBS 8:00My Living Doll. CBS 8:30Beverly HiUblllles. CBS 0:00-Dick Van Dyke, B 0;30Cara WilUama, CBS 10:00Danny Kaye, CBS 11:00Pinal Report 11:80Movie</p>
        <p>WITN Ch. 7</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00The Llttlest Hobo 7:30Mr. Novak, NBC 8:30Hullabaloo, NBC 9:80-iTW8, NBC 10:00Lewis and Clark. NBC 11:00News and Sports 11:10Weather 11:15Tonight Show. NBC WEDNESDAY 6:25Aspect 6:55Carolina Farmer 7:00'Today</p>
        <p>9:00Leave It to Beaver 9:30people Are Funny. NBC 10:00Room for Daddy. NBC 10:30Whats This Song?, NBC 10:55News. NBC 11;00Concentration, NBC 11:30Jeopardy, NBC 12:00Say When, NBC 12:30Consequences. NBC 1:00Bachelor Father 1:30Lets Makea Deal, NBC 1:55News, NBC</p>
        <p>9:00Moment of Truth, NBO 2:30The Doctors, NBC 8:00pother World, NBC 3;30-^YUi Dont Say. NBC 4:00The Match Game. NBO 4:30Funny Page 5:30Cartoons 6:00News 6:15Sports 6:36Weather  t</p>
        <p>0:30News. NBO 7:00Leave It to Beaver 7:30The Virginian, NBC* 9:00Movie, NBC ll:pONews and Sports 11:10Weather 11:15Tonight show, NBC</p>
        <p>WNBE Ch. 12</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>5:00Kiddie Show 6:30Riley 6:00Early Report 6:10Weather 6:15News, ABC 6:30Rifleman 7:00Rebel 7:30Combat, ABC 8:30McHflles Navy, ABC 9:00Tycoon, ABC 9:30Peyton Place, ABC 10:00Leonardo De Vinci, ABC 11:00Late Report 11:10Weather 11:15Lc.s Crane. ABC WEDNESDAY I 7:00Kiddie Show 9:00Early Show 10:30Open House</p>
        <p>11:00liOve Bob 11:30Pi'lca Lm R4|ht. ABO 12:00Donna Reed, ABC 12:30Father Knows Best. ABO 1:00Ernie Ford, ABC 1:30Eastern Carolina Pnrmor 2:00Flame in Wind, ABO 3:30Day in Court. ABC 3:65Ne va, ABC 3:00General Hospital, ABO 3:30Young Marrieds, ADO 4:00Trallmaster, ABC 5:00Kiddie Show 5:30Riley 8:00Early Report 6:10Weather 6:15News, ABO 6:30Rifleman,</p>
        <p>7:00One Step Beyond 7:30Ozzie and Harriet, ABO 8:00Patty Duke, ABC 8:30Shindig, ABC 9:30Burkes Law, AP'^ 10:30Scope. ABQ,</p>
        <p>11:00Late Report 11:10Weattier H;15_Les Crane, ABO</p>
        <p>estate will pleatt mike lmaiH-ate payment to the underalgn* ed.</p>
        <p>Thie ihe 38th day of Jeauenr, 1966.  .</p>
        <p>L. . PEELE End R. L. PIBLI. Admlniitretore, O.T.A. of the tetfte of je^ Loonenf Peale Fountain. North Caroline Mark W* Owena, Jr., Attorney P.O. BOX 15</p>
        <p>Oreenvllle, North Carolina Feb. 3. 9. 16, 33</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>Tlie undersigned having qualified as Administrators, C.T.A. of the estate of JESSE LEONARD PEELE, deceased, late of Pitt County. North Carolina, this Is to notify all pei\sons having claims against said estate,' to present them to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of July. 1965, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted w the said</p>
        <p>ADMINISTRATRICES* NOTICE Having this day qualified aa administratrices of the estate of Mjrrtle McLawhorri Tucker, deceased, late of Pitt Couhty, North" Carolina, this is to notify all persona having claims against the estate of the aald deceased to exhibit ttie same, duly itemized and verified, to the undersigned admtnlstra-tricea at Route 1, WIntcrville, North Carolina, on or before the 16th day of August, 1965, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery All persons Indebted to said estate will please make payment to the administratrices.</p>
        <p>This the 8th day of February, 1966.</p>
        <p>LARUE McL. CASTELLOF. LEGKIE McL. WILKERSON Adminlstratrlcea of the Estate of</p>
        <p>Myrtle McLawhorn Tucker, Deceased R. B. Lee. Attorney Feb. 9, 16. 23, March t</p>
        <p>you</p>
        <p>90  60  ^</p>
        <p>WI66  IN  JUMfcMfcNf'''</p>
        <p>"Anyone with a deep, exhaustive knowledge of diamond smuggling and theft is now dead, Dawlish is cautioned as thestor Dawlish is cautioned as the story continues here tomorrow.</p>
        <p> STILL CRITIC .%L*</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP)  Actress Patricia Neal remains in critical condition at UCLA Medical Center, where she was admitted Wednesday, a hospital spokesman said today^ Miss Neal, 39. suffered two ^rokes and underwent surgery at the hospital Thursday.</p>
        <p>Bonefish grow by shrinking. When the young fish reach about three Inches, they actually shrink an inch or two before resuming growth to attain full length of about 36 inches.</p>
        <p>EXTRA DOLLARS THE EASY WAY...</p>
        <p>USE DAILY REFLECTOR CLASSIFIED ADS</p>
        <p>The extra cash you want for better, easier living Ig aa easy (o have as dialing PI 2-6166! Because thats all It takes just  phone call  to start a mony-maklng Classified Ad on Its wey to buyer who pay cash for the good, but no longer used, articles you)have around your home.</p>
        <p>Go through your place today. Make a list of every worthwhile thing you find that Isnt needed or enjoyed any more. When youve finished, make that important phone call. Dial PL 2-6166 for the friendly Ad Writer whos waiting to help you. ^  '</p>
        <p>Sound Idsy? It it . . . and it't inuxpdntivd^ too.. A 15 word'/ B line ed id. uat $.60 per dey on tht tpdcial 7 day pitn. So, If you want to not the oxtro dollars that make living  lot^^moro fun, uto powerful Daily Reflector Clattified Ads. Do it today.</p>
        <p>' DAILY REFLECTOR CLASSIFIED ADS</p>
        <p>209 Cotanche St.</p>
        <p>Where Modern Fimiliet Rnd * Extra Cash FI 2-6166</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>1:30 - 5 PJA.</p>
        <p>rj</p>
        <p>mm.</p>
        <p>Hi</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0009" />
        <p>ALWAYS IN THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED SECTION</p>
        <p>U.S. Embassy Is Forcad To Movo</p>
        <p>. KAMPALA. Uganda (AP) -The U.8. Embassy is blng c forced to move because anti-American demonstrators have twice damaged the eight-story building where it now occupies the two top floors.</p>
        <p>"Our lawyers are now considering how long to give the Americans to find other premises," said Semel Nyazi, chairman of the governments Uganda Development Corporation which owns the building.</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>^NOTCE~TO~CREDlfoK8~</p>
        <p>The undersigned having qualified*" as Administratrix of the estate of John Quincy Adams, Jr., deceased, late of Pitt County,. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or before the 17Ui day of August, 1965, or tills notice will be pleaded in bar of Mielr recovery. All persons indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. -</p>
        <p>This the 17th day of February, 1965.</p>
        <p>MAVIS C. ADAMS, Administratrix of the Estate of</p>
        <p>John Quincy Adams, Jr. Route 5, Box 46A Greenville, North Carolina James &amp;amp; Hite, Attorneys Oreenville North Carolina Feb. 23, Mar. 2, 9, 16  _</p>
        <p>nlng thence south 76 deg. west a distance of 130.8 feet, a corner; running south 16 deg. 80" east a distance of fifty (60) feet to a stake, a corner; running thence north 74 deg. 16" east a distance of 130-2 feet to a stake, the point of beginning (all courses being according to survey of Henry L. Rivers, C.I., made in April 1922), and being the identical lot conveyed to Prank M. Brown by deed of Elizabeth C. Tibbatts on October 22. 1947, which deed is duly of record in the Public Registry of Pitt County in Book A-25 at page 508, and to which deed reference is hereby directed for a more particular description."</p>
        <p>The highest bidder at such sale shall be required to deposit ten per cent (10%) of his bid as evidence of good faith pending confirmation of the sale by the court.</p>
        <p>This the 19th day of February 1965.</p>
        <p>SAM B. UNDERWOOD, JR.</p>
        <p>Commlsloner Feb. 23. Mar. 3</p>
        <p>.NOTICE OF RESALE Novlh Carolina County</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of an dXder of the Clerk of superior</p>
        <p>- Court of Pitt County made this " .in that special proceeding</p>
        <p>entkied "Wachovia Bank and ;^ust Company, Administrator of the Estate of Frank M. Brown, Deceased; Corlnne P. Brown, Widow; Marion B. Smith and husband, J. M. Smkh; Franklin M. Brown and wife, Margaret 8. Brown; Eugene M. Brown and wife, Linda Brown", directing a resale ihn an advance bid filed in said;i&amp;gt;roccedlng, the tuiderslgn-d dommlssioner will on the 8th .day.;, of March 1965. at 12:00 Oclock noon at the Pitt County ' Courthouse door in Greenville, North Carolina, offer for sale , to the highest bidder for cash pporr an opening bid of Ten Thousand, Five Hundred Fifty  Dollars ($10,550.00), but subject to the confirmation of the court and also subject to 1964 and 1965 Pitt County and City of Grdenville ad valorem taxes, that certain lot or parcel of land lying and being In the city of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows;</p>
        <p>"Beginning at a stake in the western property line of Evans Slreet, which stake is located 101.2 feet northwardly from the northwest corner of the intersection of Evans and Fourteenth ' Straets, and running from said 1 stifke northwardly along the , we.stem property line of Evans Street a distance of fifty (50)</p>
        <p>- feet to a stake, a corner; run-</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE OF "THE GREENVILLE BOOK STORE"</p>
        <p>A SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP</p>
        <p>NOTICE is hereby given that W. P. Young, conducting the business of a news stand and book store under the firm name and style of The Greenville Book Store" has this day con-</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVI</p>
        <p>Aviof Per Sele</p>
        <p>FORD  1962 - 4 dr. Mdan, exoillent condition, p. b p. auto. tnuu.. price $1995. Jim Dandy Moton, PL 2-2725.</p>
        <p>FORD  1961 - 2 dr. hdtp.. StarUner, r k h, blue with red interior, auto., 8 It E Motora, Ayden, 746-3111.</p>
        <p>FORD  1963 4-dr., r It h, power brakes, excellent mechanical condition. Call PL 2-5796 after 5 p. m.</p>
        <p>STOP STALLING I DRIVE A fully reconditioned and guaranteed uoed car from Wagner-Waldrop Motors, Inc., 752-4525.</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH - 1964PuiTn door hard top like new. Must sell, tako up payments. Call 758-4354 after 6 pjn.</p>
        <p>SELECTION OP OVER 40 OUT-,of-state old used cars can be seen at Harvey Bowen Motor, Ayden. 746-6475.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC  1985 - 2 dr. hdtop., priced at only $2996. See Clifton Ellis at Duke Buick - Pontiac Motors, ParmvUle, 753-3137.</p>
        <p>VOLTsWA(3E~1%2 Immaculate, must see to believe. Call PL 2-2917.</p>
        <p>Trucks Por Salo</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET ~ 2 ton "60</p>
        <p>veved thp same to Charles R  Chassis  cab.  2  speed axle,</p>
        <p>veyed the same to Charles R.  Whitehurst.  Davenport</p>
        <p>Flanagan.</p>
        <p>Charles R. Flanagan Will continue the operation of said business as the sole proprietor thereof and will collect all</p>
        <p>Motors. 752-2100.</p>
        <p>CARD OF THANKS</p>
        <p>IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY Dear Aunt Ella P. Graham who passed away February 20, 1952. When I forget your laughter the brightness of your eye, when I forget your smile, the sun will forget to rise. Though other memories fade away upon this mortal shore, your memory like the laurel stays green forever-more. Your devoted niece, Naomi B. Hart.</p>
        <p>AUTOS WANTID</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL  1958, 8-130, 1 ton with flat body, dual wheels, $550. A Dream! Greenville Equip debts owing to the firm and ment Co., PL 8-1179. pay all debts incurred by the firm from and after February 15, 1965. W. F. Young will collect all debts owing to the firm and will pay all debts owed by said firm as of February 15,</p>
        <p>1905.</p>
        <p>This the 15th day of February, 1965.</p>
        <p>W. F. YOUNG Formerly doing business as "The Greenville Book Store</p>
        <p>Feb. 23, Mar. 2, 9. 16</p>
        <p>To Build Business Profits With Classified Ads</p>
        <p>Lt Far-Reaching Clattlfied Adt Taka Your Salat Mattaga Straight To Tha Bast Prospects You've Got .  .  The</p>
        <p>Raady-To-Buy Readers Who Voluntarily Turn To Tho Classified Section First When They're In The Market For A Product Or Sorvice.</p>
        <p>DO YOU HAVE ANY OLD National Geographie maga-sines? Bring them in and we will buy tBem. Book Barn, PL 8-3811.</p>
        <p>Classified Ads</p>
        <p>Dial PL 2.6166</p>
        <p>FOR SAU</p>
        <p>MIscellaneeut For Sale</p>
        <p>ONE DDilNO ROOM SUITE, good condition, flrst $2) gets it. Dining table, six chairs, buffet, one china closet. Call PL 2-7955.</p>
        <p>OUR PHONE NEVER RESTS! Reglatered pharmacist on duty at all times. Free delivery. War; rens Drug Store, 752-3514.</p>
        <p>RIAL ISTATI</p>
        <p>RINTAU</p>
        <p>NEW 40 FT. WIDE STEEL quality building at a low price. PaUowfield Realty. 7584202.</p>
        <p>Housee For Selo</p>
        <p>1117 SOUTH OVERLOOK DRIVE, framed, near schools, 3 be&amp;lt;3* rooms, 2 baths, wall to wall carpets, drapes, $17,700, good finance. PL 8-1994.</p>
        <p>GOLF OXFORDS. FNLL GRAIN cowhide, crepe soles with regulation spike, $12.95. H. L. Hodge Hardware, 210 E. 5th St. 752-4166.</p>
        <p>When Youre 111 You See A Dector When Yon Nted Legal Advlee Yon See A Lawyer When Yon Need Advlee on Alnminuni Prodnete See Ua HIQB-QUALITY ALUMINUM PRODUCTS. lao. MM 1. 10th St.</p>
        <p>PL t-3561 Designers in Alnminani</p>
        <p>FLORinS</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>CARS WANTED</p>
        <p>For Top Wholesale Cash Offer Call Vince HoweU. PL 2-4470</p>
        <p>Tarheel Truck Rentelt 305 Airport Road</p>
        <p>BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>ANTIQUES</p>
        <p>ROUND OAK PEDESTAL Tables In All Sizes, Oblong Oak And Walnut Tables. Several Washstands. Reflnlshed Or In The Rough.</p>
        <p>JOHNSEN'S ANTIQUE SHOP</p>
        <p>115 East 14th Street Open All Day Wednesday And</p>
        <p>Saturdays. And Every Night.</p>
        <p>WANTED FRANCHISED DEALER for</p>
        <p>McCANN HOMES</p>
        <p>Americas leading quality factory built home. 180 different standard models or well manufacture to your plans at no price penalty. Other models 100% factory completed for finishing In hours at building site. Complete line of commercial and industrial steel buildings to supplement residences. No inventory or franchise fee  required. For details write George Dorsey McCANN HOMES, P.O. Box 1103, Silver Spring, Md. 20910 or phone 310-585-5550.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Female Help Wanted</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>BUICK - 1963  Rlveria. air cond., power s. b, w. like new. Call Rex Wainright at PL 8-1123, Folger Buick.</p>
        <p>DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>. . CLASSIFIED</p>
        <p>h rates and</p>
        <p>INFORAAATION</p>
        <p>J ASK FOR CLASSIFIED</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>700 minimum cLarge for 8 lines or leas for flrjt Insertion. 1 Day 25c Per Une Per Day 4 Days22c Per Une Per Day 7 Days^20c Per Line Per Day Contract Ratea Available _ CLASSIFIED DIBPLAT RATES $1.35 Per Column IndL Open Rate Contract Rates AvaUabI#</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>The Dafly Reflector wlH to responsible only for the fliM incorrect or omitted insertloo of any advertisement In tbeee columns and then only to tto extent of a make-good Inajh tlon^f. Errora which do &amp;gt; not lessen Ihe value of tto advM^ tlsement will not to conrecMfl a make-good nubllaher reserves the right It rfvlie or reject any oogfi</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>No new adi, killa &amp;lt; coitii^ Uona accepted after I p JH* ito ^ before pubUeatloD.</p>
        <p>SVE MONEY</p>
        <p>OrOr yonr kd to rm 1 to* the oosi la less per day. Wh fog set (^ealred rMWtj. &amp;lt;0 Ml l-eief and stop tto fii pay lor only the aumber</p>
        <p>iJ^\yoor</p>
        <p>BLTCK  1962  Electra 225. sedan, air cond., excellent shape. Call Bruce Newsome at PL 8-1123, Folger Buick.</p>
        <p>CADILLAC 1964, like new, fully equipped with air cond. Big savings on this locally owned car. Bill Jenkins Motors, PL 8-3118.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1961 - 4 dr. sedan, r &amp;amp; h, W.W., like new. $1195. Messer Chevrolet Co., Farm-ville, 753-312C.  __</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1957, 4 door, sedan, factory air cond., V-8. radio &amp;amp; heater, Wynnes Inc., Bethel, VA 5-4321.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1963 - 4 dr. sedan, factory air cond., V-8, r 4ih, p s , p.b., One owner. White Chevrolet, PL 2-3134.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1%2 - Impala, 4 dr. hdtp., powergllde, r &amp;amp; h, W.W., extra mice. White Chevrolet. PL 2-3134._ ________</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1965 - Sport Coupe for sale or trade. Call PL 8-4388.</p>
        <p>MIDDLE AGED WHITE LADY to do general work in small office and other responsibilities. Call PL 2-4066.</p>
        <p>tEN(3GRAPHER  BOIU</p>
        <p>keeper, age 20 to 30. Single, good penmanship, shorthand required. Knowledge of bookkeeping not essential, will teach. Write in own handwriting giving particulars, Stenographer", Box 588. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Male-Fmal Help Wanted</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>WHITE LADY DESIRES LIGHT housekeeping, care tor elderly person. Call PL 24634 from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.</p>
        <p>LADY DESIRES CHU.D &amp;lt;T0 keep in her home for working mother. Call PL 2-2788.</p>
        <p>LADY DESIRES TO KEEP child in her home for working mother. CaU PL 2-4204.</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVICE</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Mitcallanaeut For Sala</p>
        <p>WANTED: SOMEONE IN THIS area to take over 9 payments of $7,72 on Automatic Singer Zlg Zag sewing machine. Guaranteed. For details write, Credit Dept., P. 0. Box 2113, Rocky Mount. N. C.</p>
        <p>REFRIGERATOR, GOOD (XN-dltion $25. CaU PL 2-6813.</p>
        <p>WHEEL CHAIRS. CX)MMODES, patient lifters. For Sale or Rent. Brooks .ervice Company, Inc., Kinston. N.C. Call JA 7-2490.</p>
        <p>CLARK AND CO.: McCULLOCH chain aws and parts. Chain. I bar, and sprockets for all aawa. Bicycle repairs. 758-2125.</p>
        <p>A NICE MEMORIAL TO SOME-one Dear , . . floral designs from Inas House of Flower, N. Memorial Dr. PL 2-5656.</p>
        <p>HO^SmOLD GOODS</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER CLEANINO. TO keep colors gleaming, use Blue Lustre carpet cleaner. Rent electric shampooer $1. Mary Cartera.</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>GOOD NEWS! STILL GREAT service at Carr AUens Texaco (next door to old 'post office), PL 2-4838.</p>
        <p>PARTNERSHIP IS FINE AS long as both partners live. . . But if sudden death strikes a partner, there is always the widow of the deceased that remains on the payroU or demand the sale of a fine business. Why not let us draw up a modem BUY . &amp;amp; SELL AGREEMENT, and fund it with low cost insurance. Call Ed Tipton Agency 758-2602.</p>
        <p>SEWING MACHINE: IN LIKE new cabinet. Zig-Zags, makes buttonholes, fancy stitches, and dams etc. Local party may finish payments of $11.14 monthly or pay complete balance of $54.19. Full details and where seen write: Home Office, "Nationals Time .^Payment Dept., Box 283, Asheboro, N, C.</p>
        <p>HOMEOWNERS</p>
        <p>WARM YOUR WHOLE HOUSE WITH NEW SYSTEM FROM</p>
        <p>ALL WEATHER</p>
        <p>HEATING k COOLING</p>
        <p>Free Estimate PL 2-2294</p>
        <p>$10 DOWN DELIVERS</p>
        <p>ANY ONE OF THESE ITEMS NEW AND USED</p>
        <p>Bedroom, Living And Dinette Suites. Stove, Refrigerator, Heater, Washing Machine, TVs.</p>
        <p>Richard Garris</p>
        <p>GARRIS SUPPLY FURNITIWE CO.</p>
        <p>Five Points  PL  2-5225</p>
        <p>INCREASF. NET INCOME: Substitute Nutrena Hog Pioduc-tlon Program for Tobacco cut. Ayden MobUe Milling, 752-6270.</p>
        <p>SWEAT SHIRTS - MANY COlr^ ors; already monogrammed for E(X, Eppes and Rose High</p>
        <p>CAREER OPENINGS MEN &amp;amp; WOMEN</p>
        <p>Nationally known company ha immediate opening in this area for 2 men or 2 women with or without sales experience. We school and field train at companys expense. This 1 an excellent opportunity for qualified men or women who are not satisfied with their present Income and advancement potential. Permanent $110 per wk. guarantee if you meet our requirements. Advancement into management with increased income after 90 days. Apply Holiday Inp On Feb. 24 between 5 and 7 p.m. Ask Mr. Rullman.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1963 conv., very very clean, auto, trans., r, h, W.W.. Stafford OldsmobUe. PL 8-3416. Many Others!</p>
        <p>aiEVROLET  1957 -PrlM $250. Call PL 2-6585 for information.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1964. conv., new tires, fully equipped. Ass u m e payments. Call PL 8-2258 or PL 2-3220.  __</p>
        <p>FALCON  1964 Sell or trade. 7 months old, st. drive, 4 dr., r &amp;amp; h, w.vfj, Make offer. Ted Harrison. 1010 Tenth Street. PL 2-2663.</p>
        <p>FAIXON  1964. conv., fully equipped, only 12.000 miles, blue finish. P &amp;amp; D Motor.s, Bethel, VA 5-4451.</p>
        <p>FALCON  1963 v4 dr. sedan, r &amp;amp; h, auto, tran.s., new tires, extra clean. $1295. Fai'mers Used Cara, PL 2-4776.</p>
        <p>THREE AVON REPRESENTA-tives needed for immediate placement. Openings in county and city. If you are not being ser/ed, why not become a representative and earn a good income. Call 758-3245 after 7 p. m.</p>
        <p>TEAR our THIS AD. AND mail with name, address for big box of home needs and cosmetics for Free Trial, to test in your home. Tell your friends, make money. Rush name. Blair, Dept. 685BC3, Lynchburg, Va.</p>
        <p>Mal Help Wantad</p>
        <p>WANTED AT ONCE-RAWLEIOH DEALER in part of Greenville. See or write J.M. Galloway, 211 Hlllcrest Dr. Greenville, N. C. Phone PL 2-3676 or writ# Raw-leigh. ^Dept. NC B 740 3, Richmond, Va.</p>
        <p>HOME HEATING WITH LENNOX  More people buy School. Book Bam, 758-3811. Lennox for home heating than any other make furnace. We offer qmfllty workmanship and materials. For free survey with no obligation. Call today Financing available. Oenmd Heating.</p>
        <p>Inc., 1100 Evan 8t. Telephone 752-41d7.</p>
        <p>T &amp;amp; W MOBILE HOME RE-pair. Complete repair service, complete line of appliances. Route 4, Box 307, Phone PL 8-3312 night, PL 2-4675 day.</p>
        <p>$10 DOWN ON $100 SALE</p>
        <p>Limited Time</p>
        <p>KEN'S</p>
        <p>Furniture Store 905 Dickinson Ave. PL 2-5683</p>
        <p>FOR ALL YOUR</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>NEEDS</p>
        <p>Call ED TIPTON AGENCY...</p>
        <p> Fire &amp;amp; Casualty</p>
        <p> Income Protectioa LifeBusiness</p>
        <p>GroupPartnership Mortgage</p>
        <p> Automobile</p>
        <p> Inland Marine</p>
        <p> Hospitalization</p>
        <p> BurialUp To Age 80,</p>
        <p>No Physical Required</p>
        <p> True Group FranchiseAssoc.</p>
        <p> Retirement and Pension Funds</p>
        <p> Savings Plans</p>
        <p> College Education</p>
        <p> Family Plans</p>
        <p> (New) Small Business Retirement Plans</p>
        <p>FROM $1 TO $5 PER WK. 12 LOCAL MEN TO SERVE YOU</p>
        <p>Ed Tipton Agency</p>
        <p>203 Boyd Ave. Greenville, N. C. 758-2602</p>
        <p>1806 EAST THIRD STREET, S bedrcKxns, living room, din 1 n g room, garage, childrens swimming pool. VA or FHA flnanced. BUI WUUami, J. Hicks Corey Agency, PL 2-2615.</p>
        <p>805 LINDELL ROAD, EXTRA nice house with living, dlnl n g, kitchen, bath, 3 bedrooms, and carport. Terms avaUable. Phone PL 24123 days. PL 2-5824 nlghta. Standard Realty Co.. P. O. Box 421. Greenville. N. C.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>REASONABLE RENT AND 8AT-Isfled customers keep u In busl-neas. Orier Rental Agency, (closed all day wed:) 752-5700.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>Rooma For Ront</p>
        <p>LARGE ROOM IN PRIVATE home. Private entrance, private toth. Air cimdltiontd. Parkl n g, prefer buslneaa min. CaU PL 2-2781 after 6 p. m.</p>
        <p>SINGLE ROOM WITH PRIV-ate entrance and bath, $10 per week. Call PL 2-7565 or PL 2-7388</p>
        <p>RENT THAT VACANCY through Rent Ada. It'a BABY. Dial PL 241M.</p>
        <p>Trucka For Rout</p>
        <p>RENT A VAN TRUCK MOV* yourself. Sava 50 percent I $11 per day plua IS cent per mile. Oae and oil furnished. Funtura pads and dollies available. Tkr* heel Truck Rentals, Local rental office at Neluma Texaco jKatiqa. Phone day or night. PL 2-4470.</p>
        <p>SCHQOIS-INSTRUCTIONS</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM UNFUR-nlshed apartment near collet. CaU after 5 p.m., PL 8-1349.</p>
        <p>PRACTICALLY NEW APART-ment, 8 bedroom, central heat</p>
        <p>and air conditioned. PL 2-7808.</p>
        <p>U.S. CIVIL SERVICI TISTSI</p>
        <p>Men-women 18 and over. Stotva Jobs. High pay. Short hours. Advancement. Thousands of Jobs open. Preparatory training until appointed. -Experlenct usually unnecessary. FREE Information on joba, salaries, requirements. Write today gwlng name, ad* dreM and phone. Linela 8cr vice. Box 406, Greenville, NQ.</p>
        <p>DO YOU NEED</p>
        <p> A PoeUlde Apartment?</p>
        <p> A Roommate To Share Expenses?</p>
        <p> A Luxury Mobile Home?</p>
        <p> A Home For Tonight?</p>
        <p> Conqilete Furnishings?</p>
        <p>We Have Them All For You!</p>
        <p>May We Help You FlU Yonr Needs?</p>
        <p>COLLEGE INN</p>
        <p>IN AYDEN, 2 BEDROOM FUR-nlshed apartment, $55 monthly. Immediate occupancy. Contact Van D. Hatch, 746-3200.</p>
        <p>2506 EAST 10th STREET, EX-tra nice, 2 bedroom apartment with refrigerator, stove, air con* dUloned, heat, and hot water furnished. Call M. B. Massey, Jr., PL 2-6123 days, PL 2-5824 nights.</p>
        <p>STARTING MARCH 1 BPBSIt term beginning classes day or night. Greenville School of Oomp merce, PL 2-2261.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOTICB</p>
        <p>FARM MACHINKRY AUCTION sale Tuesday. March 2nd M 10 a. m. 150 farm tractors, 400 farm Implements. Anyone can buy or seU. Wayne Implement. Inc., Goldsboro, N. C., Highway 117 South, Phono 734-4234.</p>
        <p>THREE ROOM FURNISHED apartment, private bath and entrance. Two blocks from college Ubrary. CaU 758-3245 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>WHO ARE YOU WILLING your responslWUtle to? ?*? Youf Mother-in-law, your Father-ln-law. , .It Is enUrely possible that Mother and Dad can be kiUed in the same accident. . .Why dont you aee a trust officer M some good Bank to manage the affairs of your children  then see ED TIPTON AGCY. to complete an Insurance Trust. PL 8-2602.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>HUGE MOBILE HOME SPACES Including large patios and paved sidewalks. Also, some mobUe I'^mes available. Pineview Court (5 minutes from downtown, turn left at CUifs Oyster Bar). CaU 758-3644 or 758-3928.  _</p>
        <p>TV^ BEDR^M HOUSE TRAIL-er with automatic washer. PL 2-3056 before 6 p. m.</p>
        <p>TWO ROOM FURNISHED apartment for couple. Two blocks from college, two blocks fr(nn uptown. Newly painted. CaU PL 2-4753.</p>
        <p>For Ront or Loss*</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE - NEW "66" Service Station, Second &amp;amp; Co-tanche. Contact Farmers OU Co. SK 3-3064, Walstonburg. N.C.</p>
        <p>Houtos For Ront</p>
        <p>'TWO BEDROOM HOUSE ON half acre lot. with many extras. Central heat. PL 8-2041.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM HOUSE ON West Fifth St. Ext., across from Medical Pavilion, $75 per month. See Smith Insurance and Realty, PL 2-2754.</p>
        <p>INEZS DAY CARE NURSERY. Children: infants to 6 years. CaU PL 84398.</p>
        <p>INCOME TAX. BOOKKEEPING and Notary Service. GaU  W. erman Hardee, PL 2-4237.</p>
        <p>FARM AUCTION</p>
        <p>42.7 ACRES 12 NOON FEB. 27</p>
        <p>On Premises Of Laii4 1 Mils From Venters Croasreadf On Hwy 102 Harvey Bowen 746-g4'ni</p>
        <p>CUSSIRED DISPUY</p>
        <p>POUR BEDROOM HOUSE. UN-fumished, newly painted Inside, 1206 Criarle# Street near Intersection of Charles and 14th</p>
        <p>POR SALE OR POR RENT See our new 10 wide. 2 bedroom  Trust  Co.,  CaU  PL</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Selo</p>
        <p>mobile homes for $3295. $295 down and $54 per month.</p>
        <p>AZALEA MOBILE HOMES Phone: PL 2-3109. PL 2-5822 8012 East 10th Street</p>
        <p>FRESH FROM THE FACTORY 2 or 3 bedroom mobile homes: $3995, $295 down. B &amp;amp; W MobUe Homes, 752-2911.  '</p>
        <p>KITCHEN CUPBOARDS OR caulkkig compounds, when in need of building materials. See Home BuUders Supply, PL 2-4151.</p>
        <p>LAWN MOWER REPAIRING all types, all sizes! Nw and used. Look no further. . R. P. McLawhon Si Sons, PL 2-3286.</p>
        <p>MONEY GIVEN AWAY through savings earned by having H &amp;amp; M Radlo-TV Shop do your repairs. 758-2436.</p>
        <p>BLACK WALNUTS AND PE-(sans. Sold by the pound. 1112 Ward Street. Phone PL 2-4094.</p>
        <p>ANNUAL MAONOVOX SALE</p>
        <p>on aU Stereo and TV sets. From $50 to $100 off wholesale prices. Music Arts, 758-2530.</p>
        <p>TOFF CArWoT~PE McVASKEY. SERVICE STA-FREE CARTON OF PEPSI  register,  all  keys. 2</p>
        <p>totals, perfect condition. Call PL 8-2350 or can be seen at Averys Gulf Station.</p>
        <p>Is YOUR HOSPITAL PLAN paying your bUls at home while you are hospital confined? ? If not, for pennies a day we can send you $100 per week for Life . . .Call Ed Tipton Agency, 758-2602.</p>
        <p>with purchase of 12 gals. gas. Wed. only at West End Atlantic,</p>
        <p>PL 2^52^__</p>
        <p>ADbmO BEAUTY TO YOUR home is our profession. We sand floors, install formica tops and linoleum. Pitt Tile Co., 752-4998.</p>
        <p>LATE FDR WORK BECAUSE your car wont start? We can fix it. Ricks Service Center 9th &amp;amp; Evan, 752-4342.  -</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS</p>
        <p>ROOFING, SIDING AND ALUM- Storm windows and doors, awa-</p>
        <p>PORD  1958  Statlonwagon. good mechanical condition. Reason for sellliig: Acquiring mew car. Phone PL 2-5150^ ^</p>
        <p>FORD  1964. conv.. 6 months</p>
        <p>old. like new fully equipped. Red  .  ^</p>
        <p>finish. P 4i D Motors, Bethel. |pany, 310 EVana Slreet, Green-</p>
        <p>VA 6-4451.  \</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT MANAGSR CREDIT MANAGER</p>
        <p>Sherwln WUllam Company has an opening for an ambitious man to assist manager in operating a paint and wallpaper store in Greenville, N. C. Duties wlU include inside sale, credits, collections. and aasistlng in' overall operations. Good advancement opportunity. Training provided. Good Martlng salary with many company benefits. If you are interested In an opportunity to prove your ability end reisum to Mr. Rudolph, Branch Man-agfr, Sherwln Williams Com-</p>
        <p>Ule, Nf.</p>
        <p>Inum gutters. Up to 5 years to pay with monthly or fall terms. (]k&amp;gt;odson Roofing Co.. 752-4322.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Firm Equlpmtnt</p>
        <p>FARMALL SUPER A TRAC-tors with cultivators, iertlllwr attach. &amp;amp; warrantlee! $895 up. Greenville:. Equip. Co. 758-1179.</p>
        <p>raACTORT 1 ROWr CULTIVATE ors. sowers, fumigation outfit, tractor and equipment In excellent condition.; Has' been overhauled and painted. Price $50(lu+-</p>
        <p>GE REFRIQERATOR-FREEZ-^er combination Only four months old. Automatic ice filler. A steal I Call PL 8-4354.</p>
        <p>IDR "A JOB WELL DONE feeling clean carpets with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Glidden's</p>
        <p>Call PL 2-6098.</p>
        <p>MIscellantout For Sak</p>
        <p>LADIES: CORNING WARE SALE on 2'ii qt. saucepan w/cover. (Reg. $6.95 now $4.88). Globe Hardware. 120 &amp;gt;^5th.. 752-6m,</p>
        <p>TWO PIECE LVINC ROOM suit, good condition. WlU sell very cheap. OUl PL 1-2046 after I p m.</p>
        <p>k</p>
        <p>Ings, Venetian blinds, porch enclosures, paint and hardware. Ne down payment, three years to pay.</p>
        <p>C. L. LUPTON COMPANY "Your Comfort Is Our Business PL 6-2235</p>
        <p>250 BALES OF HAY. CALL PL 2-6464._ __</p>
        <p>KELVIN A T O R ELECTRIC range, 4 mouths old, in excellent condition. Call PL 8-1406.</p>
        <p>1964 SIEGLER JET BURNER oil heater, used 8 months. Sold for ^69.95, no reasonable offer refused. Reason for sellii^g: In-stallihg heaUng plant. CaU PL</p>
        <p>MONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>NEED MONEY?</p>
        <p>1st. and 2nd. Mortgages. Reduce Monthly Payments Up To 60% or More.</p>
        <p>Combine Your Billa Into One Monthly Pa.vnient</p>
        <p>Glisson Tax Service</p>
        <p>Box 6, Stokea, N. C. 27884 Agt. Southern Mortgage Co. of N.C., Inc.</p>
        <p>75A-2855</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>We Definitely Are Not In The Legal Business .. . BUT . . .</p>
        <p>We Do Solicit</p>
        <p>A visit from you to your lawyer if you havent made a will yet. It Is the only way to leave your property intact, and without severe taxation in some casca. Dont make your wife and children pay for this mistake!! See your Lawyer Now . . . Theh call us for the INSURANCE you need to discount the ever demanding TAX DOLLARS they will need.</p>
        <p>ED TIPTON AGCY.</p>
        <p>203 Boyd Ave.  758^2</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>2-3419.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM HOUSE IN exceUent condition, near college. $90 per month. CaU PL 2-2475. ADS F</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>FOR RENT. OFFICES WORS-ley Building, Apartment East 3rd Street and Houoe Trailers, Drum Street. James R, Worsley.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Material Handlers</p>
        <p>Young married men for ma-trlal moving in "Productioa Dept." Only energetic men interested in a permanent Job with a secure future should apply. Interested applicants apply to:</p>
        <p>EMPIRE BRUSH INC. Box 422. U.S. 13 North Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Phone 758-4111</p>
        <p>COLLINS HOUSE MOVERS</p>
        <p>Rt. 1, New Bern, N.C. Call</p>
        <p>Collect 637-2937"</p>
        <p>"Your House tan Be Moved</p>
        <p>GO '65 POLARA!</p>
        <p>The New 65 POLARA Is A BIG Car. BIG In Room Leg-room, Hiproom, Shoulder Room. And Headroom In Back Aa Well As In Front). BIG In Wheelbase. Length, Tread And Width. BIG In Power. BIO In Luxury.</p>
        <p>BIO IN VALUE, TOOl</p>
        <p>No matter where you ihop Polaras more Car Cor the money. Our Polara Pricea begin as low as</p>
        <p>$3498.00 JIM DANDY</p>
        <p>MOTORS 1511 N. Greeao 7$2-27tl</p>
        <p>GOOD USED TRACTORS 1 a I ROW</p>
        <p>$250.00 up</p>
        <p>Hendrlx-Bsmliill GreeiviUe, N.C.-PL S-41</p>
        <p>HOUSES</p>
        <p>WANTED \</p>
        <p>NOW!!</p>
        <p>IjiniteteM.</p>
        <p>For Immediat* Sale</p>
        <p>If You Plan Build A Second I Homo, Now la Tho I Timo To Sell The j Home You LIvo In. iiWo Havo Sevorit ii Long Distance Calls j! A Day From People ij Being Transferred li To Oreenvllle.</p>
        <p>"V liij.</p>
        <p>We Welcome All Listings Even Thfough Other Reel E 11 e t e Agencies. Our Sole Interest la To Serve Greenville, To Help It Grow , .</p>
        <p>Llai Yaar Hmne</p>
        <p>Now With Ua.</p>
        <p>ED TIPTON</p>
        <p>AGENCY  201 Beyd PL l-IMI</p>
        <p>LmsI - Blal# NatlMSl ficrvlct</p>
        <p>lili</p>
        <p>'-AV</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <pb facs="00089904_0010" />
        <p>^ ' ' '</p>
        <p>|l&amp;gt;'"AtiftWy 'iifiiiltrf totnvlii^ N. C.-Tiitlty, Mbrvtfy 33^ IHI</p>
        <p>NSW TORS (AP)  prioet roM in ftAhion</p>
        <p>Stock</p>
        <p>ffaarfcet prioet rote in fcJrly britk faehion early this after* POOD despite a scattering of soft spots.</p>
        <p>The list was up from the start after the long Washington birth* day weekend.</p>
        <p>Traders showed relief that nothing of a drastic nature oc* eurred In the Viet Nam region over the weekend. A call for postponnent of the steel strike deadline and Britain's lowering of its Import surcharge were other encouraging factors in the news.</p>
        <p>Gains of key stocks were mostly fractional and quite a few were unchanged. A few leading Issues took fractional losses. A number of secondary stocks were bought eagerly and posted gains of a point or better.</p>
        <p>A generally higher tone prevailed among steels, motors, rails, electronics, building materials. electrical equipments and aerospace stocks.</p>
        <p>Utilities and chemicals were scrambled.</p>
        <p>The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at no&amp;lt;xi was up .9 at 333.3 with industrials up 1.3. rails up .8 and utilities unchanged.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones Industrial average at noon was up 3.25 at 888.86.</p>
        <p>Eastman Kodak advanced about 2 points following its report of record sales and earnings for 1964. The chemical group, however, included a loss: of nearly a point by Du Pont.</p>
        <p>Zenith,, up more than 2, was a standout among electronics.</p>
        <p>All Big Three motors posted fractional gains. Steels also were a shade higher.</p>
        <p>Prices were higher in active trading on the American Stock Exchange.</p>
        <p>Corporate bonds were narrowly mixed. U.S. government bonds were generally unchanged.</p>
        <p>Ford Motor OoL Klee 0i Foods Du Pont od N Eastman Kod * Foote Min Ford Motw Oen Elec Oen Foods Oen Mot Oen Tel it Tel Oerb Prod Qoodyaur T&amp;amp;R Oulf Oil COrp Int Paper Int Tel it Td Kayser-Roth Liggett &amp;amp; Myers Lockh Air Lorillard P Martin-Marietta McLean Trk Monsantos Montg Ward Motorola NaU Biscuit Nat Dairy Pd NaU DistUlers NY Central Norf it Wes Param Plct Penney J C Pennsy RR Pepsi Cola Phillips Petr Pitt Plate Gls Pure O Radio Corp Rex Chain Rep Stl Reynolds Tob Seabd Airl Sears Roebuck Sou Railway</p>
        <p>82% 83%</p>
        <p>96% 96% 82 81% 245  244%</p>
        <p>150% 152% 20% 20% 52% 53% 96% 96% 82 81% 97  97%</p>
        <p>38% 36% 44% 44% 49  49%</p>
        <p>55% 55 32  32</p>
        <p>60% 60% 27V4 27% 82% 81% 42% 42% 43% 43% 19% 19% 14% 15 86% 86% 38% 38% 107% 111 64  64</p>
        <p>90% 90% 28% 28% 54  54%</p>
        <p>133% 134 51% .&amp;gt;.%</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)</p>
        <p>Std Brands Std OU Calif Std Oil NJ Stevens J P Texaco Ric Textron Inc Union Bag Un Carbide Union Pac United Airlines United Alrc United Fruit U SRubber US Stl</p>
        <p>Va El &amp;amp; Pow</p>
        <p>Prev.</p>
        <p>Close Noon; W Va P&amp;amp;P</p>
        <p>Allied Ch</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>AUis-Chal</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>Am Enka</p>
        <p>76%</p>
        <p>77%</p>
        <p>Am Motors</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>Am Tel Tel</p>
        <p>67%</p>
        <p>67%</p>
        <p>Am Tob</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>Atch T&amp;amp;SF</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>Bendlx Corp</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>Beth Stl</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>Boeing Air</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>Borden Co '</p>
        <p>84</p>
        <p>83%</p>
        <p>Burl Ind</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>62%</p>
        <p>Burroughs Corp</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>Cao P&amp;amp;L</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p> 45%</p>
        <p>Celanese Con&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>81%</p>
        <p>82%</p>
        <p>Champion P&amp;amp;F</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>Ches * Ohio</p>
        <p>72%</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>56V4</p>
        <p>Coca-Cola</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>Columbia G&amp;amp;E</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>Coml Credit</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>Curtiss Wrt</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>Dan Rlv Mills</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>Douglas Alrc</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>Dow Chem</p>
        <p>82%</p>
        <p>82%</p>
        <p>Duke Pow</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>Du Pont de N</p>
        <p>245</p>
        <p>244%</p>
        <p>East Alrl</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>Eastman Kod</p>
        <p>150% 152%</p>
        <p>Foote Min</p>
        <p>20^i</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>Western Md West Union Westing El Winn-Dixie Woolworth Zenith Rad</p>
        <p>67% 66^ 44  45</p>
        <p>70% 72 56% 56^ 73  72% 58% 58% 31% 31% 59% 59% 42% 42% 38% 39 44% 44% 128% 129 57% 57% 14% 14% 80% 81% 71% 71% 80% 80% 46% 47 78% 78% 56% 57% -  34%</p>
        <p>131  131%</p>
        <p>40% 40% 68 66% 66% 67% 17  17</p>
        <p>65% 65% 51V4 51% 48% 48% 44% 44% 42  42%</p>
        <p>36%  46% 46% 42% 42% 26Vb 26% 67% 68%</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>EC Chaplain</p>
        <p>Disbeliei best describes the resotion of the Reverend Lawrence Patrick Houston, Jr. to the city of Greenville, and Saint Pauls Epiac(H&amp;gt;al Church. . ."Dis</p>
        <p>belief that such a large group of peoide in such a small place can be so interested, so cordial, and so sincere in their intention of personal contact."</p>
        <p>The Rev. Mr. Houston is beginning his second week as associate rector and college chaplain for the Saint Pauls Eidscp Church.</p>
        <p>One of his major areas of work win be with the ECC Episcopal college students.</p>
        <p>"I never dreamed that I would be in this area of work," remarks Houston. "I certaki 1 y couldnt have been more disinterested in rellgit during my own college days."</p>
        <p>"I had some Canterbury work while assistant at a parish in</p>
        <p>Fear 60 Miners Dead In Japan</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP)  Sixty miners are feared dead in the gas ex-plosicm Monday in a coal mine in northern Japan.</p>
        <p>Police reported 27 minws were known dead, 17 injured and 33 missing and believed de%d. Rescue workers with gas masks dug through debris-filled chambers looking for the missing men.</p>
        <p>The Hokkaido Colliery CO., at Yubarl, 600 miles north of Tokyo, had 172 miners at work when the explosion occurred. An explosion in the companys No. 2 mine in February 1960 killed 42 miners.</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Peraon</p>
        <p>Bride Person died Saturday In Edgecombe General Hospital, Tarboro. Funeral services will be Wednesday at 2:00 pjn. at Flanagan and Parker Fun eral Chapel. Burial will follow in the Bethel Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Nannie Person of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Mamie Ruth Wilkins and Mrs. Nann3 Mae Stokes both of Brooklyn, N.Y.; 10 sons, Willie, Charlie, Jasper, Jesse, Edward, and Jonnie Person all of the home, Lee, Bryant, James, Ray Person all of Brooklyn, N.Y., Louis Person of Newark, NJ.; two brothers, Henry Person of Greenville, Alfred Person of Bethel; 44 grandchildren; several great .gr a n d</p>
        <p>Colored News</p>
        <p>The Good Cwnmunity Club Will hold its meeting tonight at 7:30 in the education buildint, of Cornerstone Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Fannie Lee Langley Moore died in a Baltimore, Md., hospital Monday night after a lingering illness. She was Uie daughter (rf Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Langley, and the sister of Mrs. Jessie D. Green all of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements are In-canplete.</p>
        <p>The Junior CJholr of Holy Trinity (Thurch will meet Wednesday at the home of Mrs. D. D. Garrett.</p>
        <p>Starts WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>C0WB0V6', RnONi:S&amp;amp; BABE</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>8hm 7:86-4:88</p>
        <p>Lart fay - *XlLr</p>
        <p>children.</p>
        <p>The body win remain at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home until funeral hour.</p>
        <p>Chance</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mattie Chance died Saturday morning at her home at RobersonvUle, Route 2, after a brief illness.</p>
        <p>Funeral services wUl be held Wednesday at 3 p.m. at St, Mary Baptist Church with the pastor Rev. J. E, James officiat i n g. Burial win be in the Shivers Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are, her husb and, Clyde (Dock) Chance; three sons, Namon enhance (rf Newport News, Va., Robert Lee and Larry Donnell Chance of the home; &amp;lt;ie sister, Mrs. Lillie Bunn of Rob-ersonviUe, eight brothers, Lessle and Julius Mooring, Willie Mooring all of Newport News, Va., Norman of Washington, D. C., Andrew of Bethel, Jessie of IKok-es, Charlie of Greenville and Robert Daniels of Baltimore, Md.; two aunts; two uncles.</p>
        <p>The body will remain at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home until the funeral hour.</p>
        <p>REV. HOUSTON</p>
        <p>Richmond, Virginia, as we were the closest one to the University of Richmond."</p>
        <p>"However, ctmtinues the Rev. Mr. Houston, "It was not until I was confronted with the situation here and had heard the Job outlined that I felt I could make some contribution in this area. He goes on to say that the real reason for his willingness to work specifically with college students is that they are honest people. "If they dont believe, they will not hesitate to tell you so.</p>
        <p>"Many people have the distinct impression that college kids should be put apart as a unique and special breed. This is not true. They have the same hopes, dreams, and fears, that you or I have.</p>
        <p>Canterbury work, as the work with college students is known, is a joint effort between East Carolina College and Saint Pauls Episcopal Church for the religl-</p>
        <p>Turncoat Gl Is Committed To Mental Hospital</p>
        <p>Reaves</p>
        <p>Mrs. PriclUa Forman Reaves died in Pitt Memorial Hospital Saturday morning after a brief illness.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Mt. Calvary FWB Church. Rev. W. L. Jones, her pastor, will officiate. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are six grandchildren; 21 great grandchildren; 13 great great grandchildren; 10 nieces; 1 nephew.</p>
        <p>The body will be viewed at the Phillips Brothers Mortuary from Wecbiesday afternoon until the hour &amp;lt;rf the service.</p>
        <p>_L</p>
        <p>AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Korean War turncoat Lowell D. Skinner was committed today to Haw-thomden State Hospital, a mental institution, for an Indefinite period,</p>
        <p>The ex-GI, who spent 10 years ki Communist China, has been in jail since Dec. 10 for violating a two-year probation. The decision apparently removed the threat of prison for the 34-year-old former Marine.</p>
        <p>Committal was ordered by Common Pleas Court Judge L. A. Lombardi and Probate Court Judge Nathan Koplin.</p>
        <p>Skinner, who has been arrested several times, was dishonorably discharged from the service. He was placed on probation a year ago for assault with a deadly weapon in a shooting Incident in which he allegedly fired at two youths.</p>
        <p>After admitting he violated the probationmainly by being Intoxicated  he was adjudged a violator last Dec. 10.</p>
        <p>Soviet General In West Berlin</p>
        <p>BERLIN (AP)  The new commander of Soviet forces in East Germany visited West-Berlin for the first time today.</p>
        <p>Gen. P.K. Koshevoi and the Soviet charge daffaires, A.I. Subkow, led a Soviet delegation that laid a wreath at the Soviet war memorial in West Berlin in commemoration of Red Army Day.</p>
        <p>out stimulation of Episcopal students on campus.</p>
        <p>The students meet once a week ta the churchs Canterbury Room for a communioQ service followed by a meal and a program. The programs are usually a combination of planning between the priest and the students.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Mr. Houston is originally from Belaire. Ohio. He is a graduate of Kenyon College In Ohio and the Episcopal Theol uglcal School in Cambridge, Mas-sachusettes.</p>
        <p>Before entering the seminary, he taught at Gow School in South Wales. New York for seven years. It was while teaching there that Houston met his wife-to-be, the former Sandra Tucker of Murfree^ro, N. C.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Houston was a student in home economics at Worn e n  s College in Greensboro working in Nyack, New York as a summer counselor at the time.</p>
        <p>The Houstons have three children, Larry, age six; David, age five; and Sara, age 20 months.</p>
        <p>"The reception afforded my family and I has been just wonderful, comments the Rev. Mr. Houston. "If things do not woric here, it certainly wont be the fault of the parish."</p>
        <p>PAC Officers Are Nominated</p>
        <p>The nominating committee of Pitt Action Committee has nominated Vernon Cox of WlnterviUc as PAC chairman. Father Gordon Kendall of FarmviUe as vice chairman and G. R. Whitaker of Greenville as secretary. William S. Fulford was designated as an alternate for vice chairman.</p>
        <p>The nominations were made at a ccxnmittee meeting at Pitt Technical Institutc yesterday af-ternocm. These officers will be recommended to the full membership of PAC at a meeting that has been tentatively scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on March 8 in the Rawl Auditorium on the E(X campus.</p>
        <p>The committee also recommended a 15-man nominating committee that will include representatives from County and Ciity Schools, East Carolina College, Pitt Welfare Department, Pitt Technical Institutc, North Carolina Joint Council cm Health and Citiaenshlp, Vocational Re-habOltatlon, Libraries, medical profession. Health Department and Agricultural Extensicm Service.</p>
        <p>In addition there will be seven at - large members to represent communities of the county not already represented through persons from the above agencies.</p>
        <p>The nominating committee, which doubles as the by - laws committee win meet again next Tuesday afternoon to consider by - laws for PAC.</p>
        <p>Members of the nominating committee Include Dr. Douglas Jones, Father Gordon Kendall, George McRoric, Mrs. El 1 e n CarroU, Rev. William J. "Tadden, Vernon Cox, J. B. Smith, Dr. A. A. Best. S. C. Winchester and C. S. Whichard.</p>
        <p>CLEANUP . . . Students from tho East Carolina Celiaga Dapartmant of Haith and Physical Education dig into tha garaga of tha Oraanvllla Art Cantar to praparo tha facility as a caramics classroom.</p>
        <p>Four-Vehicle Wreck Monday</p>
        <p>Police said an estimated $335</p>
        <p>pn^rty damage resulted from a four - vehicle collision on V^ade Street near the Broad Street Intersection, investigated yesterday.</p>
        <p>Police said Gerie Franklin Mozingo, 35. of 302 Clairmont dr. was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety following the 9:35 p.m. Wade Street crash.</p>
        <p>According to reports, the Mesingo vehicle collided with a car driven by David Scott, 67-year-old Negro of 1313 Mill St. as the Mozingo auto pulled from a parked position.</p>
        <p>Force of the Impact caused the Mozingo vehicle to strike a pariced car owned by Delmus Ray Ayers of Route 1, Bethel. The Ayers auto in turn hit a car driven by Charlie Lee Stocks Jr., 40, of Ayden.</p>
        <p>Damages in the mishap were set at $175 to the Moringo car, $10 to the Ayers auto, $50 to the Stocks vehicle and $100 to the Scott car.</p>
        <p>Five Groups Combine To Aid Ceramics Class</p>
        <p>Five groups in Greenville are</p>
        <p>Two Executed As Spies For U.S;</p>
        <p>DAMASCUS (AP) A naturalized American of Syrian origin and a Syrian army colonel were executed before dawn today on charges of spying for the United States.</p>
        <p>The government announced that Col. Abdel Moeen Hakimf, 43, who served with Syrias coastal forces, died before a firing squad. Farhan Atassi, 37, who acquired U.S. citizenship after marrying an American girl was hanged in A1 Marja Square in downtown Damascus.</p>
        <p>They were convicted of bekig members of a spy ring headed by Walter Snowdon, second secretary of the U.S. Embassy. The U.S. government denied the espionage charge, but Snowdon and a clerical secretary at the embassy. Martha Scherrer, were expelled from Syria.</p>
        <p>Joyner</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Hen r y Joyner of Rt. 3, Box 402, Greenville, who died to Pitt Memorial Hospital Saturday night, will,be ^eld Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Phillips Brothers Mortuary. Rev. N. Harris will officiate. Furial will follow to the St. Delight Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are hie wife, Mrs. Ada Joyner the home; two sons. Rev. Henry Joyner Jr. and 'George Joyner (rf Greensboro.</p>
        <p>The body will be viewed at the Phillips Bj^hers Mortuary frcnn Tuesday afternoon until the hour of the servlM.</p>
        <p>Humphrey Visits Space Center</p>
        <p>CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)  Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey said his first vWt to the nations spaceport was "fantastic, a richly rewarding experience."</p>
        <p>He spent six hours Monday visiting launching pads, talking to spaee experts Md loolri&amp;amp;g</p>
        <p>over the 88,(X)6-acre Merritt Island moon launching center.</p>
        <p>ram</p>
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        <p>Obituary</p>
        <p>wmianu</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mary WUllams, widow of the late R. D. Williams of Swan Quarter, died this mom^ to the home of her son with whom she was staying at 208 N. Harding St. She was 80.</p>
        <p>She WAS ^he mother of Lloyd Williams and Mrs. Frances Wll-Hard, both of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Services will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Swan Quarter Methodist Church.</p>
        <p>McAdams To Be Speaker For Methodist Men</p>
        <p>Next Wednesday, February 24, Charles K. McAdams, Director of Public Relations at Methodist College, Fayetteville, will speak to the Methodist Mens Club of the Grifton Methodist Church. As usual this will be a supper meeting beginning at 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>McAdams Is a graduate of N. C. State College, and served four years with the army. He taught Vocational Agriculture to Chapel Hill for three years, and was associated with Edenton Street Methodist Church in Raleigh as an ^ociate Pastor for many years.</p>
        <p>McAdams left Edenton Street Church to assume the positio\ he now holds as Director of Public Relations for Methodist College in Fayetteville.</p>
        <p>Methodist College is on two new colleges established North Carolina Conference The Methodist Church in and has been in operation for five years. The enrollment this year is 619.</p>
        <p>Optimists Hear Captain Thomas</p>
        <p>Captain Walter Thomas of the Greenville Polices Records and Identification Bureau, presented a slide program ot the local police departments operations and problems facing law enforcement officers at the regular meeting of the Greenville Oitimlst Oub last night.</p>
        <p>Capt. Thomas showed the group color slides of their local department in action, explaining the many services avallab 1  through the police and the many duties discharged by officers.</p>
        <p>Thomas also explained some of the latest techniques in crime detectlOTi and police train 1 n g, emphasizing the need of training and education in professionalizing law enforcement.</p>
        <p>President Tom Halgwood presided over the dinner session held at the Silo Restaurant.</p>
        <p>this week co-ordinating efforts toward providing a ceramics program for OreenvUle citizens.</p>
        <p>Dr. Ralph Steele of the East Carolina College Department of Health and Physical Education, said the purpose of this effort was to try and show how many groups in a town could work toward a common goal.</p>
        <p>The common goal is to begin classes next month In ceramics at the Greenville Art Center.</p>
        <p>The students and staff of Physical Education 129, a course taught by Dr. Steele, Initiated the project and prepared the art centers garage for use as a classroom as a project in Community Recreation. Dr. Ste.ele noted that the program will serve all ages and groups.</p>
        <p>"Co-operation was the common denominator through the entire project, he said.</p>
        <p>The Greenville Art Center gave permission to use and develop the centers facilities for the ceramics program and provided some of the materials.</p>
        <p>Alton Little, director of the Greenville Department of Recreation, agreed to offer help to the recreation project during its formative year and the East Carolina College School of Art Is supplying an Instructor and technical and professional advice.</p>
        <p>Dr. Steele explained that the</p>
        <p>last class of his course will</p>
        <p>meet tomorrow morning to map the final stages of preparing the ceramics course. On Monday the class met at the art center to clean up the garage and get it ready for use.</p>
        <p>Plans for the first ceramics class call for it to help already organized groups, such as the boy, or girl scouts, to particl-patie possibly in connection with merit badge study, Dr. Steele said. However, the class will be open to alL</p>
        <p>Interested groups and citizens should contact Mrs. J. OBrian Edwards at the Greenville Art Center. There will be a minimal charge for the course. Dr. Steele noted.</p>
        <p>Britain Asking Full Reviev/ Of NATO Strategy</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
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        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>reatares 12:28 2:U 4:45 8:U 8:85 ALL SEATS  tSc</p>
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        <p>MORE SELF-SERVICE BELGRADE (AP)  Self-serv-Ice shops are becoming more popular in CJommunlst Yugoslavia. In 1960 there were 187 such shops.. By 1964 there were (845.  V./</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP)  Prime Minister Harold Wilsons government today called for a full review of North Atlantic Treaty Organization strategy to ease Britains defense burden.</p>
        <p>Defense Secretary Denis Healey told the House of Commons In a defense White Paper that the Labor government had inherited from the Conservatives a overstretched ' and rously underequipped de-ense establishment.</p>
        <p>He said he had immediately Instituted a full policy survey and set up machinery for a cost-effectiveness study of army, navy and air force operations. Thk&amp;gt; was believed similar to Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara's review of U.S. defense expenditure.</p>
        <p>Healey was defending the governments announced Intention of spending $6,036,(X)0,000 for defense during the 1965-66 fiscal year, beginning April 1.</p>
        <p>NRHS Chapter Members Join Rail Excursion</p>
        <p>Several members of the East Carolina chapter of the National Railway Historical Society pai&amp;gt; ticipated Sunday in a special excursion .planned by the Old Dominion chapter, Richmond. Greenvillites among the 153 passengers were Miss Velma Lowe, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Dade, Bill' Morris, and Bob Morrison.</p>
        <p>The special trip, partly over lines without passenger service for more than a decade, ran from Richmond to Bremo over the Chesapeake and Ohios scenic James River line. Near Bremo, the special train, consisting of two streamlined, self-propelled "rall-diesel-cars (RDC's), crossed the RIvanna River and climbed over a twisting but picturesque route to the industrial town of Dillwyn.</p>
        <p>Certificafe For Local Arcliiteci</p>
        <p>Wesley Paul Harrelle of Dudley and Shoe Architects in Greenville, received his certificate to practice architecture at the Forsythe Country Club in Winston - Salem this weekend.</p>
        <p>A graduate of Virginia Poly-technical Institute, Harrelle was awarded the certificate after successful completion of examinations in December.</p>
        <p>A native of Ctolerain in Bertie County, Harrelle graduated from high school there and from Virginia Tech to 1958.</p>
        <p>He came to Greenville to 1958</p>
        <p>W. P. HARRELLE</p>
        <p>and was employed by the late J. W. Griffith Jr. In 1962 be Joined the Dudley and Shoe organization.</p>
        <p>Harrelle is a member of the</p>
        <p>NRHS membership is open to  Commerce</p>
        <p>all who are interested to rail travel and history.</p>
        <p>Plan Observing St. Matthais Day</p>
        <p>Pilot Parachutes As Jet Crashes</p>
        <p>BEAUFORT, S.C. (AP) - A Marine jet aircraft crashed into an open cabbage field about one mile southwest of Beaufort early Tuesday.</p>
        <p>The pilot, Capt. Edwin Kowal-czyk, 29, parachuted to safety. He was uninjured.</p>
        <p>Kowalczyk, of the nearby Mar line Corps Air Station, was performing routine landing practice when his Crusader Jet had a power failure. He ejected from the craft seconds before the crash.</p>
        <p>Kowalczyk, a member of the Marine All-Weather Fighter Squadron 235, Group 31, lives with his wife Patricia at Laural Bay, a Beaufort suburb. He to a native of Rutherford, N.J.</p>
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        <p>St. Pauls Episcopal Church will observe St. Matthais Day on Wednesday, February 24th. There will be two celebrations of Holy Communion at 7:00 a. m. and the other at 10:00 a.m.</p>
        <p>The Associate Rector, the Rev. Lawrence p. Houston Jr. will be the celebrant at the early service. Mrs. Trudy Cart-ner and her 8th grade class of the Church School will attend in a group for their corporate communion and breakfast. Mrs. Ray MacKenzie will serve the breakfast.</p>
        <p>At the latter celebration of 10:00 a.m. the Rector will be the celebrant.</p>
        <p>St. Matthais is the apostle appointed to succeed Judas to continue the office of the apostles.</p>
        <p>This being examination week, Canterbury will not meet in St. Pauls on Wednesday evening.</p>
        <p>There will be the regular Thursday communion at 7:00 and 10:00 a.m. in St. Pauls. This Is the regular midweek schedule.</p>
        <p>Board of Directors and the Greenville Moose Lodge. He is also a member of Hooker Memorial CJhristian Church.</p>
        <p>He is married to the former Betty Lou Brett of Ahoskle and they have three children.</p>
        <p>The examinations include the areas of academic and practical training, personal audience, history and theory of architecture, site, planning and competition, architectural design, build 1 n g construction, structural design, professional administration and building equipment.</p>
        <p>Cars Collided At Intersection</p>
        <p>Trule Wells Stokes. Negro of 409 West 14th St. was charged with faUing to see her intended movement could be made in safety following a 7:50 a.m. collision today at the Intersection of Boyd Avenue and Broad Street.</p>
        <p>Traffic Division officers said the Stokes auto collided with a car driven by Louis Moore Mobley of 1301 Evans St., causing an estimated $200 damage to the Mobley vehicle.</p>
        <p>Damage to the Stokes car was placed at $100. No injuries were reported.</p>
        <p>The Pines</p>
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