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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0001" />
        <p>Wather</p>
        <p>Generally fair through Friday. Mild days and cool nighti.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>88th Year</p>
        <p>NO. 235</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 1, 1970</p>
        <p>20 Pages</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page SNear Normal In Amman Page 1#Obttuariet Page 2*NATO Deciskm</p>
        <p>Price 10 Cents</p>
        <p>And Now, It's October</p>
        <p>PRETTY PUMPKINSDale Emory, an East Carolina University art student, is shown above perched on top of some lu'ight orange, fall pumpkins. The fall of the year has finally arrived with cool weather and the rustling of leaves.</p>
        <p>Dale is a member of the Sigma Sigma Sgma Sorority. The pumpkins were grDwn by Worth and Mark Forbes of Rt. 2 Greenville. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)</p>
        <p>Study Committee Will Urge State To Assume New Role In Medicaid</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) A special committee will soon urge North Carolina to assume all nonfed-eral costs of the medicaid program in the state.</p>
        <p>An advisory committee studying the medicaid program approved a recommendation Wednesday that the state assume the counties share of such costs, and that the program not be cut back.</p>
        <p>The committee, which will make its recommendations to the Board of Social Services, said that no changes should be made in eligibility requirements and that coverage should be continued for the medically indigent as well as those on welfare.</p>
        <p>Federal law requires that medicaid must cover all welfare recipients. But the state also provides for the medically indigent  those unable to meet their medical costs  the permanently and totally disabled and the blind.</p>
        <p>One charge- in coverage that the committee did recommend, however, was a copayment mechanism under which the medically indigent would pay a</p>
        <p>WESTMORE DIES</p>
        <p>NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP)  Perc Westmore, 65, one of the movie industrys most widely known makeup men and one of four brothers who achieved fame in the vocation, died Wednesday of a heart attack. He was employed by Warner Bros.</p>
        <p>moderate fee.</p>
        <p>Federal law prohibits the extension of co-payment to welfare recipients,.</p>
        <p>Included in the suggestions of the committee was a provision that a more effective utilization review system be developed to increase program efficiency.</p>
        <p>If we can make sure that the program is being utilized effectively. we think we can save more money than if we adopt any other restrictive actions, said Qiarles H. Frenzel, committee member and director of the graduate program in hospital administration at Duke University.</p>
        <p>The committee reported that it found the fees paid to those who provide medical services under the program were fair and reasonable.</p>
        <p>Emmett Sellars, director of the medicaid division of the state Board of Social Services, said the recommendations, if implemented, would not substantially change the services offered under the program.</p>
        <p>TTie committee followed closely the opinion of Atty. Gen. Robert Morgan that the score of services provided could not be reduced and that the medically indigent codd not be eUminated from the program.</p>
        <p>Tobacco Prices</p>
        <p>Nasser Rites Inspire 'Emotional Explosion'</p>
        <p>MARKET</p>
        <p>Pounds</p>
        <p>Dollars</p>
        <p>Average</p>
        <p>Ahoskie</p>
        <p>280,427</p>
        <p>$203,010</p>
        <p>$72.39</p>
        <p>Ginton</p>
        <p>254,736</p>
        <p>* 181,223</p>
        <p>71.14</p>
        <p>Dunn</p>
        <p>276,634</p>
        <p>193,980</p>
        <p>70.12</p>
        <p>Farmville</p>
        <p>563,496</p>
        <p>420,891</p>
        <p>74.69</p>
        <p>Goldsboro</p>
        <p>279,^2</p>
        <p>206,945</p>
        <p>74.10</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>1,260,271</p>
        <p>905,195</p>
        <p>71.82</p>
        <p>Kinston</p>
        <p>1,032,951</p>
        <p>756,069</p>
        <p>73.20</p>
        <p>Robersonville.</p>
        <p>265,739</p>
        <p>192,188</p>
        <p>72.32</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount</p>
        <p>1,075,813</p>
        <p>771,722</p>
        <p>71.73</p>
        <p>Smithfield</p>
        <p>549,941</p>
        <p>389,289</p>
        <p>70.79</p>
        <p>Tarboro</p>
        <p>260,481</p>
        <p>186,886</p>
        <p>71.75</p>
        <p>Wallace</p>
        <p>272,886</p>
        <p>195,512</p>
        <p>71.65</p>
        <p>Washington</p>
        <p>250,577</p>
        <p>177,562</p>
        <p>70.86</p>
        <p>Wendell</p>
        <p>288,318</p>
        <p>208,858</p>
        <p>72.44</p>
        <p>Williamston</p>
        <p>279,128</p>
        <p>200,391</p>
        <p>71.79</p>
        <p> Wilson</p>
        <p>1,344,871</p>
        <p>1,026,302</p>
        <p>76.31</p>
        <p>Windsor</p>
        <p>293,285</p>
        <p>210,984</p>
        <p>71.77</p>
        <p>TOTALS</p>
        <p>8,829,536</p>
        <p>6,427,007</p>
        <p>72.79</p>
        <p>SEASON TOTALS</p>
        <p>232,800,551</p>
        <p>$172,451,988</p>
        <p>$74.08</p>
        <p>By NICK LUDDING-TON Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>CAIRO (AP) -2- Gamal Abdel Nasser, hero of the Arab world, was laid to rest wrapped in a simple white sheet today after a funeral that provided an emotional explosion for millions of adoring Egyptians.</p>
        <p>Nassers body was taken from Sheik Mohammed Fahhan, preacher at the centuries old A1 Zahar mosque.</p>
        <p>Verses from the Moslem Holy book, the Koran, were read by religious leaders as they placed Nassers body in the grave in the garden of the Manshiet el Bakry mosque in a Cairo suburb.</p>
        <p>Outside the mosque thousands of distraught Egyptians cried</p>
        <p>Nixon</p>
        <p>Charge Four In Slaying</p>
        <p>NEW BERN, N.C.' (AP)  Three Marines and a former Marine have been charged with shooting a young Vietnam veteran to death Saturday night while he worked on his car.</p>
        <p>New Bern Police Chief L. M. Toler said today it is believed robbery was the motive in the death of Marine Sgt. Gregory Qark Amerson, 23, of near Wilson.</p>
        <p>Amerson was on his way home from Cherry Point when his car developed motor trouble and he pulled into a New Bern service station lot. Witnesses told police he was shot three times in the back while working on the motor.</p>
        <p>Toler identified those arrested as John G. Andarde, 20, whose home is New Bedford, Mass.; Roby W. Lancaster, 21, of Cleveland, Ohio; and Patrick Nickerson, 21, of Chicago, HI., all Marines stationed at Cherry Point, and Berry A. Ferguson, 24, a former Marine living in New Bern.</p>
        <p>Toler said a coronei-s inquest will be held, but a date has not been set . The four men are being held without bond.</p>
        <p>Toler said Ferguson was arrested in New Bern and the three Marines were arrested by Cherry Point officials at the Marine base.</p>
        <p>He said Amerson had been shot in the back, ^m and hip with a high-powred&amp;gt;rifle. The victim and those arrested apparently did not know each other, Toler added.</p>
        <p>No Confidence In Booze Recipe</p>
        <p>FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) -Judge Jesse Eschbach got a com liquor recipe and some advice in U.S. District Court Wednesday.</p>
        <p>After FYank Cpnley, 47, of Laotto, pleaded guilty to owning and operating a still, Eschbach asked if he understood the plea. Chnley then gave a detailed description of how to make com liquor.</p>
        <p>Sounds like a good recipe, the judge said.</p>
        <p>Chnley replied, I wouldnt advise you to drink it, judge.</p>
        <p>and shouted as their adored leader was interred.</p>
        <p>Solemn-faced Egyptian dignitaries, not striving to hold back their tears, lined up at the graveside as the body was lowered. Peoide broke through and rushed into the mosque garden to see the final moments of Nassers funeral. The flag covering the casket was torn.</p>
        <p>It was an emotional explosion for the Egyptians and the Arab world.</p>
        <p>An explosion which began as millions of wailing, tearful Arabs and Egyptians massed along the 13-mile funeral route as an army helicopter started their beloved leaders on his final journey.</p>
        <p>The helicopter flew over the mourners and landed at the starting point of the funeral cortege, an island in the middle qf the Nile River.</p>
        <p>Nassers two sons, tears pouring down their cheeks, watched as the coffin draped in the red, white and black colors of Egypt was placed aboard a caisson to be drawn through the streets of the capital.</p>
        <p>Acting President Anwar Sadat also broke down in tears as he led a file of dignitaries past the flag-dr aped coffin.</p>
        <p>A Cairo Radio announcer interrupted his account of the scene and wept: We have no one but you, 0 Gamal, why are you leaving us, where are you going? 'The whole Arab naticm</p>
        <p>calls out for you.</p>
        <p>Crowds waved countless pictures of their fallen leader and chanted; Nasser, Nasser, you cannot die.</p>
        <p>Nassers widow, Tahia, fainted and was taken to a nearby army office where she was treated by doctors.</p>
        <p>Leaders of Arab nations lined up with other world leaders behind the caisson as the procession started toward a bridge connecting the island with the Nile bank.</p>
        <p>Jordans King Hussein, who only days earlier exchanged an angry series of messages with Nasser over charges that his army was trying to annihilate Palastinian guerrillas, wept openly.</p>
        <p>Tears streamed from th faces of other Arab leaders as well, including the Libyan strongman, fk)l. Moammar Ka-dafi, and Sudans president, Jaafar El Numairi.</p>
        <p>Other leaders included Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin; Haille Selassie, emperor of Ethiopia, and Paleltinian guerrilla chief Yasir Arafat.</p>
        <p>A 20-officer drum and bugle corps preceded the caisson through the streets, and directly behind the coffin were officers carrying cushions on which the fallen leaders decorations were placed.</p>
        <p>Along the route, huge crowds threatened to overwhelm the more than 50,000 troops and police.</p>
        <p>U.S. President Visits Serbia</p>
        <p>And Tito Confer</p>
        <p>ZAGREB, Yugoslavia (AP) President Nixon and President Tito talked over world problems for two hours in Belgarde today, then came to Zagreb for a visit to the capital of Coratia and the Yugoslav presidents boyhood home in Kumrovec.</p>
        <p>Tito and his wife left Belgarde ahead of the American chief executive and were on hand here to greet President and Mrs Nixon.</p>
        <p>There was no indication immediately what trend the Nixon-Tito conversations in the federal executive council build-</p>
        <p>Nothing New In VC Plan</p>
        <p>By STEPHENS BROENING</p>
        <p>PARIS (AP) - The United States said today that a careful review of the Viet Ck&amp;gt;ngs latest eight-point plan for peace has turned up nothing that could advance a negotiatedsetUement of the Vietnam war.</p>
        <p>South Vietnram also told the 86th session of the Paris peace talks that it has tried in vain to discover something new in the plan, presented Sept. 17 by Mrs. Nguyen TTii Binh, the Viet Congs top delegate. South Vietnamese Ambassador Pham Dan Lam issued an urgent reminder that his country is very much a part Of the war and insists on a major voice in any peace settle-mait.</p>
        <p>U.S. Ambassador David K.E. Bruce told the conference that I have seen nothing which leads me to revise my opinion that yois- fundamental demands seem unchanged. These demands unilateral U.S. withdrawal and a new Saigon government have already been rejected by the United States.</p>
        <p>Bruce said the demand for the removal of Saigons president, vice president and premier remains unacceptable. He implied that to make such a demand was a breach of our agreement to begin plenary talks. .</p>
        <p>Bruce and Lam ejq}ressed their positions as speculation mounted that secret talks between North Vietnam and the United States had begun on the basis of Mrs. Binhs self-styled peace initiative.</p>
        <p>Bruce and his deputy, Philip C. Habib, must report to President Nixon in Ireland this weekend on the status of the talks.</p>
        <p>Again</p>
        <p>lection, Nixon went to the Federal Executive (Council Building for his meeting with Tito.</p>
        <p>For several downtown blocks, crowds were almost as large as when the President arrived in Belgrade Wednesday.</p>
        <p>At one intersection, Nixon followed his practice of stopping and plunging into the crowd for handshakes and greetings.</p>
        <p>C&amp;amp;D Director Reminds Economic Growth Need</p>
        <p>ing took, but undoubtedly they covered the difficult situation in the Middle East.</p>
        <p>Tito may not make the 28-mile trip to Kumrovec but was expected to return to Belgrade with Nixon aboard the Presidents plane.  j</p>
        <p>Nixon arrived at Titos office half an hour behind schedule. By prearrangement with the</p>
        <p>Yugoslav leader, he had stopped 1 route to meet with Dragoslav Markovic, president of Serbia, largest of the countrys six republics.</p>
        <p>After spending about 15 minutes in the downtown Serbian dbuncil Building-and receiving from Markovic a bronze sculpture entitled Mother and Cliild for the White House col-</p>
        <p>(Related photo on Page 6)</p>
        <p>By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer The director of the North Carolina Department of Cion-servation and Development, Roy G. Sowers, said last night that We need economic growth in North Carolina, especially in our poor regions, and it must be accomplished within the framework of a protected environment.</p>
        <p>Speaking at the local Ducks Unlimited chapters annual dinner at the Moose Lodge, Sowers noted that the "average per capita income in North Carolina is only $2,890 a year and that is a shame.</p>
        <p>TTie director added that the conservation and environmental factors have to be considered by the development interests in North Carolina, and so far as government is concerned, those factors ought to be considered long before they reach the cabinet level or Governors desk.</p>
        <p>Sowers said| that the conservationists in the State, however, should remember that many people in North Carolina simply can not afford the money or time to be involved in conservation crusades.</p>
        <p>That set of concerns interest in nice parks for camping, green trees and pure water untouched by industrial affluentshould also contain an interest in those poor people and their need for economic opportunities, he noted.</p>
        <p>Sowers pointed out that in some states, Maine in particular, commissions have been organized with the power to veto any development project which could substantially affect the environment of the state.</p>
        <p>North Carolina is now moving in that direction here, he said. In the Department of C&amp;amp;D, he said, We are now legally required to examine all dredging</p>
        <p>prop(^als along our coast froin the viewpoint of protecting the breeding grounds for marine life before issuing permits.</p>
        <p>And if we decide that the cost to the environment would be too great to permit commercial development, we have the authority to deny the dredging request, he added.</p>
        <p>Sowers said that the situation involves a matter of adding factors to the decision-making process.</p>
        <p>And this is the basis for our suggestion that conservation and development functions of State Government be retained in a single agency of a reorganized state government, he asserted.</p>
        <p>The department head noted that he appeared recently before the State Government Reorganization Subcommittee</p>
        <p>to express that opinion and that a tentative proposal has been made that there be a department of natural resources and a department of economic development in a reorganized State Government.</p>
        <p>I share the opinion of Governor Scott and members of the reorg^ization committee that North Carolinas State Government desperately needs to be streamlined and reorganized for greater efficiency and to do away with a lot of overlapping that now xists.</p>
        <p>Sowers added that when turning to the conservation and development of the state, both of which he noted involve our natural resources, it is my belief that those functions should (Continued on page 10)</p>
        <p>'In Living Color'</p>
        <p>ASHEVILLE (AP)  Western North Carolinas trees will put on their annual fall color show as usual in mid-October.</p>
        <p>Grady Webb, Asheville district ranger for the Blue Ridge Parkway, predicted today the show will be at its best on the parkway the week of Oct. 10-17.</p>
        <p>To many, the trees in the mountains seemed to be staying greener later in the season because of the weather staying warmer later than normal this year.</p>
        <p>Webb estimated the areas trees are only at eight to 10 per cenj of their peak at present, which means Mother NatLire must work overtime if the height of the color show occurs on time.</p>
        <p>Signs of the brilliant color pageant in the momitain forests, which are normally quite evident by late September, have just begun to appear at the higher elevations, Webb said.</p>
        <p>TTie xooler temperatures which the mountains have ex-perience this week are expected to help turn the trees.</p>
        <p>At this time each year chlorophyll, which gives leaves their green color, undergoes a change. When the green fades away, previously concealed yellow pigments are revealed on some trees, while others respond to fall weather by producing reddish pigments from the sugar contained in the dying leaves.</p>
        <p>Webb said maple, oak, dogwood and black gum leaves turn red.</p>
        <p>White ash leaves gradually turn into a somber purple, chestnut oak leaves a russet yellow and poplar leaves, yellow. </p>
        <p>As in past yers, the color show is expected to draw hundreds of tourists to the mountains.Pitt United Fund Campaign Launched With Goal Of $126,387</p>
        <p>Today is the kickoff date for the 1970 campaign of the United Fund in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>The countywide goal this year, budgeted to siq)port 15 service and, charitable organizations and agencies, is $126,387.06.  ,</p>
        <p>Officials of Pitt County United Fund Inc. expressed confidence that the goal will be met. But they urged full support and backing by all citizens.</p>
        <p>J&amp;lt;rfin B. (Jack) Lewis Jr. of</p>
        <p>Farmville, UF President, said The United Fund ^aks for the people of Pitt County who see the virtue of giving once and supporting simultaneously our servicemen, our y'buth programs, the blind, our mental health and blood bank efforts and the many others embraced in the untied effort.</p>
        <p>By giving once for all we can achieve the hope tha| We have long sought to fulfill of one united charitable (^n-tribution.</p>
        <p>I feel confident as do the officers of Pitt County United Fund that the people of Pitt (^unty having heard the call will answer.</p>
        <p>Agencies supported by the United Fund and amounts budgeted for 1971 include: Pitt County Mental Health Assn., $8,239.68; Salvation Army, $1^2,147; American Red Cross, $20,777; Pitt County Association for the Blind, $3,250; Boy Scouts of America, $20,396.33; Girl Scouts of America, $7,851.68;</p>
        <p>Pitt County 4-H Qubs $810; N.C. Mental Health Assn., $1,026.98; Pitt County Association for Retarded Qiildren, $1,425; Childrens Home Society, $2,644.13; USO $1,301.49; Florerwe Crittenton Home, $1,044.14; Services Planning Collection, $16,807.64; Local Community Services, $9,091.34; N.C. United Community Services, $1,306.34; Reserve, $8,268.31.</p>
        <p>Volunteer workers have been busy for months (rganizing various divisions</p>
        <p>for the October fund-raising effort. General chairman for this years campaign is Joseph 0. Qark of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Dvision chairmen include:</p>
        <p>Advance Gifts, Mrs. Walter F. Taylor, Greenville; County, Frank Little Jr., Greenville; ECU, Dr. Ed Hooks, Greenville; Goal Buster, Louis Clark, Greenville; Industrial, Gerald Oane, Greiville; Leadership, Sam Keel, Greenville; Special Gifts,</p>
        <p>Carlton Taylor, Greenville; Professional (A) James G. Sullivan, Greenville; (B) Dr. Robert G. Dayton Jr., Greenville.</p>
        <p>In addition, committees and chairmen j have been appointed in the various areas of Pitt County including Ay den, Bel voir. Bethel, Bellarthur, Farmville, Fountain, Griftmi, Stokes and Winterville.</p>
        <p>Report meetings are being scheduled on a regular basis throughout the campaign.</p>
        <p>according to Clark and Joe D. Tripp, executive director of Pitt County United Fund Inc.</p>
        <p>Qark said there will be no house to house solicitation for the United Fund but an extra effort will be made to contact every head of household in the county at his or her pldce of business.</p>
        <p>"Wed just like to remind everyone that the people who will be calling will be a citizen of Pitt County ,and a* volunteer, and may be as busy or busier than the</p>
        <p>person hes calling on. We hope everyone will work with these volunteer solicitors so that they can accomplish their work as quickly and effectively as possible. We hope not to miss anyone.</p>
        <p>Clark expressed hope that the United Fund goal can be reached during the month of October. We are confident that we can do it for the second straight year, Qark said. It is important to get v off to a gopd start  and that s^art is today, October i.</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0002" />
        <p>The D*lly Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Thursday, October 1, lt7</p>
        <p>Life Styles Reflected In Food Buying Patterns</p>
        <p>Noisy ChUdren StiU Belong In Church</p>
        <p>By JEANNE LESEM UPl Food Editor</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI) Take a look at the contents of your neighbors shopping cart in the supermarket if you want to know what kind of life he or she leads.</p>
        <p>Distinct new life styles and consumer attitudes are reflected clearly in our food buying patterns, says Chain Store Age, a trade publication in its annual supermarket sales manual issue.</p>
        <p>You hear a lot about the new singles societygroups of</p>
        <p>NEW WAY TO BE SUDDENLY SLIM</p>
        <p>Los Angeles:  Are you a woman whose figure is on the good side but might look perfect? You'll be thrilled by the new easy way^ science has discovered tor you to become Suddenly Slim and yet completely I com torta-ble. It you're more than 15</p>
        <p> ____ pounds</p>
        <p>overweight, or your waistline is larger than 32 inches, then this idea is not tor you. It your weight problem tails within this range, then you can realize a new, smoother figure today, without diet or exercise.</p>
        <p>Suddenly Slim is an all-new kind of 4-oz. girdle constructed of science fibers. Oie startling innovation is the sheer nylon front panel. This is permanently stiffened by a science process and cannot give or sag. It's surrounded by a slimming action border. A teatherstltched panel down each side of this girdle will contour your hips if they are a problem.</p>
        <p>The girdle itself is of a "wonder Lycra spandex blend. It's a new power net consisting of nylon, acetate and spandex. It is so comfortable, but has such slimming strength, it gives your tigufe everything that's possible with a foundation.</p>
        <p>"Suddenly Slim," in both girdle and panty versions, is the peak achievement of the California designer - genius, Olga. They are available at</p>
        <p>SEQOTTA'S</p>
        <p>GEORGTOWNE SHOPPEES 75 5777</p>
        <p>young adults banding together in large metropolitan areas. The rep&amp;lt;rt showed them largely responsible for the current boom in single-porti(Mi prepared food products, ranging from frozen casseroles to canned puddings.</p>
        <p>These desserts now represent 42 per cent of all pudding sales, ahead of multi-service canned puddings and packaged mixed and this after only nine rnmiths of natimal distributim.</p>
        <p>If you think dry cereals are just kid stuff, think again. The study said tl^yre the number one breakfast product, up 10 per cent in dollar volume. The figures are for 1969. One Maryland-based buyer said sales do fantastically well with singles living five to six tn an apartment in Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>Singles and two member households also largely are responsible for pushing sales of eight-slice cheese packs ahead of the 12-slice variety, the survey showed.</p>
        <p>ITie magazine added that the wide acceptance of instant breakfast products indicates both a stepped-i^) pace of life for the average city-dweller and ba Ix-eakdown in formal eating patterns. A 300per cent increase in the informal snack market in the past three years is another clue to irregular family eating habits.</p>
        <p>New England buyers told the magazine that instant breakfasts have taken over as part of the convenience market for the 70 per cent of families who dont Ixreakfast together.</p>
        <p>lYie report also slwwed that families with two or more children are the major consumers, demographically, of these instantly made, instantly c&amp;lt;m-sumed foods.</p>
        <p>The impact of the new consumerism is reflected in a coming trend to ncm-code bread dating forecast by manufacturers.</p>
        <p>Increasing interest in good nutrition shows up in sales of everything from pasta products and iH'ead to dairy foods and canned fish.,The report showed young families responsible for a six to 10 per cent growth rate im&amp;gt; premium bread sales last year. Their education and life style makes them more aware of nutrition and less willing to sacrifice it in the name of</p>
        <p>economy, the magazine added.</p>
        <p>It showed premium pasta products selling faster than ess expensive ones for the same reason. But rising pasta sales in the last six months of 1969 were credited largely to budget problems.</p>
        <p>Nutrition and good health considrati(ms also led to increased sales of-high protein dairy products in all causarles, with fatfree milk, cottage cheese and yogurt among the heaviest growth products.</p>
        <p>The magazine said 30 tp 40 per cent of yogurt users buy the cultured milk product fw health or weight-watching, but up to 40 per cent of it is bought by persons especially teenagers  who eat it because they like it. Seems teen-agers consider it a kookie snack.</p>
        <p>Rising sales of canned fish are indicators both of hard times and growing interest in high-{x-otein diets and good nutrition. They are an outstanding value compared with fresh meat, fresh and frozen fish, lunch meats and cheese.</p>
        <p>Couple Honored On Anniversary</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND  Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Haddock Sr. were honored at a 25th wedding anniversary reception on Sunday hdd at their home.</p>
        <p>Hosts and hostess were their diildren, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis L. Hardee and Grover C. Haddock Jr.</p>
        <p>Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Mills Sr. and the honored couple. Miss niyllis Watson presided at the guest register.</p>
        <p>Itefreshments were served in the dining room from a table covered with a Mdiite lace cloth and centered with an arrangement of white carnations with silver streamers.</p>
        <p>Those assisting with the reception were Mrs. Jean Garris, Mrs. Sherry Tripp, Mrs. Gertrude Hardee, Mrs. Inez Gurganus, Mrs. Anna Moresi, Mrs. Janice Hardee and Miss Kathy Arnold.</p>
        <p>Good-byes were said by Mr. and Mrs. Claude Rouse.</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buran</p>
        <p>My husbands remarks about other womens builds hurt me terribly. He will say, Boy, lo&amp;lt;rfc at that gal. She sore is stacked. I wonder if her bosoms are 'real?</p>
        <p>The other day I was standing in front of our window when a buxom redhead walked by. He yelled at me, Dont block the view. Thi he sighed, What a body!</p>
        <p>The hurt and humiliation are getting to me, Abby. Can you help me?  HURT</p>
        <p>DEAR HURT: 1 cant imagine any man being so insensitive. If he has aiways made such remarits. its possibie that because you iook so weil, hes not even thinking about your surgery. Or perhaps because youve had snrgery, you are overiy sensitive abont it. Quit suffering in tiience and ask him if hes thoughtless, or Just plain cruel.</p>
        <p>| im Ur CSkast THUhm-N. V. Nn fysS., Im.1</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: My chUdrm have all urged me to write and take exception to your answer regarding all the selfish dobs who bring crying and talking babies to church services.</p>
        <p>You said, If a child makes even one annexing sound he should be removed from the audimce for the duration of the service.</p>
        <p>We are Mormons, aid Mormons believe in large families. We also believe the whole family should attend church together. Maybe the young people who are having problems with drugs, immorality, etc. would be living differently if they had been taken to church when they were babies.</p>
        <p>Babies by nature cry. Children by nature sometimes speak out. Adults by nature are often intolerant of dhersespecially of children. I admire the minister who is impervious to distractions.</p>
        <p>1 suspect that if Christ were giving the sermon (e day and your writer cmnplained to Him about the children. He would repeat what He said mee before, Suffer little children and forbid them not to come unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven.</p>
        <p>Yours, very truly,</p>
        <p>MRS. C. D. H., BLACKFOOT, IDAHO</p>
        <p>DEAR MRS. H.: Thank you for pointing out the other side of the coin. Yon show yourself to be more compassionate than I In this instance. May I amend nay advice and apply the rules of baseball to disturbances in church? Three times and out! I would like to know bow clergymen feel about tlds.</p>
        <p>DEIAR ABBY: My mother in law, who lives in another state, is things crazy. She has traveled all bver the world collecting things. Her home is a museumnot a home.</p>
        <p>My husband and I and our two children, ages three and five, visited her recently and it was pure agmiy. She watched the children like a hawk and it was, Dont touch that, every other minute. My husband went right alrag.with her, spanking the kids every time one reached to touch something.</p>
        <p>I got so nervous 1 finally sent the children outside. My mother in law followed them to be sure they didnt step on her flowers! [She spanked the 3-year-old twice in 20 minutes for daring to touch one of her pansies.]</p>
        <p>'These children are not bad. And theyre certainly not wild or destructive. They have an intelligent curiosity about everything, and what harm is there in touching a flower?</p>
        <p>I refuse to visit her with the children again. Ive told my husband that if his mother wants to see US, she has good health and plenty of money, and she can lock up her museum and visit us in our home. My husband says I am wrong. What do you think?  ALL SPANKED OUT</p>
        <p>DEAR ALL: I think youre right.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY; I had a beautiful body until I had radical cancer surgery six years ago. I accepted what had to be without tears or complaint. It has not changed my life as I still work up to my full capacity, physically and mentally.</p>
        <p>I could forget my bodily disfiguraticm [almost] because with the pr(^r undergarments I still have a good figure.</p>
        <p>PERSONAL</p>
        <p>Mrs. E&amp;lt;kia Beddard Jones is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital, room S27. #</p>
        <p>ST. GABRIELS FALL PARTY</p>
        <p>1970 Volkswagen to be giveni away to winning ticket.</p>
        <p>Tickeb &amp;gt;1.00</p>
        <p>Drawing to be held</p>
        <p>Oct 19th</p>
        <p>Ticket holder please note change of date.</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>Buck</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. J(^ Wayne Buck, Richmond, Va.,.a son, aielton Wayne, on S^. 23, 1970. Mrs. Buck is the former Ramona Sawyer of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Jenkins</p>
        <p>Born to Lt. and Mrs. James Jenkins, Cheaspeake, Va., a son, Jason Arnold, on Sept. 29, 1970, in the Portsmouth Naval Hospital.</p>
        <p>DELUXE MOTOR COACH NEW YORK THEATRE PARTY THRJEE TOP BROADWAY HIT SHOWS</p>
        <p>** Nov. 9-13 Frick Art Gallery, Tour of Lincoln Center Price $147</p>
        <p>Time for Sightseeing, Christmas Shopping. Make Your Reservations Now.</p>
        <p>Tour Personally Conducted by Mrs. Vera F. Bullock</p>
        <p>BULLOCK TOURS P. O. Box 3383 Kinston, N. C. 28501 Tel. Ja. 3-3934</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>TONIGHT, TRY RITUAL*</p>
        <p>Re-Moisturizing Night Treatment. See the beautiful difference tomorrow.</p>
        <p>Womens Group Versus TV</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI) -The motion picture industry is dei*iving a vast, free-spending adult audience of the entertainment it wants to see.</p>
        <p>^at is the conclusion reached by tabulation of a nationwide random sami^ing of member ; reaction by the (]reneral Federation of Womens Qubs, a worldwide organization of women with a membership of more than 11 million. The women were critical of the industrys insensitivity and general lack of response...to the needs and wishes of the people to defend and strengthen morality and culture at the community level.</p>
        <p>(^peciall.. FOR ONE WEEK</p>
        <p>,  ONLY</p>
        <p>iQolette</p>
        <p>our fine quality wig with hand4ied front that sells regularly at 35.00</p>
        <p>ONLY *21,90</p>
        <p> hand-T LLO FRpNT - ^EEN ONIY I N MUCH MORE EXPENSJ VE WIGS.</p>
        <p> MIRACULOU-S KANLKALON- LOOKS' LIKE YOUR OWN HAIR BUT IS MUCH EASIER TO CARE FOR. WASH, DRIP-DRY, BRUSH AND GO.</p>
        <p>t LIGHT.AS-A IR, COMFORTABLE STRETCH CAP.</p>
        <p>t MOST VERSAIILI AIG YOU CAN OWN, BRUSH IT INTO DOZENS OF STYLES, INCLUDING the NI W; OFF - THE - FACE SHAPES THAT CAN ONLY BE ACHIEVED WITH THE HAND- rI ED FRONT FEATURE,</p>
        <p> 27 NATURAI - I OOKINC SHADES INCLUDING FROSTEDS.</p>
        <p>"GIVE THE UNITED WAY</p>
        <p>MILLINERYSECOND FLOOR</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>Now $5.00 (an 8.50 value).</p>
        <p>(Limited Edition-l oz. Size)</p>
        <p>What a wonderful way to get acquainted with Ritual Re-Moisturizing Night Treatment! Its a super-concentrated,deep-moisturizing night cream. Yet its so air-light it seems to disappear as you smooth it across your face. Try Ritual tonight... notice the beautiful difference when you wake up. Try it now, in October, and save 3.50 on the Limited Edition.</p>
        <p>GIVE THE UNITED WAY"</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>Matchmaker *21.00</p>
        <p>Town &amp;amp; Country Shoes</p>
        <p>lOWJN &amp;amp; COUNTRY ILLUSTRATES FASHION IN THREE COLORS</p>
        <p>Multi-colors of calfskin or suede give Town &amp;amp; Cpuntry shoes a multi purpose Tor fall. What great wearing capacities the shoes and handbag have in combinations of brown/winter white/winter taupe suede or calfskin, black/winter white nutria calf or navy/green American beauty suede.</p>
        <p>^ - i GlYE'THE UNITED WAY -  -  -</p>
        <p>SHOE DEPARTMENTFIRST-FLOOR</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0003" />
        <p>\</p>
        <p>STARTS</p>
        <p>TODAY!!!r&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>* / *</p>
        <p>Girls Full-Length</p>
        <p>Fun Fur Coats</p>
        <p>14.88 &amp;lt;26.70</p>
        <p>.if sMi sliesj to6x... Regular 19.99, now 14.88. Girls sizes a 7 to 14... Regular 30:00, now26.70.</p>
        <p>~ Sale! Personal Care Items</p>
        <p>Regular values 1.25 to 18.99.</p>
        <p>Includes curler bonnets - shower caps s- tote bags  kleenex holders ' travel kits accessories purse curler bags v hair spray covers.</p>
        <p>Fun Fur Contrasting Trim Coats</p>
        <p>Girls 7 to 14</p>
        <p>Regular 35.00. Contrasting trim on cuffs and &amp;gt;lTar.</p>
        <p>CO</p>
        <p>29.70</p>
        <p>Fall Fashion Casual Shoes</p>
        <p>Regular 8.99 Jan strap pump with brown vamp, red with navy and black with brown.</p>
        <p>5.77</p>
        <p>Full Fashion Ribbed Sweaters</p>
        <p>Regular 10.00. 100 percent acrylic chanel type sweaters in white, navy, red, beige and blue.</p>
        <p>5.70</p>
        <p>Fringe Haridbags</p>
        <p>Patch leather, suede and cabretta leather. Shoulder and tote bags included.</p>
        <p>2.88</p>
        <p>Slippers and Slipper Shoes</p>
        <p>169 &amp;amp; (99</p>
        <p>Regular 2.50 and 3.50. Washable terry cloth in a choice of styles and colors.</p>
        <p>Better Scarves in all shapes</p>
        <p>Regular values to 5.00. Pure silk and twills in 24''. Silk blends in 28" square.</p>
        <p>FringerBelts and Head Bands</p>
        <p>Regular 4.00 to 6.00. Assorted suede leather belts with fringe. Suede dog collars with ; Indian beads in tones to match.</p>
        <p>Boys Wool CPO</p>
        <p>Shirts</p>
        <p>5.70</p>
        <p>Regular 7.99. Wool plaids and solids in sizes 8 to 20.</p>
        <p>Boys 12 to 20 Norfolk</p>
        <p>Jacket.</p>
        <p>Regular 18.00. Dacron-Cotton poplin belted jacket. Full pile lining with pile collar. Sizes 12 to 2Q.  *</p>
        <p>.-'V'</p>
        <p>'t''</p>
        <p>\f</p>
        <p>*#/!</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>Junior and Misses</p>
        <p>Winter Coats</p>
        <p>29.70</p>
        <p>Regular 35.00. Choose from 7 great styles. The notched Edwardian stand up collar. The trench coat take off. Round collared tattersall plaid. Plus four more great styles.</p>
        <p>Save On Womens All-Weather</p>
        <p>Coats</p>
        <p>Regular 18.99 and 23.00. Dac-cot. in button front style. Also Balmacaan D-C button front. Assorted colors.</p>
        <p>10.77</p>
        <p>/'</p>
        <p>SPECIAL SALE BUY I!!</p>
        <p>Womens Polyester Knits \</p>
        <p>Regular 16.00. Zip right into an easy care smartly styled textured knit. Sizes 8 to 18. Choose from a wide assortment of colors and styles.</p>
        <p>12.70</p>
        <p>Famous Brand Double Knits</p>
        <p>21.7731.77</p>
        <p>Regular 40.00 to 65.00 values if perfect. One, two and three piece, costumes in wool, wool blends and dacron-'wools. Assorted styles and colors.</p>
        <p>r-</p>
        <p>j</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>'I</p>
        <p>SNUGGLE WARM ORLON PILE FUN</p>
        <p>FAKE FUR COATS</p>
        <p>19.70 26.70 34.70</p>
        <p>Regular 30.00.</p>
        <p>^ Layered look with back belt and ' buckle. White, beige, and navy. / In sizes 6 to 16..</p>
        <p>Regular 30.00.</p>
        <p>Glenoit's acrylic pile coat. Belted back. In ash. Sizes 5 to 15.</p>
        <p>Regular 40.00.</p>
        <p>Doubled breasted rayon pile coat. Wide belt. Two frdnt pockets.</p>
        <p>IN DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE. OPEN NIGHTS TIL 9 PM</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0004" />
        <p>4The Daily Renector, Greenville, N. C.&amp;gt;-11iiirtday. October i, itTO</p>
        <p>Pitt Tech Proving Its Worth</p>
        <p>Pitt Technical Institute is proving its worth to the county with a steadily growing enrollment each year.</p>
        <p>This fall the institute reported an all time high enrollment of 655 full time students, or an increase of 182 over last year.</p>
        <p>President William Fulford reported to the board</p>
        <p>Big Tradition In Rockingham</p>
        <p>By BRYAN HAISLIP</p>
        <p>REIDSVILLE  The County of Governors is the proud title worn by Rockingham.</p>
        <p>The six chief executives it claims on the basis of birth, residence or close career association is more than any of the other 100 counties can boast.</p>
        <p>Recognition for its distinguished sons will be given on October 12 with the fifth annual dinner in their honor, an affair which combines historical tribute</p>
        <p>BRYAN r't HAISLIP</p>
        <p>with Democratic Party fundraiser and campaign rally.</p>
        <p>The occasion will be a convocation of governors present and past. As many as three are expected to attend in the flesh. Another five will be present in spirit.</p>
        <p>A governor will be the principal speaker. He is Robert E. McNair of South Carolina, the first out-of-state figure to address one of the dinners.</p>
        <p>Luther H. Hodges, one of the six Rockingham governors and the only one living, is expected to be present. Another former governor, Associate Justice Dan K. Moore of the State Supreme Court, has indicated he will attend. Governor Bob Scott, who was speaker for the 1%9 dinner, is not expected to make it this year.</p>
        <p>Future Leaders, Too</p>
        <p>Its possible that future governors will be in the crowd at Reidsville Senior High School for the dinner and reception which precedes it.</p>
        <p>Ranking state officials, including members of the Council of State, will be there along with Rockingham Democrats and party leaders from counties which join with Rockingham in composing the Six Congressionl District  Guilford, Alamance and Caswell. The number will embrace several who have shown varying degrees of interest in running for governor in 72 or later.</p>
        <p>Congressman Richardson Preyer, who represents the Sixth District, and Senator B. Everett Jordan will be among the guests.</p>
        <p>The .upcoming general election will bring out many of the partys candidates for legislative seats and local offices in the Rockingham and adjacent area.</p>
        <p>Allen H. Gwyn, Jr., Rockingham Democratic chairman, said he looks for a full house of around 500. Weve never missed an overflow crowd, he said,</p>
        <p>In addition to Hodges, who served as governor from 1954</p>
        <p>to 1960, the Rockingham governors and the years of their terms include: Alexander Martin, 1782-84 and 1789-92; John Motley Morehead, 1841-45; David Settle Reid, 1851-54; Alfred Moore Scales, 1885-89; Robert Broadnax Glenn, 1905-09.</p>
        <p>Represented By Kin</p>
        <p>With the exception of Glenn, they will be represented by lineal or collateral kin at the dinner. Charles Hunter of Eden, who was Governor plenns bodyguard at the 1907 Jamestown Exhibition, will provide a link with that chief executive.</p>
        <p>All of the six were Democrats, except for Martin, a Federalist, and Morread, a Whig. Gwyn said he felt it was appropriate to cover the two in the cloak of a party affair since if they were living in Rockingham today I feel confident they would be Democrats.</p>
        <p>The six Rockingham governors were men who left an imprint on the state in varying ways.</p>
        <p>Martin was a New Jersey native and Princeton graduate who came to North Carolina and practiced law in Guilford. After military service in the Revolution, he was a member of the State Senate before election as governor.</p>
        <p>As chief executive, he was a reconciler, appealing for leniency towards former enemies. He also advocated establishment of educational facilities. Service in Congress and as a member of the state Senate from Rockingham followed his years as governor.</p>
        <p>Railroad Developer</p>
        <p>Morehead was born in Virginia, but moved to Rockingham as a child. His mark as governor was made in the expansion of railroad facilities. Improved transportation was a critical need at the time, and he worked to meet it through the establishment of the North Carolina Railroad.</p>
        <p>Morehead was the first governor inauguarated in the then new State Capitol. Following North Carolinas secession in 1861, he served as a member of the Confederate Congress. His home in Greensboro, Blandwood, is now being restored.</p>
        <p>Free suffrage and the elimination of land ownership as a requirement for voting was the theme of Governor Reids administration. He was regarded as the leading Democratic statesman of his time, and served in the General Assembly and Congress as well as governor. He was born in Rockingham County in 1831 and died in 1891.</p>
        <p>Scaless, a Reidsville native, also had state legislative and Congressional experience. As governor, he advocated educational improvements including financial aid by the federal government.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209Cotanche Street, Greenville, N. C. 27834 Established 1882 Published Monday 'Hirough Friday Aftern''' and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of th^Board JOHN S. WHICHARDDAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville. N. C.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable in Advance Home Delivery By Carrier Motor Route Monthly $2.25</p>
        <p>By Mail. One Year Six Months ^ Three Months</p>
        <p>$27,00</p>
        <p>13.50</p>
        <p>6.75</p>
        <p>(Prices include saleS tax where applicable)</p>
        <p>MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The .Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publications of 7r-special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
        <p>of trustees that the current enrollment reflects an increase of 29 percent in technical programs and 40 percent in vocational programs. The overall increase averages 31 percent.</p>
        <p>There are 464 first year students and 157 second year students enrolled.</p>
        <p>The 1967-68 enrollment was only 359 full time students.</p>
        <p>Pitt Tech is obviously serving a need for Pitt County young people. Many of them go to the institute because it offers the programs they want and they would not be able to obtain these programs at the colleges and universities.</p>
        <p>Just this year new pr(^rams such as practical nursing, mental health and commercial art were added to the curriculum.</p>
        <p>Pitt Tech programs should be made just as flexible as possible to serve the largest number of people in the county. As President Fulford suggested to the board, planning must continue to -provide the facilities which will be needed to carry out the programs for an increasing enrollment.</p>
        <p>We must be concerned with the need for additional buildings, he said. Pitt Tech is an important part of the total education picture in Pitt County. Its programs and facilities should be developed as rapidly as possible.</p>
        <p>Bowles Using A Soft Peddle</p>
        <p>UNITED PRE^S INTERNATION Ar</p>
        <p>Adv ertising rates and deadlines available upon request Member Audit Bureau of Qrculation.</p>
        <p>By JOHN KILGO GREENSBORO.  Hargrove (Skipper) Bowles is going to run for (jlovemor of North Carolina in 1972, barring a drastic change of events, but the State Senator from Greensboro tries to soft peddle the issue now, saying with a smile and in a low voice: Im not trying to make any noise.</p>
        <p>Bowles faces November opposition in his bid for reelection to the State Senate, and while he says hes in a mean, mean race, other politicians in his area just i^rug and say: Skipper will win in a breeze.</p>
        <p>Bowles says he doesnt want to  talk about the Ciovernors race, except to say that he does have an interest in it and will see about that later.</p>
        <p>On his desk in his modestly-ftimished office is a layout for a billboard hes thinking of using in his campaign for the Senate. In big, red letters it reads:</p>
        <p>Skipper Bowles.. .Running for State Senate...Not for Governor.</p>
        <p>But if its true that Bowles &amp;gt;is not trying to make any noise about the Governors race, hes been unsuccessful. He has felt people out to see if they would support him and his friends say that he has been encouraged. Bowles knows that its going to take a pile of money to run for Governor in 72.</p>
        <p>Ive heard its going to take between $1 million and $1.7 million to run, he says. I feel its going to take every penny yoii could get your hands on, plus $100.</p>
        <p>He also knows that if a man runs for (governor in North Carolina, he must go after the money early.</p>
        <p>Its a shame, he says, but today someone thinking about running for Governor better have a pretty good idea that he is going to look like a winner enough to know the moneys going to come in to get him cranked off. People dont want to put oats in a dead horses stall. Five and ten dollar bills wont do it in the Governors race. Youve got to have some $100 bills and some $500 bills  and not many people can part with that kind of money.</p>
        <p>Skipper Bowles is 50 years old, trim, his curly hair is mostly chestnut with a smattering of gray here and there, and his blue eyes twinkle when he laughs,.</p>
        <p>which is a lot. He has a lot to laugh about. His business association reads like a Whos Who of Wall Street...Vice Chairman of the Board of Jewel Box Corp., developer of a successftil Greensboro shopping center, on the board and executive committee of First Union National Bank, on the board and executive committee of the American Hog Co. Let us say that, financially, Bowles is better off than the average bus driver.</p>
        <p>A former University o^'^ North Carolina roommate and fellow table waiter by the name of Terry Sanford got Bowles started in politics in 1960. Bowles went to Raleigh with Gov. Sanford as Director of the Department of (Conservation and Development.</p>
        <p>But more important than that, he was bitten by the political bug. Hs been on the Democratic ticket in his home district five times since 1%7 and has led the voting each time.</p>
        <p>I love politics, Bowles says. I really love it.</p>
        <p>He sits on the edge of his chair when he talks politics.</p>
        <p>I love to campaign...really enjoy head to head campaigning, one on one. I love campaigning in the rural districts, shaking hands, meeting people. I could give you a pat answer and say politics is a challenge, but there are challenges all over the place. Ive been real, real lucky. Financially, I can spend some time in politics without hurting my family. The world has been good to me and maybe politics is the way I can make the world a better place.</p>
        <p>Sounds a little like a man who might be interested in running for Governor, doesnt it?</p>
        <p>Bowles also has some ideas about what he thinks North Carolina needs to do. He says the State should establish some priorities, quit trying to beef up the per capita income.</p>
        <p>We need to do something about occupational education, Bowles says, and right now were doing about as poor a jobeas any State is doing. Then our leaders must sell the state and bring in clean, non-polluting, high-paying industry.</p>
        <p>Occupational education ... industry to the state . . . hijgh</p>
        <p>(Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>. AihI Now . . . NassorV</p>
        <p>By JAMES KILPATRICK</p>
        <p>A Too-Contrived</p>
        <p>The Presidents Commission on Campus Unrest laid a neat trap for Mr. Nixon in its generally useless report last weekend, but the trap is a little too neat, a little too contrived, to have much political value.</p>
        <p>The pitfall is supposed to work in this fashion: By urging that the President exercise his reconciling moral leadership as the first step to prevent violence and to create understanding, the commission puts Mr. Nixon in a snare. If he tries to follow the commissions advice, and</p>
        <p>the violence continues, it will be all the Presidents fault: His efforts were ineffective. But if he tries, and the violence diminishes, the restoration of order may be credited to the wisdom and restraint of the students.</p>
        <p>On the other hand, suppose the President does not go down the line with the commissions recommendations. Suppose, for example, that he does not choose to meet on a regular basis with representatives of student groups of varying ideological persuasions. In</p>
        <p>Other Editors Say No Logic At All</p>
        <p>(Henderson Dispatch)</p>
        <p>Ruling by a Federal Communications Commission lawyer that free anti - smoking broadcasts on national television must continue even after cigarette ' manufacturers are barfed from the airways is anything but logical. There is nothing fair about it.</p>
        <p>The networks should be able to look out for their own interests, but apparently they are fearful of the aU -powerful bureaucratic Federal Communications (Commission and the Federal Trade Commission, and thus far are not lifting a finger in protest to the imminent ruling.</p>
        <p>*The attorney for FCC said we will have to have some transitional period;  and that doesnt make sense either. Why should there be a transitional period for government propaganda any more than similar treatment for the cigarette makers or the networks? Since advertising on the air is to b|e sawed off pronto, why not the hostile spot broadcasts also?</p>
        <p>The anti-cigarette broadcasts were ordered by</p>
        <p>F(CC under what it calls the fairness deoctrine. But what is fair about forcing the networks to continue free time when the tobacco companies are not allowed even paid time? If smoking appeals were to bf barred, even when, paid for, replies gratis by the American Cancer Society and other agencies were ordered on the laretext of violating the so-called fairness doctrine. But when advertisers are being kicked out while opposition propaganda is still to be required, isnt that a violation also?</p>
        <p>niis new move impresses as a further evidence of bureaucracy running the Federal government. Agencies and commissions have seized the reins and are throwing their weight around, while Congress is either afraid of them or is at least unwilling to go to the mat with them. When FCC can.get away with this highhanded edict, it will move on to others. And all the while freedom of private enterprise and of the people generally is to that extent rapidly being eroded. From there it is not far to a dictatorship.</p>
        <p>Trap</p>
        <p>this event, as young Joe Rhodes told a national television audience, the President would, in effect, consign many young Americans to a violent death. How do you like thlat for fresh-toasted demagoguery?</p>
        <p>What is it that the commission would have the President do? In brief, it is to reconcile the irreconcilable. He is asked to use moral suasion on student thugs with the morals of Jack the Ripper. Is it conceivable that anything Mr. Nixon might have done this summer  anything at all  would have deterred those murderous children who blew up the Madison building in August?</p>
        <p>The commissions fundamental premise, in this regard is gauzy nonsense. The countrys concern, in this whole business of campus unrest, is not with the nonviolent expression of rational dissent. It is a muddying of the water to pretend that this is so. The concern goes directly to the bombings, the burnings, the seizure of buildings, the fascist repression of the rights of law-abiding students. As an exercise in criminal pathology, it might be interesting to understand the student who defecates on the rug of a presidents office, but let us understand him second. First let us put him in jail.</p>
        <p>What I am saying is that some forces ought not to be reconciled. They ought not to be appeased, cajoled, flattered, fluttered over. They ought to be slapped down. And it is the gross failure of college administrators, faculty members, and student leaders to suppress the anarchy in their midst that has brought us to this point.</p>
        <p>To its credit, the commission acknowledges this failure. The universitys own house,' says the report, (Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)  Jumping to conclusions:</p>
        <p>Acre for acre, life in Manhattan is noisier and probably more deadly than in any Brazilian jungle.</p>
        <p>Everybody hates his own picture in his high school yearbook wlien it is first published, but 25 years later, glancing through it, he decides he wasnt such a bad-looking kid after all.</p>
        <p>Four out of five men have something hidden in their office desks that they wouldnt want</p>
        <p>members of their family to see. How about you?</p>
        <p>The human race will never be universally courteous and helpful until the Lord sends down an affliction that will force every member of it to use crutches at least one day a week.</p>
        <p>Whenever I see anyone eating a piece of pizza pie with every outward appearance of enjoyment, I deplore his taste but admire his stomachand wish only that he were wrecking it in a nobler cause.</p>
        <p>An old-timer is one who remembers when no family went on a picnic without taking along a tin cup.</p>
        <p>One of the things that bothers me about dogs in a big city is that so many of them live out their existences without ever having the fun of burying a bone in a backyard.</p>
        <p>One solution of the miniskirt maxiskirt controversy that has upset style conscious women would be to have them wear mini-length petticoats and over them a maxiskirt made of see-through plastic. That would certainly solve the problem from the male point of view.</p>
        <p>Some pople make it a point of pride never to be unduly stirred by anything. When shown Niagara Falls for example, Oscar Wilde remarked only that they would be far more impressive if the water ran the other way.</p>
        <p>Mischief must be rare in heaven. Otherwise long ago some merry angel would have painted a beard on the rainbow.</p>
        <p>There is a connection between brains and moneybut not a happy one. It doesnt take a lot of brains to make a lot of money ; even a little money, however, can at times upset the brai-nest of men.</p>
        <p>One of the reasons many people wouldnt want to live their lives over gain is that they cant stand the thought of having to fill out all those government forms a second time.</p>
        <p>Opinions In Brief</p>
        <p>The first amendment is explicit as to the right of the people peaceably to assemble and petition the Government for a redress of grievances. Peaceably is a key word of this quote; however, it is conveniently ignored by many persons who equate dissent with destruction.  J. Edgar Hoover.</p>
        <p>Mankind must put an end to war, or war will put an end to mankind. John F. Kennedy.</p>
        <p>Strength For Today October To See Contradiction</p>
        <p>EVENTUALLY Visitors to India often gather in great circles to watch a rather horrifying but interesting spectacle. A cobra snake rises out of a basket and begins swaying back and forth. At last the show is over, the musician or charmer pushes the cobra snake back into its basket, picks up the coin:^ that have been tossed to him and moves on to a different location.</p>
        <p>Statistics seem to indicate that a very large percentage of these snake charmers who handle the poisonpus cobra end up by having  cobra bite . them . Which means death in a few minutes. &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Ultimately death. This is true not only in the case 5f the snake-charmers of India but in many aspects of life in the Western Hemisphere ..JTie</p>
        <p>guy who can hold his liquor comes to the place where he finds out (as his contemporaries knew all along) that he is getting to be an alcoholic. The employee who is a little free in his handling of money belonging to other people finds himself at last caught in the net, arrested and sent off to serve a prison term. The person who ^ spreads bad stories about others finds himself at last hated and despised by his contemporaries.</p>
        <p>The lesson is that if we handle danger we are likely to have danger handle us. Eventually we become yictingis. ^Percentages are ^ against us. .The straight and narrow may sometimes be uncomfortable but it is better than the broad gate that leadeth to destruction.</p>
        <p>By Earl L. Douglass</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER Octobef will be a month of contradictions, confusion and conniptions for businessmen.</p>
        <p>The administration will be telling them that the battle</p>
        <p>ELMER</p>
        <p>ROESSNER</p>
        <p>against inflation is being won and that the economy is booming again. Further, there will be definite actions by administration agencies to bring that happy state about.</p>
        <p>At the same time, liberals and Democrats in the marketplace -will be screaming that all such statements are shams- and ^ </p>
        <p>that the country is going to hell in a handbasket unless perchance it elects a lot more Democrats to Chngress.</p>
        <p>Some place in between will be the dollars-and-cents facts of the matter.</p>
        <p>Telling It Like It Will Be</p>
        <p>And the facts will be:</p>
        <p>Prices will keep on rising. The consumers price index for August, announced late last week, showed the smallest price rise iq 20 months, less than half the 1969 average, or 0.2 per cent, which would be at a 2.4 per cent annual average.</p>
        <p>Through the Republicans applause can still be heard, the, truth: even though the rate was smaller, prices are still rising or being inflated. Until there is a decline, or at least a leveling off of the copsumer price inde)^, the</p>
        <p>economy will continue to be like the girl who was a tiny little bit pregnant. And, like that girl, it will keep on swelling.</p>
        <p>Even more pregnant than, the price situation is unemployment. As pointed out in this column previously, the United Auto Workers strike against General Motors is automatically increasing unemployment by more than 300,000. The closing of uneconomical plants, is throwing more thousands out of work.- ,</p>
        <p>The menace of othfer strikes and layoffs will shoot unemployment up.</p>
        <p>Confusion Confounded</p>
        <p>The W a s h i lYg t o n pronouncements that business is better and thfe local observance of higher</p>
        <p>prices are more layoffs will be contradictory and confusing, and the confusions will be compounded. </p>
        <p>There will be upward flurries in the stock market, followed by fresh skids. Some workers, with wage increases built in in previous negotiations, will have more than ever to spend; others striking or laid off because of strikes will have less.</p>
        <p>The election campaigns will be further confusion with implied promises of wonderful feats of legislation if the promisor is elected. At the Same time, administration spokesmen will be promising the world with a little white fence around it, but the fence will be mortgaged.  '  .</p>
        <p>It will be enough to drive us all into conniptions.</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0005" />
        <p>Life Almost Normal Again In Scarred Amman</p>
        <p>charge 3 For Blast Death</p>
        <p>SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) -Two truck drivers and a woman have been charged with second degree murder in the death of a truck driver whose 21-fon cargo of dynamite exploded when apparently struck by a bullet.</p>
        <p>Ordered to arraignment today were Bobby Lee Shuler, 29, Gerald Lee Bowden, 29, and his wife, Sharon Lynn Bowden, 27, all of Joplin. Two other men and a woman were being held for investigation.</p>
        <p>John Galt, 48, of Oklahoma City, the driver of the truck, was killed early Wednesday in the blast which left a hole 30 feet deep and 50 feet wide in Interstate 44 about 12 miles west of Springfield.</p>
        <p>The truck was operated by Tri-State Motors, Inc., of Joplin, which has continued operations despite a strike by a Teamsters union local that began Sept. 14.</p>
        <p>R. E. Perkins, vice president of the firm, said Shuler and Bowden had worked for the firm before the strike and were</p>
        <p>Kilpatrick Col.</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4)</p>
        <p>must be placed in order. But by assigning first priority to the role of the President, and to government in general, the commission dissipates whatever impact its recommendations might have carried. This is the old Injun game known as passing the buck. The White House does not propose to let it stop there.</p>
        <p>Beyond its needless and nebulous advice to the President  he should convey his understanding of the divisions in this country to its citizens  the report contains much sound advice to college administrators and to law enforcement officials. But there is nothing new in this advice; it is the same advice that such rational critics as Sidney Hook and Edward Teller have been propounding for months. From them we had it free. By the time th^last bill is paid, the commissions report will have cost the taxpayers nearly $800,000,</p>
        <p>It was a colossal waste of money, and was bound to be. Such commissioners as Mr. Rhodes went on the trail in July with their prejudices neatly packed, and never bothered to open their bags. By spreading blame like mayonnaise, across the whole sandwich, the commission achieved one massive, equivocal waffle. The short and sensible rule for handling campus unrest remains today just what it was before: Tolerate dissent; punish violence. This could have been said, with abundant footnotes, for a whole lot less than $2,000 a page.</p>
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        <p>The truck was oi route to a mining area in southeastern Missouri, Perkins said. It was part of a three-truck convoy and at least one of die other vehicles, which carried no load, was fired at, he said.</p>
        <p>A witn^ said he saw a shot fired at Galts truck from a car. Police later found an abandoned car matching the description and bearing Tennessee plates.</p>
        <p>Highway patrol investigators found a 30-30 rifle and expended cartridges along an exit ramp of the four-lane highway.</p>
        <p>The shock wave of the blast rolled through Springfield, where residents at first thought there had been an earthquake, and was felt 15 miles away.</p>
        <p>The largest remaining fragment of the truck was an eight-foot section of frame. Other pieces were scattered over a quarter-mile area.</p>
        <p>Galt, a father of five, had telephoned his wife in Oklahoma City from Joplin Tuesday night to let her know he had found work. It was his first run for Tri-State after being out of a job several weeks.</p>
        <p>Kilgo Col. . . ..</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4)</p>
        <p>paying jobs ... And then we could see the tide change in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Right now, Bowles says, we just dont have the money to improve all of the things that we know need improving. We must improve the per capita income to do the things that we need to do.</p>
        <p>Two Squadrons For S. Vietnam</p>
        <p>BIEN HOA, Vietnam (AP)  Two squadrons of A37 jet attack bombers were turned over to the South Vietnamese air force today, raising to 28 the number of squadrons now operated by the Vietnamese.</p>
        <p>The 40 aircraft were transferred from the U.S. Air Forces 3rd Tactical Fighter Wing in ceremonies at this big air base 15 miles northeast of Saigon as part of the Vietnamization program.</p>
        <p>By 1972, plans call for the Vietnamese air force to have 50 squadrons, 1,200 aircraft and 45,000 airmen.</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>Life was almost back to normal today in war-torn Amman, but an Arab truce team was dispatched to investigate Palestinian guerrilla charges of renewed fightihg in northern Jordan.</p>
        <p>In Cairo, kings and presidents gathered with millions of Arab mourners for the funeral of President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, who died Monday of a heart attack.</p>
        <p>At the United Nations, the United States appealed Wednesday to Israel and Egypt to resume the Middle East peace talks, stalled since Sept. 6 after Tel Aviv accused C^iro of mov-</p>
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        <p>ing Soviet missiles into a ceasefire zone along the Suez Canal.</p>
        <p>Elarly today, seven Arab commandos were flown to Cairo after being released by Britain, Switzerland and West Germany in return for the freeing Tuesday of the last six hostages from multiple hijackings of airliners by guerrillas Sept. 6 and 9.</p>
        <p>One of the freed guerrillas was Leila Khaled, who had bei held in Britain 24 days for her part in an abortive hijack attempt.</p>
        <p>She and the other six arrived in Cairo in time for Nassers funeral. They were escorted by</p>
        <p>Egyptian security police from the airport to Palestinian headquarters in the Egyptian capital and planned to participate in the funeral cortege.</p>
        <p>The last six hostages, all American men, arrived in New York Wednesday after being released in Jordan to intermediaries from the International Red Cross.</p>
        <p>Amman Radio said a full cease-fire was effective Wednesday in the Jordanian capital, with army troops withdrawing to positions three miles from the citys outskirts and guerrillas in Amman gathering at their headquarters and surrendering their</p>
        <p>arms.</p>
        <p>However, Damascus Radio broadcast a guerrilla charge that Jordanian troops had launched artillery and ground attacks against Irbid and Ram-tha, five miles from Syria.</p>
        <p>Irbid, Jordans second largest city 50 miles north of Amman, was the scene of violent fighting during the civil war between King Husseins forces and Palestinian guerrillas led by Yasir Arafat.</p>
        <p>On Sunday, Hussein and Arafat met in Cairo, and, under the auspices of Nasser and other Arab heads of state, agreed to halt the fighting and allow an</p>
        <p>Arab truce commission to supervise the cease-fire.</p>
        <p>The truce team sent observers Wednesday to investigate the situation in Irbid and Ramtha which are 10 miles apart and are considered guerrilla strongholds.</p>
        <p>The team expressed hope that the way could soon be opened for the second phase of the</p>
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        <p>truce agreement, which calls for the return of government troops to their bases and the withdrawal oL guerrillas from cities and villages.</p>
        <p>The commission also said the Amman airport was open to civilian flights, interrupted with the outbreak of fighting Sept. 17.</p>
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        <pb facs="00091101_0006" />
        <p>The Delly Reflector. Greenville. N. C.Iliursday. October 1,1970</p>
        <p>School Bonds Today 'Different'</p>
        <p>By JOHN DIET^ WASHINGTON (UPI) -Big jazz bands are spring up at hi|^ schools and colleges across the nation. But they're not like the ones that thrilled Amc1-cans 30 years ago and they refuse to conform to tradition.</p>
        <p>The young musicians in these student bands are performing for people of their own generationnot to nostalgic over-40s.</p>
        <p>Rather than reviving the music of an earlier generation, the new student bands are creating a sound of their own by blending modem jazz concepts with rock or rtiythm and blues.</p>
        <p>No Unnoticed The popularity of these student bands, or stage bands as educators prefer to call them, has not gone unnoticed in the music business where a growing number of rock groups are imitating big band arrangements, utilizing lots of horns and brass.</p>
        <p>Student musicians also are making their presence felt overseas. The University of Illinois Jazz Band, led by John Garvey, scored a tremendous hit late last year when it toured the Soviet Union for the State</p>
        <p>South Koreans Heavy Smokers</p>
        <p>SEOUL (UPI)  South Koreans smoked 21,510,750,(MX) (b) cigarettes during the firsthe half of 1970, bringing 31,470,119,000 (b) won ($104.9 million in revenue) for the government, the Monopoly Office reports. Each smoker consumed 14 cigarettes a day on the average. Ibe number of smokers was placed at 8,110,000 or about 35 per cent of the populati(H).</p>
        <p>Department as part of the U.S.-Russian exchange program. Milliken University (DI.) and Indiana University jazz bands have also toured for the State Department overseas.</p>
        <p>Charles Suhor, a New Orleans jazz expert, estimates about 15,000 students in high schools, music schools and universities are now playing in stage bands.</p>
        <p>Many Summer Camps</p>
        <p>In addition, young jazz players can choose from among more than 100 summer music workshops or camps boasting instruction by such diverse performers as Oliver Nelson, Marty Paich, Julian Cannonball Adderley and Clark</p>
        <p>Credit Code Hearing Set</p>
        <p>nie Uniform Ckinsumer Credit Code Commission will hold a public hearing Wednesday at 10 ajn. in Greenville.</p>
        <p>The location for the meeting will be announced later.</p>
        <p>The Commission is studying the proposed Uniform Consumer Credit Code for purposes of making a recommendation to the 1971 General Assembly. 1116 Ck)de deals with finance charge rates in consumer credit sales and loan transactions and regulates certain practices and remedies.</p>
        <p>All persons are invited to attend the hearing and to submit to the (Commission their views concerning this proposed Code.</p>
        <p>Persons desiring to testify at the hearing may make advance arrangements by giving notice to the Commission before Monday. Tbe notice may be addressed to room 2002, State Legislative Building, Raleigh, N.C.</p>
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        <p>Student jazz band festivals or contests, offering prizes and scholarships, now number more than 50, and are attracting an increasing number of competitors. Last spring the University of Illinois hosted the annual National Intercollegiate Stage Band Festival, highlighted by competition between the winners of previous regional contests. The contest will have a permanent home at the John F. Kennedy Onter for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., as well as a permanent advisory board.</p>
        <p>Some of the most successful college bands, like those at Illinois, North Texas State, and Ohio State, put out recwds and play regular concert schedules.</p>
        <p>The student jazz band movement has its problems. Many music educators, steeped in 19th Ontury classical music do not take jazz and rock seriously, and find it hard to identify with their students. A Downbeat Magazine survey showed six times as many student musicians playing outside school than are participating in school music currculums.</p>
        <p>Limited To Affluent</p>
        <p>Pravda Sees Undue Fuss</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Ck}mmunist party newspaper Pravda accused the United States Wednesday of raising a racket over alleged Soviet {dans to build a strategic naval base in Cuba. Pravda charged that this is part of a cam|)aign to create military hysteria among Americans.</p>
        <p>Pravda did not deny that the bases are being built, but chided Washington for organizing too light-mindedly noisy pro{)agan-da campaigns.</p>
        <p>The newspa{&amp;gt;er apparently was referring to a statement by a White House official last week that the United States would view with utmost seriousness the installation of a Soviet naval base in Cuba.</p>
        <p>The official cited evidence that the Soviets might be building a {&amp;gt;ermanent base in CXiba to service their missile-carrying submarines.</p>
        <p>Pravda cited the fuss over the bases as one of a series of official U.S. efforts to artificially aggravate the international situation, create an atmos-{diere of military psychosis among the orginary Americans and exert political pressure on the capitals of some other capitalist states.</p>
        <p>COST OF LITTER BOSTON (UPI) Massachusetts s{)ent $748,924.32 for litter cleanup and rubbish control on the states highway in 1969, the state De{)artment of Public Works re{X)rted.</p>
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        <p>"GIVE THE UNITED WAY</p>
        <p>Also, the stage band movement Uius far has been limited mainly to the affluent. Inner city schools often depend heavily on federal money for cultural programs, and this aid is not easily obtained.</p>
        <p>Private efforts in the city are often more successful. (Jood examples are the HARYOU-ACT program in New York City, a youth band in Harlem that trumpeter (Hark Terry rehearses; the Watts Jazz Orchestra in Los Angeles, and</p>
        <p>the Association for the advancement of Oeative Musicians in Oiicago.</p>
        <p>Many of the student musicians write and improvise their own music, and encompass every jazz style. Hje Illinois band, for example, uses arrangements from the C!ount Basie book, as well as originals v^ich reflect the avant garde or free-form modem trend, and at the same time, maintains a Dixieland ensemble within the band.</p>
        <p>Felt Sorry For Hijack Capfoi^</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO, N. C. (AP)-Walter Ridenhour Jr. of Oiar-lotte, held captive by Jordanian guerrillas for three weeks, says he learned something from the ex{)erience but he wouldnt want to go through it again.</p>
        <p>I feel sorry for those people, he told newsmen Wednesday. I felt like the people who took us had a just cause. But I cant do a thing about it to help them.</p>
        <p>And I tell you, he added, you see the hatred over tiiere and you know there 11 never be any {&amp;gt;eace ...</p>
        <p>Ridenhour was one of 38 American hijack victims who were held the full {&amp;gt;eriod. He flew to his fathers home in Greensboro after being released earlier this week.</p>
        <p>Ridenhour and his wife were on a round-the-world vacation trip when their plane was hijacked. His wife was released earlier with othw women and children and returned to Charlotte.</p>
        <p>Even after he was separated from his wife, Ridenhour thought he would be freed shortly-</p>
        <p>Gradually, he said, the guards got to be pretty friendly. Ihey would horse around, play games. They just left their guns</p>
        <p>sitting around ... they would play games of slap hands. It was quite a contrast seeing a man with a sub-machine gun and grenades playing slap hands ...</p>
        <p>After a while, the captives were taken to a building near the summit of one of Ammans seven hills, where 15 of them were put in a small room that had only one window. The next day, the fighting in the civil war started.</p>
        <p>As the days went on, Ridenhour said, the hostages began to sense that things were not going well for the guerrillas.</p>
        <p>Last Saturday, Ridenhour said, They told us, It looks like the cease fire is going to work. We think youll be home very soon. </p>
        <p>He said a man from the Egyptian Embassy came to the house and told them, Grab what you can and dont waste any time.</p>
        <p>The man from the embassy had a stick, Ridenhour said. He said if you have anything wave it. I pulled out a pair of dirty underwear shorts and waved it.</p>
        <p>FVom th*e they went by Red Ooss plane to Cyprus, then to Rome and home.</p>
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        <p>speaker Roy G. Sowers prior to last  chairman, Dr. EdwiA Clement</p>
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        <pb facs="00091101_0007" />
        <p>Thf Dally Reflc&amp;gt;ct4M*.Greenville,N.C.niurtday.Octoler I, lf7-7</p>
        <p>Music Therapy Helps Curje Depression</p>
        <p>By NAOMI ROCK AP Newsfeatures Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Im really not very good, said the man in the white hospital gown, leaning over in his wheelchair to get closer to the piano keyboard.</p>
        <p>This is only my fifth lesson, he continued, raising his hand slowly over the piano and turning to his teacher for encouragement.</p>
        <p>'Three, two, one, two three, three, three, said the teacher, aniling and nodding his head as, hesitantly, Allen Smith</p>
        <p>SAFETY RECORD</p>
        <p>SEATTLE (UPI) The Seattle Engineering Department averaged only 7.5 persons injured for each million hours worked in 1%9, a safety record unmatched in the nation. The city has been presented the Award of Honor by the National Safety Council.</p>
        <p>struck one note then another, another and another. A broad grin spread across his face as the strains of Mary Had a Little Lamb filled the tiny room.</p>
        <p>Mr. Smith has a muscular-nervous disorder and its important to get his hands and arms moving, explained his teacher, Darrell Peter, a musician and music therapist.</p>
        <p>Three days a week Peter comes here to the Veterans Administration Hospital in Manhattan to teach piano, voice and instrumental music. Each week between 70 and 80 of the hospitals 900 patients take lessons from either Peter or another music therapist. Some come by choice; others on doctors orders. Some get bored and drop out. Some discover music.</p>
        <p>Faunsby Short, a native oi Jenkins, Ky., and a World War II Army veteran was hospitalized here 10 years ago with muscular dystrophy. Pie dis</p>
        <p>ease forced him to give up ms job as a postal clerk and his (riano playing. Eight years ago he started singing lessons with Peter. 'Pie singing, which provides an emotional lift, is important physically: it forces expansion of Shorts chest muscles, which helps him breathe.</p>
        <p>I never sang a note in my life before I began therapy, Short said, a broad smile deepening the creases around his mouth. Im something of a ham you know. I love to sing. He swung his wheelchair toward the piano, and as Peter began playing When the World Was Young, Short began singing in a deep, melodic voice. His eyes grew misty.</p>
        <p>My voice isnt up to par, he apologized when the song was done. Some days Im really good,</p>
        <p>A young man with a cast on his leg invited a visitor to listen to his jam session.</p>
        <p>I keep organizing groups and</p>
        <p>the guys keep leaving, complained Stephen Jakakas, a 20-year-old Vietnam veteran from Brooklyn, N.Y., who used to sing with a professional group. You can go nuts here without something to do.</p>
        <p>For most patients, however, music therapy offers more than just a way to kill time. Under the guidance of musicians who have had therapy training, pa-tiitsdespondent  physically</p>
        <p>handicapped or aged and infirm are given a new and hopefully buoyant interest.</p>
        <p>Music for therapy began to gain acceptance during World War II when it was used first with shock victims and then for other hospitalized veterans. The Musicians Emergency Fund, a nonprofit musicians benefit organization, provided therapists for the paitents Thus was born the MEFs Hospitalized Veterans Service, which to date has provided more than half a million therapy sessions, and cur</p>
        <p>rently operates in 44 hospitals, day treatment centers and homes for the aged in eight states and the District of Ck)lum-bia.</p>
        <p>Darrell Peter, a composer, choral conductor, pianist and organist, formerly taught at the Juilliard and Manhattan Schools of Music. Through the MEF he has been working with hospitalized veterans for more than JO years.</p>
        <p>Music can do wonderful things, Peter said as he relaxed over coffee between lessons. Music is a nonthreatening therapy if you dont try to force participation."</p>
        <p>Like a mother trying to second guess a fretful baby, Peter explained, a music therapist must be sensitive to his pa tients needs and prepared to switch tacks at the slightest hint of boredom.</p>
        <p>Often you must figure out whats good for the patient because he either wont or cant</p>
        <p>tell you, Peter Continued. One may say he always wanted to learn piano, but as soon as lessons begin he gets discouraged. It may be enough for him to listen to me play. Sometimes a patient becomes annoyed with the kind of music or with a particular piece. I must always be ready to change.</p>
        <p>Most people like music, Peter said. Often they hide their interest because theyre afraid of failing. But if you leave them alone and the atmosphere is relaxed theyll often come to you. Music offers a marvelous means of reaching people.</p>
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        <p>READY FOR THE CHALLENGE...Rip Hawk and Swede Hanson are confident they can do justice in their main event bout with the Masked Infernos on October 8 at ECUs Memorial Auditorium. Also on the card are J.C. Dykes, El Gaucho, Pedro Godoy, Jerry Brisco, Matti Suzuki, Joe Soto, Tony Romano and Alex Medina.</p>
        <p>Wrestlers For Oct, 8 Named</p>
        <p>A slate of top ring talent for the championship professional wrestling coming to Greenville on October 8 has beeq, announced.</p>
        <p>: At 8:15 p.m. the first of a monthly series of wrestling bouts sponsored by the Greenville Jaycees for the benefit of the Greenville Boys Club will open at Memorial Gymnasium at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>The big event of tliis first match is the appearance of the Masked Infernos, who will take on Rip Hawk and Swede Hanson, The Masked Infernos will be accompanied by their manager, J. C. Dykes. Dykes is known for 'getting into the action when his two boys need his help.</p>
        <p>Both these teams are widely toiown for rough and rugged methods in trying to win their matchesthe Infernos for their c^iptroversial shoe, and. Rip pile-driver hold, event will see the  gbto the best of three falls -within the hour time limit.</p>
        <p>In another tag match on the opening night card, the team of El Gaucho and Pedro Godoy are pitted against Sandy Scott and newcomer Jerry Brisco. Brisco, was the 1968 National A.A.U. wrestling champion.</p>
        <p>' The opening action Thursday night will see Tony Romano facing Alex Medina. In other singles action, foreign wrestlers will 'furnish the action as Japanese Matti Suzuki tangles with Peruvian Joe Soto.</p>
        <p>All proceeds from this and subsequent matches will go to the Boys Club of Greenville, which is seeking funds to continue their operations now serving more than 400 young</p>
        <p>.coniruvt;r5ifti a</p>
        <p>:.Hawk for his pil ; 'Th\main eve -victor ^to the b&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>white and Negro boys.</p>
        <p>Advance ringside tickets are now on sale in a number of places in Greenville at $2.50 each. Interested persons can also contact the Greenville Boys Club,'telephone 758-4029 for tickets. In addition to the advance ringside tickets, admittance, will be by general admission at the gate tickets at $2.00 per person.</p>
        <p>Refreshments will be available during the matches.</p>
        <p>Compensating</p>
        <p>Crime Victims</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>BOSTON (AP)  'The State of Massachusetts has paid about $32,000 to residents who have been victims of violent crimes since a bill allowing such compensation was enacted July 1, 1968, says the state attorney generals office.</p>
        <p>Approximately 170 claims have been filed and adjudicated for payment in district courts, a spokesman said.</p>
        <p>To Talk Ending Frat System</p>
        <p>DAVIDSON, N. C. (AP)  Trustees of Davidson College will consider a proposal by President Samuel R. Spencer Jr. to scrap the century-old fraternity system.</p>
        <p>Spencer recommended that fraternities be open to anyone wishing to join.</p>
        <p>About 47 per cent of Davidsons 1,000 students belong to fraternities. About 75 per cent belonged five years ago.</p>
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        <pb facs="00091101_0008" />
        <p>8Tli Dally Reflactor, Grenvill, N. C.Thuraday, October 1.1*70</p>
        <p>Panel's Pornography Findings Argued</p>
        <p>By JIM ADAMS Associated Press Writer * WASHINGTON (AP) - A presidential commissions call for repeal of U.S. adult antismut laws has been blasted as the Denmark option by three dis</p>
        <p>senting membersbut two oth-*ers say it doesnt go far enough.</p>
        <p>Vice Presidoit Spiro T. Ag-new dismissed the 18-member Commission on Obscenity and Pornography report out of hand during a speech in Salt Lake</p>
        <p>City Wednesday night. He called it a product of former President Lyndon B. Johnsons administration.</p>
        <p>Its not our baby, Agnew said of the 12-member majoritys report. This commission</p>
        <p>Vietnam Villagers Won Battle And Peace</p>
        <p>Big</p>
        <p>By WILLIS JOHNSON .Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>HAU DUC. Vietnam (AP)  The word pacification covers a lot of ground in Hau Due.</p>
        <p>Two years ago. when Maj. Nguyen Van Thanh and his U.S. adviser. Capt. David Spencer, first arrived at the firebase here, the Viet Cong set up a loudspeaker in the village and demanded they surrender The pair wasnt to be deterred. A few days later when Viet Cong snipers were taking potshots into the base from a nearby hill, Thanh rounded up 140 of the Regional Force troops he had inherited from the previous commander and set out to drive them away. Spencer recalls the scene:</p>
        <p>We got to the bottom of the hill, and the men stopped They wouldnt go any farther. The major told them there were only three VC at the most up there and they were 140. But they still wouldnt move.</p>
        <p>So Thanh started climbing, followed only by Spencer and the majors houseboy.</p>
        <p>Revival To OpenSunday</p>
        <p>REV. HOWARD MCLi^MB</p>
        <p>Appointed To SREB Post</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Rep. Dwight Quinn, D-Cabarrus, will become North Carolinas fourth member of the Southern Regional Education Board.</p>
        <p>Gcv. Bob Scott, who recently became SREB chairman, appointed Quinn to the post Wednesday.</p>
        <p>Quinn succeeds state Sen. Hector MaCLean, D-Robeson, for a four-year term expiring June 30, 1974.</p>
        <p>The Other North Carolina nieml^ers of the SREB are William Friday, president of the Consolicated University of North Carolina; Watts Hill Jr. of Durham; imdDr Craig Phillips, state siqjerintendent of public instruction.</p>
        <p>"nie U.S. population in 180 was 7,239,881.^  .</p>
        <p>1-</p>
        <p>We got up on the hill and found the VC had run away, Spencer says. Then the RFs came up and they were so damned ashamed we never had any trouble with the soldiers again.</p>
        <p>Two months after that incident. Hau Due was attacked by a regimental-strength enemy force. Fifty defenders were killed. But others held ground and the North Vietnamese withdrew. leaving 314 dead.</p>
        <p>people work in the fields, protected by another one-third who either are standing guard by the paddies or out on ambush.</p>
        <p>The remaining one-third does common labor. They work on the new dispensary, help carry tin for the roofs, or clean up. But everyone works.</p>
        <p>was not named by President Nixon... As long as Richard Nixon is President, Main Street is not going to turn into Smut Alley.</p>
        <p>However, two members of the commission, both sociologists, said the panel should have recommended repeal of all U.S. antismut laws, including those banning the sale of pornography to children.</p>
        <p>There is no substantial evidence that exposure to juveniles is necessarily harmful, said professor Otto N. Larsen of the University of Washington and Marvin E. Wolfgang, chairman of the University of Pennsylvanias sociology department.</p>
        <p>'There may even be beneficial effects, they said, if for no other reason than the encouragement of open discussion about sex between parents and</p>
        <p>children relatively early in young lives.</p>
        <p>But Charles H. Keating Jr., President Nixons only appointee to the commission, accused the panel of following the Pied Piper of Denmark. He said its proposals would turn the United States into a pagan, animalistic country if Congress paid any attention to them.</p>
        <p>The commissions recommendations Wednesday to repeal adult censorship laws but enact laws against publicly displaying obscene pictures or selling them to children would parallel Denmarks liberal sex laws.</p>
        <p>The commission said it was not opening the door to live sex shows like Denmarks, which it said would remain subject to local indecent exposure, sodomy and disorderly conduct laws.</p>
        <p>Chairman William B. Lock-</p>
        <p>Ci?lHGELVlS JUHR MAlt ALWAVS MANAGES ID GET ID MIM LIRE A HOMING- flGEON -</p>
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        <p>INSTANT FOUL -UP f</p>
        <p>That was in September 1968, and not a mortar round, not even a rifle shot, has been fired into Hau Due since, the major claims. He insists theres not a North Vietnamese soldier within 10 miles.</p>
        <p>No one is really sure why the place hasnt been attacked.</p>
        <p>Thanh insists the Viet Cong are afraid of him and his psychology of the masses.</p>
        <p>Hau Due is one of the first and biggest refugee resettlement towns in the northernmost 1st Military Region. It has seven schools and a dispensary, making it the type of showcase pacification project that the Communist command ordinarily</p>
        <p>would like to disrupt.  rSHORTCw^.....</p>
        <p>The village is tightly organ-  </p>
        <p>ized. Normally, one-third of its  ^</p>
        <p>hart, dean of the University of Minnesota school of law, did not disavow the Denmark comparison at a news conforence, although he denied the commission was following Denmarks laws.</p>
        <p>He said there might be a short-lived increase in U.S. demand for erotica if adult laws were repealed but as in Denmark that will not be lasting. He said in the long run U.S. demand for erotica probably would decrease, as he said it has in Denmark.</p>
        <p>Father Morton A. Hill of New York City, who joined Keating and the Rev. Winfrey C. link of Hermitage, Tenn., in accusing the commission of slanting its report in favor of the pomogra-irfiy industry, said the effect of repeal would not be the same in America as in Denmark.</p>
        <p>The United States is not Dn-mark, he said. Denmark does -nqt have the crime we do, the unrest, the explosiveness. The Danes themselves told me when I was there these laws would bring disaster to America.</p>
        <p>The commissions long-expected recommendations got little immediate reaction from Congress but one of the key proposals in Hill, Keating and Links minority report was immediately introduced in the House.</p>
        <p>It would add a definition to federal antiobscenity law specifying that social redeeming valuethe basis on which a number of sexy films and books have been ruled not obscene by the courtsis not a l^itimate test of obscenity.</p>
        <p>The bill was introduced by Chairman Thaddeus J, Dulski, D-N.Y., of the House Post Office Committee which has begun public hearings into the commissions conduct and findings.</p>
        <p>Sale. Pay your 22.99 and take your choice. Its Penney Days!</p>
        <p>STOKESRevival  services</p>
        <p>will begin at the Stokes United Methodist Church here Sunday night, at 7:30. The Rev. Howard McLamb, district superintendent of the Greenville District, will be the visiting minister.</p>
        <p>During the past 35 years, the Rev. McLamb has organized 15 new churches in eastern North Carolina. Twelve of these were organized while he was superintendent of the Goldsboro District.</p>
        <p>The program during the week will be varied: Sunday night, youth night with chap Tucker and a group from Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church; Monday, childrens night with a story before the sermon; Tuesday, mens night with John Montgomery of Greenville as a witness for Christ;</p>
        <p>Wednesday, Sunday School night; and Thursday, ladies night.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Arnold Poe, a former pastor and now dean of men at the Methodist College, Fayetteville, will deliver the homecoming sermon Sunday morning at 11 oclock after which'dinner will be served in the local school cafeteria. The public is invited to attend.</p>
        <p>Sale 22^</p>
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        <p>single speed Va drill g99</p>
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        <p>Sale 22</p>
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        <p>Sale 22^</p>
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        <pb facs="00091101_0009" />
        <p>Tfie Daily Reflector, Greenville. N. C.^llianday. October i. l97-tGOP Regards Middle American Voter As The Key</p>
        <p>By DON McLEOD Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) ~ The blue collar middle American voter, long thought to be locked in the embrace of the Democrats his father voted for, is regarded by Republican strategists as the key to success in this years electionsand perhaps many beyond them.</p>
        <p>For in the wooing of this mortgage-owning, law-abiding workingman, GOP leaders see a chance to tareak the Democratic status as the majority party and to usher in a long Republican reign.</p>
        <p>They have met with successes here and there but the extent of any conservative shift is far from certain as Democrats counterattack on economic issues they think will keep labor Donocratic.</p>
        <p>Who is this middle voter and wliat does he want?</p>
        <p>The picture is readily drawn and statistics abound to flesh him out: Hes a fledgling suburbanite, more prosperous than he ever expected to be but fearful diat the social turmoil of the time may take away vdiat he has only now begun to enjoy.</p>
        <p>An Associated Press survey among politicians, political scientists, psychologists and others five weeks before election day finds wide preoccupation with the apparent ri^t-ward drift of at least part of the American labor movement.</p>
        <p>Items;</p>
        <p>The state AFL-CIO in New Y(x-k has endorsed Republican Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, a move supporters of his exponent, former Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg, hope to upset later this month.</p>
        <p>A high Republican political tactician, who declined to be quoted by name, confirmed in</p>
        <p>an interview that the focus on the blue collar middle American has become a key to the partys national effort.</p>
        <p>Through the campaign speeches of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, the theme runs clear; The time has cont for someone to represent the workingman in this country, the forgotten man ..., as he put it in Illinois.</p>
        <p>George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, lamented recently that the Democratic party was disintegrating under the influence of extreme liberals and alienating many of the nations 20 million unionists.</p>
        <p>On the other side. Demo-</p>
        <p>Will Coordinate Cancer Stu.dios</p>
        <p>BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI) -Environmental conditions in which the cause of cancer may lurk will come under the systematic scrutiny of scientists at the University of California.</p>
        <p>A new Cancer Epidemiology Research Program will coordinate numerous studies involving suspected ecological villains  air pollution, water pollution, pesticides among them. The program will attempt to gauge the impact the environment has on inducing cancer in large populations.</p>
        <p>LAW OVER ORDER</p>
        <p>LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPI) -Patrolman Robert Zacarrelli was suspended for 30 days for failing to report to his commanding officer. Zaccarelli said he disobeyed the order because he was obligated to attend a law enforcement class at Eastern Kentucky University at Richmond.</p>
        <p>cratic National Chairman Law-rice F. OBrien has been stumping the country talking abotk interest rates, unemployment, economic bumbling by the Republicansall the while aiming to draw the workers mind to the bread and butter issues which Meany said in an interview would be decisive in determining whether labor leaves the Democrats in substantial numbers.</p>
        <p>How big a factor is this middle voter? Election statistics tell the story.</p>
        <p>At the time of the 1968 elections, 42 per cent of this electorate were men and women who work in ^ some capacity with their hands. Add the housewives in such families and a solid majority emerges.</p>
        <p>Suburbia accounted for 35.6 per cent of the total vote. And the rush to the cuntryside races on, figures in the 1970 census shows.</p>
        <p>This exodus has been accompanied by significant changes in the racial population pattern. Whites moving into the suburbs are being replaced by blacks in the inner cities.</p>
        <p>Organized labor estimates more than half its members now live in the suburbs. More than 75 per cent of those under 40 have moved out from the cities, indicating the way of the future.</p>
        <p>Families with annual income between $5,000 and $15,000 accounted for 66 per cent of the vote in 1968. Some 80 per cent of union labor now falls wiChin these limits.</p>
        <p>In 1968 the average age of the American voter was 47. Even if 18-year-olds are allowed to vote in the 1970s, the average voter age will remain in the 40s. The under-30 group, while growing, accounted for only 17 per cent of</p>
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        <p>the vote in 1968. ,</p>
        <p>Twenty-two per cent of 198i voters had elementary achoding or less. Twenty-six per cent had been to college.</p>
        <p>Ninety-one per cent of all voters are white; 68 per cent are Protestant; 51 per cit are Women.</p>
        <p>Thats the statistical base on which the political strategists and pollsters find growing om-cern with law and order, with alleged permissiveness, with student disorders, with racial unrest.</p>
        <p>While such surveys turn up conservative feelings on law and order, they sImw at the same time liberal attitudes on the traditional social issues.</p>
        <p>This shows in approval of programs for the needy, for medicare and medicaid and sympathetic attitudes toward the hun</p>
        <p>gry and the aged.</p>
        <p>However, a common misconception is that the Amolcan workingman, having proq&amp;gt;ered, is now thinking only of the social issues and has become lets concerned with economic ones.</p>
        <p>Dr. Walter Menninga*, psychiatrist at the famed Mennin-ger Foundation and a member of the Presidents Commission on Violence, said in an interview that suburbias avmion to disorder is related to what you</p>
        <p>have to loae and particularly</p>
        <p>if you have just earned or ac-comfdished some things.</p>
        <p>Ccmcemed about his economic security, the blue collar worker sees lawlessness, radical change in moral standards, attacks on accepted institutions as a threat to a world in which he has achieved some status and comfort and of which he is ex</p>
        <p>tremely protective.</p>
        <p>The application of all these concerns shows daily on the campaign trail.</p>
        <p>The term Democratic permissiveness Is heard almost every time a Republican opens his mouth these days. The line runs that Democrats have been sympathetic to radicals and have accused the Republicans of not understanding.</p>
        <p>"The American people dont understand it either, Agnew said. "And they dont approve of it.</p>
        <p>Presidoit Nixon took up the same theme at Kansas State University ^liien he warned of the cancerous disease of violence and terror, and berated destructive activists on campus</p>
        <p>At the same time. Democrats are working to separate social</p>
        <p>and economic issues.</p>
        <p>Liberals dont favor crime, or mugging, or riots in the ghetto or on the campus, former vice president Hubert H. Humphrey told the American Bar Association recently.</p>
        <p>Both hard hats and the liberalsvtlio some people would have you believe are running off in diverse and divergent direc-tiisare all for law and order, Humphrey said.</p>
        <p>But Humphrey drove straight to the vital point when he ad-mmished;</p>
        <p>Liberals must stop using the words well-meaning about those who see violoice and law-breaking as the way to influence public policy.</p>
        <p>Both parties thus are talking on the law and order issue and they are aiming it at middle-class working people.</p>
        <p>The Republican hope is to erode the Democratic htdd on the labor vote, wed it to the traditional conservative vote and the south and hold it into a winning coalition.</p>
        <p>It is too soon to say how labor is going in 1970.</p>
        <p>But as the election approaches, political scientists and politicians seem agreed that the center wants security-economic, physical and emotional.</p>
        <p>THE ONLY THING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT REAL-ESTATE IS</p>
        <p>752-6140</p>
        <p>(Our Phone Number)</p>
        <p>The micro buggy, when youre tooyoung fora drivers license and too old for a bicycle.</p>
        <p>It just had to happen! First the mini bike ... and now the micro buggy. Powerful, beautiful, super-exciting! The closest thing to a motorized set of wheels a youngster can own.</p>
        <p>The metal flake fiber glass body isnt all show. Underneath theres a 4 HP Tecumseh engine thats just rarin to go, a 2-wheel drive utilizing a true rear end differential, scrub brakes and the fattest rear tires you ever saw ... would you believe 8 inches fat?</p>
        <p>* Not intended for racing or for use on highways, sidewalks or streets.</p>
        <p>The micro buggy is limited to off-the-road driving, but that shouldnt cut down on the fun. There are still plenty of places where you can sharpen your driving skills.</p>
        <p>Come into Penneys and see the micro buggy for yourself. Its about time you ha'd your own set of wheels.</p>
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        <p>'GIVE THE UNITED WAY'</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0010" />
        <p>It111 Dally ReHector, GreenvlUe, N. C.niarsday, Oetober 1.1970</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Audience Of About</p>
        <p>100 Hears 'Debate'</p>
        <p>Following are selected 11 a.m. stock market quotations furnished by Interstate Securities Corp.</p>
        <p>AT&amp;amp;T    44%</p>
        <p>Am Tob.  37%</p>
        <p>Burroughs  121  Vi</p>
        <p>Carolina Power  23%</p>
        <p>United Utilities  17%</p>
        <p>Chrysler  26%</p>
        <p>DuPont  lit</p>
        <p>Gen. Elec.  83%</p>
        <p>Gen. Motors  72</p>
        <p>RCA  25%</p>
        <p>R.J. Reynolds  41%</p>
        <p>Sperry  25%</p>
        <p>Standard Oil (NJ),  66%</p>
        <p>Texas Gulf  16%</p>
        <p>Ky. Fried  19%</p>
        <p>US Steel  31%</p>
        <p>Union Carbide  37%</p>
        <p>Vir. Elec.  20%</p>
        <p>Woolworth  33%</p>
        <p>Jeff-Pilot  28</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>Wachovia OVER THE COUNTER Combines Ins.  40-40%</p>
        <p>Franklin Life  13%-13%</p>
        <p>Hardees  7*4-7%</p>
        <p>NCNB  29-29%</p>
        <p>Piedmont Air  6-6V4</p>
        <p>Int^on  7%-8Vs</p>
        <p>Wachovia Realty  20%-21</p>
        <p>Eckerds  19%-20%</p>
        <p>Little Mint  3%-3%</p>
        <p>Conner Homes  4%-5</p>
        <p>Wall Street Lead</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Stock market prices continued their half-hearted downslide in moderate trading.</p>
        <p>At 11 a.m. the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 1.44 at 759.24.</p>
        <p>Sowers . . .</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 1)</p>
        <p>not operate independent of each other.</p>
        <p>The director told the estimated 180 Ducks Unlimited members and guests attending that organizations such as yours are a great help to those of us who. are charged with the* responsibility of looking after the conservation interests of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Sowers, a native of Sanford and now residing there, became director of the Department of (Conservation and Development in 1%9. A graduate of Wake Forest University, he served as Robert Scotts campaign manager during his 1968 campaign.</p>
        <p>Prior to dinner last night, persons attending had a chance to view decoys, both commercial and local, on display and chat with Eugene Pond of Beaufort, an avid decoy collector, wiio brought with him several of his collection for display.</p>
        <p>The local DU chapter is an active part of the national</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Meeting</p>
        <p>Place</p>
        <p>THURSDAY 6:00 p.m.Beta Alpha Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma will meet at the Womans Qub building 6:30.  p.m.Jaycees</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.Exchange CClub meets</p>
        <p>7 pm.Nu Chapter of the Alpha Delta Kappa meets at-the Holiday Inn 7 p.m.fund - raising meeting for Baptist Social Services at the Three Steers Restaurant 7:00  p.m.Winterville</p>
        <p>Kiwanis Club meets at Community Bldg.</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Dinner meeting for the Pitt County Democratic Women at the Greenville Golf and Country Club</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.VFW meets at Post Home 8:00 p.m,Chochee Council No. 60, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Redmens Hall 8:00  p.m.American</p>
        <p>Legion Auxiliary meets at Legion Home 8:00  p.m.Regular</p>
        <p>meeting of Greenville Elks Lodge No. 1645. Dinner prior to meeting FRIDAY 9:30 a.m.Ladies day at Greenville Golf and Country Qub</p>
        <p>2:45 p.m. General meeting of Womans Club at club bldg.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m,Redmen meet 7:30 p.m.Regular session of Faculty Duplicate Club at Planters Bank</p>
        <p>Barbecue Dinner The Meadowbrook Pentecostal Holiness Church will sell barbecue plates Saturday, beginning at* 11 a.m.</p>
        <p>The plates, $1.25 each, wUl be sold at the church.j</p>
        <p>Declines increased their lead over advances on the New York Stock Exchange to nearly 2 to 1 margin.</p>
        <p>Bid Board prices included Sony, up IV4 to 18%; Memorex, off 1 to 82V4: Whittaker, off % to 10%; U.S. Steel, off % to 31%; and Knight Newspapers, off % to 39%.</p>
        <p>On Hospital issue</p>
        <p>Pitt Draft Board Expects Meet 1970 Quota Under Number 183</p>
        <p>Hogs</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-(NCDA) -North Carolina hog markets today were mostly steady with instances .25 higher. Tops of 19.75-20.25 at Rocky Mount; 19.00-20.25 Kenly; 18.50-20.25 Tarboro; 18.50-19.50 Bethel; 18.50-19.00 Siler City and Denton; 19.50 Greensboro; 19.25 Salisbury.</p>
        <p>Poultry</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)(NCDA)  The North Carolina poultry market today had a weak undertone.</p>
        <p>Supply is ample for the current slow ready-to-cook demand. Live at farm prices 12 cents per pound. Hens supply adequate for a fair to good buying interest.</p>
        <p>About 100 Pitt County citizens heard a debate on the Pitt Memorial Hospital bond issue between Dr, Earl Trevathan Jr. and Jack Richardson at a public meeting Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>Dr. Trevathan took the opponents role for the sake of the argument at the debate sponsored by the Greenville -Pitt County Provisional League of Women Voters. Richardson made the rebuttal and gave specific information concerning hospital needs as part of the formal debate and in answer to questions from the audience.</p>
        <p>A site for the proposed new hospital has not been chosen, though it seems to be a consensus that it should be fairly close to the present hospital site, Richardson said. Lack of funds at this time is forcing the County Commissioners and the Hospital Board to reserve any decision on a new site until after the November 3 referendum.</p>
        <p>Having the old building and the land surrounding it will be a real bargain for the taxpayers, he said. The old hospital</p>
        <p>building definitely can be put to use, probably as much needed office space for county administrative and service offices.</p>
        <p>Richafdson said, t)efinitely not when he was asked whether there are racial reasons for the all-single bed rooms proposal for the new hospital. He ex-I^ained how segregaticm by sex and by disease and condition that must be used vdien there are semi - [ivate rooms and wards cut down on hospital efficiency, thus raising costs. Of course, having privacy vtiiile he is ill makes things easier for the patimt and his doctor, also,*he added.</p>
        <p>Having all iivate room wUl not increase the cost for charity patients, Richardson said, repeating his premise that increased efficiency in running the hospital should cause savings. TTiese savings no doubt would be passed on the patient.</p>
        <p>The new hospital should be a reality in three years if the bond issue is passed, Richardson said.</p>
        <p>Ran&amp;lt;jk&amp;gt;m Sequoice Number 183 is the highest lottery number reached by Local Draft Board 75, it was announced by Burney L. Tucker, chairman.</p>
        <p>Tucker said the local boards draft calls for  the</p>
        <p>remainder of 1970 will probably be filled without going beyond number 183, but this will not definitely be known until sometime in November when the local boards induction call for December is received firom state headquartOS.</p>
        <p>In compliance with the</p>
        <p>recently announced White House Executive Order, all registrants of the local board vdio are in Class I-A or Class I-A-0 on Dec. 31, 1970, and &amp;gt;^o hold a lottery number equal to or lower than the highest number reached by the board during 1970, but who, for any reason, are not issued orders to report for induction iwior to Dec. 31, will be carried over for induction during the first three months of 1971, TiKker explained.</p>
        <p>He continued, These registrants will be inducted</p>
        <p>before the registrants who otherwise would be first eligible for induction in 1971, such as registrants in Class I-A and Class I-A-0 who become 19 during 1970 and registrants who have reached age 20, but not age 26, whose deferments have expired.</p>
        <p>Tucker stated the Presidential Order provides that registrants who hold lottery numbers above</p>
        <p>the highest lottery number reached by the local board during 1970, and who are classified I-A or I-A-0 on Dec. 31, 1970, will be placed in a lower draft priority group for 1971.</p>
        <p>Registrants whose vulnerability is extended into the first three months of 1971 will be notified by the local board of his vulnerability just as soon as possible, Tucker explained.</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>First Building In Shore</p>
        <p>Drive Area Was Opened</p>
        <p>Roy Sowers, Director of Conservation and Development for North Carolina, and Mayor Pro-tem Percy Cox shared honors in ribbon cutting cernonies officially opening the new Smart - Woodall-Isley and Associates Building yesterday afternoon.</p>
        <p>Sowers complimented the efforts of the firm and their undertaking here, and noted that the role of the architect in society is a vital one. Sowers also mentioned that private enterprises, in making efforts in development and expansion, was a good direction.</p>
        <p>We are proud to participate in the grand opening of a firm that is a pioneer in building the first building in the Shore Drive project area, Mayor Pro-tem Percy Cox said yesterday at the official opening.</p>
        <p>Charles Woodall, resident architect of the firm in Green</p>
        <p>ville, expressed appreciation to city officials and planners for their assistance and wdcomed official and members of the public to the opening.</p>
        <p>George Smart and Troy Herring of the Raleigh Branch of the firm, and Max Isley and Bill Britt of the Durham Branch were on hand. The IBM office was represented by R.T. Burroughs, IBM Corporation resident manager of the Mid-Atlantic area; J.R. Garnett,</p>
        <p>Farm-City Week Eyed</p>
        <p>IBM Branch manager in Raleigh, and Charles WiUiams, Gh*eenville Office manager.</p>
        <p>The J. Frank Efird Cfompany was represented by Efird and Jimmy Andrews; and Bill CTark, local manager, was on hand for the Wachovia Mortgage Company.</p>
        <p>Woodall expressed his sincere ai^reciation for the response of faculty and studoits firom the School of Art of East Carolina University who contributed works of art to decorate the new building. These included Robert and Sara Edmiston, Norman Keller, Tran Gordley, Dan Leary, among others; and engineer Robert Pittman.</p>
        <p>organization that operates on the principle of dedication to the conservation and propagation of North Americas waterfowl as a valuable natural resource.</p>
        <p>One of the most important functions of Ducks Unlimited is the leasing of land in Candada on which to build dams, dykes, banks and other devices to control water and help to maintain suitable breeding areas for ducks and geese.</p>
        <p>Funds raised locally and at other DU dinners and meetings are dianneled into the- national fund for work involving the immediate and long range welfare of the waterfowl population.</p>
        <p>J. W. Pou has been named Pitt County Farm-City Week chairman for the 1970 observance of Farm-City Week. The appointment was announced by Atwell Alexander of Stony Point, state Farm-City Week Qi airman.</p>
        <p>Serving with Pou as co-chairman for the county (committee is' Edwin H. Yancey, County Extension Chairman.</p>
        <p>Farm-City Week will be observed across the nation on November 20-26, ending on Thanksgiving Day. The purpose of the event is to help create a better understanding between rural and urban people.</p>
        <p>In aj^inting county Farm-City week chairman, Alexander stated that North Carolina is fortunate to have a fine relationship between urban and rural citizens. Farm-City Week can help to maintain and strengthen this relationship, he said.</p>
        <p>Farmville Leaf</p>
        <p>Prices Steady</p>
        <p>Tbdayh gp-anywhere, do-anything Hush Puppies</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;S&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Trim and Comfortable. A classic casual tie from a wide range of Hush Puppies casuals.</p>
        <p>Steel shank support plus the soft brushed or smooth leather uppers assure comfort. Comfortably priced too. $00.00</p>
        <p>Quality Fit  Service</p>
        <p>OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL .9 P.M.</p>
        <p>AT 5 POINTS</p>
        <p>Short</p>
        <p>Mrs. Maggie Short, a former resident of Greenville, died Monday morning in Portsmouth, Va. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 1 pm. at Sycamore Hill Baptist Church by her pastor, the Rev. B.B. Felder. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Ometery.</p>
        <p>She was born in Pitt Chunty and was the daughter of the late Israel and Anliza Adams. She was a member of i^camore Hill Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Ada Spruill and Mrs. Nina Congleton, both of Greenville; five sons, Alonza, Jasper and Leroy Short, all of Portsmouth, Va., Willie aiort of Dewitt, Va., and Cleveland Short of Salisbury; 14 grandchildroi; 27 great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The body will be at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home and carried to the church one hour prior to the service.</p>
        <p>The family will be at the home of Mrs. Ada l^ruill, 601 T^son St. The family will be at the funeral home Friday from 8p.m. until 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE  Prices &amp;lt;mi the Farmville Tobacco Market were relatively steady yesterday.</p>
        <p>A few grades declined in price while others showed a gain. Increases offset decline. Quality of offerings was off from Tuesday. An increase in volume of nondescript grades of leaf caused a slight decline in average. Stabilization receipts yesterday were four percent of gro^s sales.</p>
        <p>Some 563,497 pounds were sold for $420,891.05, averaging $74.69 per hundred pounds.</p>
        <p>UtUe</p>
        <p>Miss Dellener Little, formerly of Pitt County, died early this week in New York aty. Funeral arrangements are incomfdete.</p>
        <p>She was the daughter of the late Jacob and Parphine Little.</p>
        <p>Survivors include two Ixothers, Bender and Charlie James little, both of near Grimesland; two sisters, Mattie of Raleigh and Ethel Thompson of New Jersey.</p>
        <p>Avery</p>
        <p>Mrs. Hattie Nobles Avery, 82,</p>
        <p>widow of Jdm F. Avery, died in the Greenville Nursing and Cbnvalescoit Home Wednesday night. Ftmeral services will be conducted at 3:30 Friday afternoon at the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by file Rev. Adrian Grubbs, pastor of Piney Gk-ove FVee Will Baptist Church, and the Rev. Harley Owi, pastor of Salem United Methodist Church. Burial will be in the Winterville Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Avery was a native of Pitt Cfounty and spent most of her life in the Winterville Community. She was a member of the Bethany FVee Will Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are three sons, J. CarlUm Avery of Bell Arthur, Harry H. Avery of Winterville, and Ernest L. Avery of Greenville; two daughters, Mrs. J. B. &amp;amp;nith of Route 1, (jrrimesland, and Mrs. Frank Kaveski of Norfolk, Va.; 11 grandchildren; seven great grandchildren; a brother, Warren Nobles of Greenville; and a sister, Mrs. Clara Oakley of Roanoke Rapids.</p>
        <p>The family will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Avery, 3004 South Elm St.</p>
        <p>Dr. Salk To Be</p>
        <p>N.C. Speaker</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)  Dr. Jonas Salk, developer of Salk polio vaccine, will be among the speakers Nov. 13 at a medical briefing to industry and business executives in N^rth C^olina and South Carolina.</p>
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        <p>ECKERDS DRUG STORES</p>
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        <pb facs="00091101_0011" />
        <p>Sports  T)ATTRJE/FIvEvCTP^)R.Classified</p>
        <p>THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 1, 1970Unbeaten Rocky Mount Visits Rampants</p>
        <p>Rose High Schools Rampants, atill looking for their initial</p>
        <p>victory of the season, play host to Rocky Mount Gryphons</p>
        <p>Friaay night at4) p.m. in Ficklen Stadium.</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount brings to town</p>
        <p>an unbeati record, a fact which the Rampants find usual to them. Only one of the teams Rose has played has been beaten vi^en they played the Rampants, and two of the four are still unbeaten, Jacksonville and Washington.</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount has had its troubles however. They downed Northern Nash, 21-12, in their opener, then squeezed past New Hanover 14-6. Their only solid win was a 33-0 romp over New Bern in their only divisional contest to date. Last week they</p>
        <p>nipped Raleigh Broughton 19-15.</p>
        <p>Rose, meanwhile, fell to Jacksonville 28-0 last Friday night. It was the 11th straight loss for Rose, extending back to the third game of the 1969 season.</p>
        <p>That first touchdown really</p>
        <p>hurt us, Rose Coach Bud Phillips said. Jacksonville went 65 yards on the first play from scrimmage last Friday to take an 8-0 lead after making a successful two-point conversion. 'Hiat took a lot out of us. Then we fumbled a lot and this killed us. We missed a touchdown because of a penalty, and all this combined to just stop us cold. Biillips said the Rampants have been working long and hard this week. We have gone through the workouts -eal well,</p>
        <p>Ay'?3fv</p>
        <p>^ it  if  'i</p>
        <p>Rose Hosting Rocky Mount</p>
        <p>Rose High Schools Rampants play host to pre-season Division II favorite Rocky Mount Friday at 8 p.m. in Ficklen Stadium. It is the fourth unbeaten team the Rampants have played in five games. Two of the Rose players wholl be in starting foies are Harold</p>
        <p>Lloyd (left) and Gary Woods. Lloyd, the son of Mrs. Johnnie Lloyd, is a 170-pound senior. He is a starting defensive end. Woods, the son oi Mr. and Mrs. James A. Woods, is a 150-pound senior. He is a starter at linebacker. (Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>Baltimore, Minnesota Warm Up For Playoffs With Pair Of Wins</p>
        <p>By DICK COUCH Associated Press Sports Writer Dave McNally and Bert Bly-leven breezed through a tune-up for the payoff pitch ... while Fritz Peterson threw a parting curve at the Green Monster.</p>
        <p>Baltimores soaring Orioles whipped Washington 6-2 Wethiesday night as McNally tossed a four-hitter for his 24th victory of the season. It was the slick southpaws final fling before his scheduled start against Minnesota in Sundays second game of the American League pennant playoffs.</p>
        <p>Blyleven, the Twins 19-year-old fireballer, earned a starting assignment in the third game of the best-of-5 title series with a solid eight-inning effort in Minnesotas 6-4 victory over Kansas City.</p>
        <p>Peterson became a 20-game winner for the first time in his careo by hurling the New York Yankees past Boston 4-3 at Fenway Park, a graveyard for lefthanders because of its short left field wallthe Green Monster.</p>
        <p>City</p>
        <p>Nash</p>
        <p>at</p>
        <p>Fridays Sports Football Robersonville at Elm Farmville at Northern Rocky Mount at Rose Roanoke Rapids Williamston -Southern Wayne at Greene Central</p>
        <p>North Pitt vs. Conley at Robersonville</p>
        <p>Soccer</p>
        <p>East Carolina at N. C, State</p>
        <p>It was the season finale for both clubs.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere, California topped the Chicago White Sox 5-1; Milwaukee dowhed Oakland 4-1 and Detroit nipped Qeveland 4-3.</p>
        <p>In National League play, St. Louis tripped Pittsburgh 4-3; the Chicago Cubs blanked the New York Mets 2-0; Montreal edged Philadeli^ia 5-4; San Diego topped Los Angeles 2-1 and Houston shaded San Francisco 4-3. Atlanta and Cincinnati were idle.</p>
        <p>McNally, who had been bothered by elbow soreness in a previous start, went the distance without duress as the Orioles tied the club record with their 10th consecutive victory and extended Washingtons losing streak to 13 games.</p>
        <p>He struck out nine while moving alongside teammate Mike Cuellar and Minnesotas Jim Perry, the other 24-game winners in the majors. Merv Rette-munds two-run single and a two-run triple by Brooks Robinson broke the game open in the seventh inning.</p>
        <p>CueUar will face Perry in the Orioles-Twins opener Saturday, with McNaily opposing Minnesota southpaw Tom Hall in the second game and 20-game winner Jim Palmer going for the Orioles against Blyleven Monday.</p>
        <p>Blyleven, who has won 10 games in half a season with the Twins, limited Kansas Qty to five hits and one earned rim, but trailed 4-1 when he left for a</p>
        <p>pinch hitter in the eighth.</p>
        <p>TTie Twins won it in the ninth with a fourH*un rally capped by pinch hitter Paul Rathffs three-run homer.</p>
        <p>his season with a .329 average. Runner up Alex Johnson of California was l-for-3 against the White Sox and remained at .327 with one game to play.</p>
        <p>That job today made up my mind, Twins Manager Bill Rigney said in announcing that Hyleven would get a shot at the Orioles.</p>
        <p>Lloyd Allen picked up his first major league victory for the Angels with clutch relief help from Dave Laroche in the eighth.</p>
        <p>Peterson, 20-11, defied the Fenway jinx for seven innings, gave up a twonrun homer by rookie Luis Alvarado in the eighth and got ninth 4nning help from reliever Undy McDaniel. It was his first victory ever at Boston.</p>
        <p>The Red Sox Carl Yastrzem-ski, gunning for a fourth AL batting title, went l-for-4 to finish</p>
        <p>Skip Lockwood and reliever Ken Sanders, aided by five double plays, weathered 11 Oakland hits to pitch the Brewers past the As.</p>
        <p>ECU-State</p>
        <p>Tickets</p>
        <p>Tickets for the East Carolina -N.C. State football game, to be played on October 10 at Carter Stadium in Raleigh, are now on sale at the ECU Athletic llcket Office. * nckets for the game, which starts at 7:30 p.m., will continue on sale in the Minges Coliseum office until Thursday, October 8.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOBILE</p>
        <p>AUCTION</p>
        <p>SALE!</p>
        <p>SAT., OCT. 3rd.</p>
        <p>'68 Fury II 4 Door Sedans FORMER NC STATE CARI (NOT PATROL CARS)</p>
        <p>NOW ON DISPLAY FOR YOUR INSPECTION AT</p>
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        <p>Mon.-Sat. 6p.m.-10:30p.m.</p>
        <p>Sunday - 6p.m.-l0p.m.</p>
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        <p>Eastern 4-A</p>
        <p>he said. Weve worked on a lot of stuff and the spirit still seems to be good.</p>
        <p>Two players will miss this weeks game, Charlie Speight and Mike Harris. Speight suffered a bruise on his nose, still healing from a non-football incident in which he got it broken. And Harris has been hobbled for the past two weeks with a leg injury.</p>
        <p>A1 Hunter, who saw little action last week due to a hip injury, is expected to be back at full speed this week, however.</p>
        <p>Our problem has been consistency, Phillips said. Weve fallen down on some of our assignments on both offense and defense and we havent been hitting the open receivers on our pass plays.</p>
        <p>Phillips said that junior transfer student Bob Barrett will probably see some action this week at the quarterback spot, spelling regular John Conway. Barrett has looked good this week in our workouts, and we are going to see what he can do. Phillips said that the Rampants would continue to call on the strong rimning of Johnny Smith and Bubba Rawl, and would be aided by the return of Hunter.  ,</p>
        <p>We are also going to try to do more platooniug this week. There should be only three or four wholl be going both ways, and well try to keep them out when we can. The coach said these wouldprobably be linemen Jay Hagans, Tim Leith and</p>
        <p>George Harris, and back Hunter.</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount is a big, strong club, the coach said. They were the pre-season choice to win the divisional title, and I guess they still are</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount likes to use the power-I offense and jam the ball at the opposition. They have a good backfield. Their tailback is James Hargrove (6-0, 180 pounds), and the fullback is Carson Robinson (5-11, 210). Both of these are strong runners, and Robinson is an excellent blocker. Pete Thompson (5-9, 165) was their quarterback last year, but has been moved out to a halfback this year. Roscoe Batts (5-10, 165) is the new quarterback.</p>
        <p>Phillips said that Batts likes to keep the ball and roll out, with the option to run or pass. Otherwise, they like to push the ball up the middle with either Hargrove or Robinson.</p>
        <p>Thompson, meanwhile, usually is flanked and is Batts favorite receiver.</p>
        <p>They primarily like to ram the ball down your throat, Phillips said. They are very similar to last years team and have most of the same personnel back. 'They do throw a tittle</p>
        <p>more than last year, but they still like to control the ball and keep it on the ground.</p>
        <p>It all adds up to another stern test for the Rampants, who would like nothing bettar than an upset win to end their streak and Rocky Mounts.</p>
        <p>The probable starting offensive lineup for Rose wUl have Ronald Taylor and Bob Forbes at ends, Hagans and Leith at tackles, Harris and Carl Lupton at guards, Tommy Diggs at center, either John CPnway or Bob Barrett at* quarterback, Smith and Hunter at halfbacks and Rawl at fullback.</p>
        <p>The defensive lineup will have Harold Lloyd and Harris at ends, Leith and Hagans at tackles, Willie Barnhill and Todd Pair at guards, David Bullock and Gary Woods at linebackers. Hunter and Barrett at halfbacks and</p>
        <p>Calvin Moore at safety.</p>
        <p>In other games last week, Goldsboro rolled over Raleigh Enloe, 40-16, while Rocky Mount recorded the only other Division II victory. Kinston, ^till scoreless, lost to New Hanover, 14-0, Durham stopped Wilsons winning streak, 6-3, and Washington pounded New Bern, 36-0.</p>
        <p>Other games this weekend include New Bern at Goldsboro, and Kinston at Wilson.</p>
        <p>The current Division II standings;</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount</p>
        <p>Goldsboro</p>
        <p>Wilson</p>
        <p>New Bern</p>
        <p>Kinston</p>
        <p>Rose</p>
        <p>Conf, Overall W L W L</p>
        <p>0  4</p>
        <p>0 0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>North Pitt, Conley Open</p>
        <p>Buc Kickers</p>
        <p>In 2-2 Tie</p>
        <p>ROCKY MOUNT - N. C. Wesleyan scored in the fourth period to force a 2-2 tie with East Carolina in the opening soccer match of the year for the Bucs.</p>
        <p>The Pirates were playing' without one of their regular linemen, Mike McFadden, who was out with an ankle injury, and Ctoach John Lovstedt said his loss definitely hurt the team.</p>
        <p>'The Pirate goals were scored by Steve Luquire and Dave Shayler. Luquires goal came on a penalty kick,! and he had an assist on Shaylers goal.</p>
        <p>The Pirates travel to Raleigh on Friday to meet N.C. State. Wesleyan  0 10 12</p>
        <p>East Carolina  Oil 02</p>
        <p>North Pitt High School and D. H . Conley High School open their very first football season Friday night at 8pm . in Robersonville.</p>
        <p>Nortli Pitt will be the host team in this first meeting of the two new consolidated schools. The two will also meet later in the year with Conley hosting.</p>
        <p>The two teams, who are scheduled to move into the new</p>
        <p>3-A Eastern Carolina Conference next fall, will operate their program as a junior varsity this year, playing junior varsities from Farmville, Robersonville, Greene Central and Rose during the year.</p>
        <p>Tlie North Pitt Schedule includes; Oct. 8 at Rose JV; Oct. 15 Greene Central JV at Robersonville; Oct. 22 at</p>
        <p>Robersonville JV; Oct. 29, at Ayden JV; Nov. 6 at Clonley.</p>
        <p>The Ctonley schedule: Oct. 8 at Farmville JV; Oct. 15 at Ayden JV; Oct. 22 at Greene Ontral JV; Oct. 29 at Rose JV 7 and the final game with North Pitt at a site to be determined.</p>
        <p>Don McGlohon</p>
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        <pb facs="00091101_0012" />
        <p>I2The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N. C.Thursday, October 1,1976Cubs, Mats Meet To Decide Second PlaceManagers Set For Annual Shake-UpsTote Surprises Miami People</p>
        <p>By TOM SALADINO .Associated Press ^rarts Writer</p>
        <p>Tlie National League East battlefor the No. 2 spotwill be settled tonight when the New York Mets and Chicago Cubs meet while in Philadelphia the surprising Montreal Expos can avoid a basement finish with a victory as the regular season comes to a close.</p>
        <p>Bill Hands stifled the Mets on seven hits Wednesday as the Cubs moved into a second place tie with their 2-0 triumph. setting up a confrontation between iCTiicago's 21-game winner Ferguson Jenkins facing Jim Mc-.Vndrew. 10-13.</p>
        <p>Second place is worth approximately Si.000per man while the losing team will pick up about S3(H) apiece. The East champion Hrateshave a fivegame lead as</p>
        <p>they get ready for Saturdays opening playoff game against the Cincinnati Reds.</p>
        <p>The Expos exploded for four third inning runs to stop Philadelphia 5-4 and move onehalf game ahead of the Phillies into fifth place</p>
        <p>Carl Morton, Montreals rookie rightJiander will be on the mound today trying to push the Phils into the cellar. The youngster has taken 18 games this season and is a prime candidate for NL Rookie of the Year honors.</p>
        <p>In other NL action, Houston edged San Francisco 4-3, St. Louis shaded Pittsburgh 4-3 and San Diego topped Los Angeles 2-1. Cincinnati and Atlanta were not scheduled.</p>
        <p>In the American League, Baltimore topped Washington 6-2, New York nipped Boston 4-3,</p>
        <p>Bradshaw Takes Blame In Loss</p>
        <p>By TOM BRILEY</p>
        <p>PITTSBURGH (AP) - Terry Bradshaw, the golden - haired rookie who quickly captured the fancy of football fans, has wasted little time in adding to his leadershiphe takes responsibility for defeat.</p>
        <p>I take complete blame for it, Bradshaw said Wednesday night as he sat at home, watching game films and playing with his St. Bernard puppy.</p>
        <p>Bradshaw, the No. 1 draft pick from Louisiana Tech, took over as the starting quarterback and led the Pittsburgh Steelers to four straight exhibition victories. Then they lost their first two regular season games.</p>
        <p>I was a little too nervous,* and so worried, he said. I hadnt realized that I was a rookie, that I had so much to learn.</p>
        <p>In the Houston game, I didnt keep my confidence and cool. In</p>
        <p>the Denver game, I started pressuring.</p>
        <p>In the second half of Sundays loss to Denver, coach Chuck Noll gave him a good pep talk on the sidelines. I started setting up and throwing the football like I know I can.</p>
        <p>I think the biggest difference is that I relize its for real. It put a difference perspective on the whole game.</p>
        <p>Bradshaw, who has completed 17 of 42 attempts with a pair of interceptions, doesnt go overboard with his regained confidence; Im not going to say I have all of it, but a lot of it. Bradshaw, who will start against the Browns in Qeveland Saturday night, echoed Noll in saying I think this team can really go.</p>
        <p>The coach, not given to flow-ery speech, said he is real happy with Bradshaw.</p>
        <p>I think he has fine talent. I think he has leadership qualities.</p>
        <p>Detroit nudged Cleveland 4-3, Minnesota downed Kansas City. 6-4, California trimmed Chicago 5-1 and Milwaukee beat Oakland 4-1.</p>
        <p>The Cubs snapped a scoreless tie in the sixth inning as Mets starter Nolan Ryan walked four Cubs for a run and Chicago add-^ a tally in the seventh on Tommy Davis run-scoring double.</p>
        <p>The Expos trailed 3-1 in the third, when with two out, Jim Gosger drove in a run with a single, John Bateman followed with a two-run hit and Bobby Wine capped the inning by driving in Bateman with a triple.</p>
        <p>In the West, Houston clinched fourth place, beating the Giants on John Edwards run-scoring single with one out in the ninth off reliever Don McMahon. Larry Dierker, 16-12, was the Astros winner.</p>
        <p>Juan Marichal went the first eight innings for San FYancisco. Bobby Bonds ripped his 26th homer for the Giants.</p>
        <p>ITie Dodgers missed a chance to clinch second in the West as the Padres snapped a threegame losing string. Los Angeles leads the Giants by one-half game.</p>
        <p>Pat Dobson, 15-16, tossed a seven-hitter as the Padres ended a three-game losing string getting a run^scoring single from Chris Cannizzaro and a sacrifice fly by Ollie Brown.</p>
        <p>Lou Brocks run-scoring single in the ninth after Jose Cardenal had powered a tying Tioiher, gave the Cards their victory, snapping Pittsburghs five-game winning streak.</p>
        <p>The Pirates had taken a 3-2 lead in the top of the inning on a run-producing single by John Jeter. Matty Alou stroked three Pirate hits, giving him 201 for the season.</p>
        <p>Bowling</p>
        <p>Strikettes League</p>
        <p>Umpires May Call A Strike</p>
        <p>By ED SCHUYLER Jr. Associated Press Sports Writer  NEW YORK lAP) - 'Ihercs a chance the major league umpires could call a strike against their employers Friday on the eve of the playoffs.</p>
        <p>I dont know whats going to happen, but were going to ask for more money, Augie Dona-telli, a National League umpire and a director of the Major League Umpires Association, said Wednesday night.</p>
        <p>More money, said Donatelli, means a minimum of $5,000 for each man who works the playoffs and $10,000 apiece for those assigned the World Series. Last year the umpires got $2,500 for the playoffs and $6,500 for the World Series.</p>
        <p>Donatelli said the Umpires</p>
        <p>Association and its attorney, John Reynolds Jr., would meet Friday in Chicago and that the money situation would be discussed and voted on at that time. The. playoffs open Saturday.</p>
        <p>Donatelli would not predict wjiat action would stem from the meeting. One possibility is a boycott. Reynolds said in Chicago a boycott is conceivable.</p>
        <p>Other umpires contacted at various major league cities Wednesday night either said they had not heard about any boycott or they declined comment.</p>
        <p>Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn was not available for comment.</p>
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        <p>High game and series. Lew Bradshaw, 223, 608.</p>
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        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>AUCTION SALE OF FARM LAND</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Pitt County signed and entered in the Special Proceeding, entitled Ethel Mills Haddock (widow), et al. vs. AAerlene Pittman and husband, Sammy Pittman," the same being Special Proceeding No. 70 SP 234 on the docket of said Court, the undersigned Commissioner will on</p>
        <p>Friday, the 16th Day of October, 1970 At 12:00 O'clock, Noon</p>
        <p>at the courthouse door in Greenville, N. C., offer for safe to the highest bidder for cash, subject to confirmation by the Court, the tract of land known as the Elmer Haddock, deceased, farm, more particularly described as follows:</p>
        <p>That certain tract of land situated in Chicod Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, near Black Jack, on the west side of the Greenville and New Bern Road, and beginning at a stake, Washington Mills' line, and running thence South 7Va West, 80 2-3 poles to a stake In the Little Pocosin; thence North 824 East, 88 poles to the Road; thence with the Road to a stake in W.</p>
        <p>H. Arnold's line; thence with his line. South 82V4 West, 138 yards to a stake; thence North 9 deg. West, 69 yards to Washington Mills' line; thence South 82V4 West to the point of the beginning, containing 35V2 acres, more or less, and being the Third Tract described in the deed recorded in Book U-24 at page 39 of the Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>There is EXCEPTED, however, from said tract of land a parcel thereof containing 9.2 acres, more or less, conveyed by the said Elmer Haddock and wife, Ethel Mills Haddock, to C. W. Evans and wife, Pearlie Evans, by that certain deed dated October 24, 1949, and recorded in Book M-2S at page 419 of the Pitt Cbunty Registry.</p>
        <p>This farm is located near Black Jack, has i five-room tenant.dwelling, 1 large pack barn, 2 tobacco barns (electricity available), with 4.05 acres of tobacco allotment, 8,327 pounds, and 13 acres corn base.</p>
        <p>The successful bidder at this sale will be required to deposit 10 percent of his bid with the Commissioner immediately after the sale to show good faithJn his bidding.</p>
        <p>This the lOth day of September, 1970.</p>
        <p>By TED MEIER Associated Press Sports Writer Preston Gomez and Harry Walker are in, bm Mayo Smith and John McNam|ira may be out as manage as^'the major league baseball regular season ends today.</p>
        <p>Gomez and Walker were rehired Wednesday as managers of the San Diego Padres and the Houston Astros, respectively, ending speculation that they might not return.</p>
        <p>In contrast, the future of Smith at Detroit and McNamara at Oakland is clouded.</p>
        <p>A Detroit official said a press conference is likely to be held Friday. Most observers feel the Tigers will announce then that Billy Martin, former Minnesota manager, will be named to re</p>
        <p>place &amp;amp;nith.</p>
        <p>Charles 0. Finley, Oakland owner, has declined to confirm or deny reports that he will not re-hire McNamara as manager of the As.</p>
        <p>Walker and his entire coaching staff were given one-year contracts for the 1971 season. Gomez and his coaching staff similarly received new one year contracts.</p>
        <p>Spec Richardson, general manager of the Astros said, In no way can I blame Walker and his staff for our sore-arm pitching. We looked for additional pitching and couldnt find it. So we are as much to blame.</p>
        <p>Im delighted and so is my staff, Walker commented. One of the reasons I would .have felt bad if I had not been</p>
        <p>coming back is I feel the dub is on,the verge of really moving up.'</p>
        <p>There was never a dwibt in my mind about the job, &amp;lt;3omez declared after Eddie Leishman, general manager of the Padres, announced that Gomez had been retained as manager.</p>
        <p>You never know in baseball, though, Gomez added. You might be hired for one year and be gone in one month.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere, Ken Boyer and Barney Schultz were named batting coach and pitching coach, respectively, for the St. Louis Cardinals.</p>
        <p>They replaced Dick Sisler and BiUy Muffett who were dismissed on Tuesday when Red Schoendienst was re-hired as Cardinal manager.</p>
        <p>High game, Kate Kennedy, 196; high series, Velma Cannon, 522.</p>
        <p>Indians Seek Win; Pirates Add Recruit</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS William and Mary, denied a possible first football triumph by two yards against Cincinnati last Saturday, seeks to get into the victory column for the first time in four starts at home this Saturday against Ohio Wesleyan, an added starter to the Indians original schedule.</p>
        <p>Shortly after William and Mary announced the 11th game approved last summer by the NCAA, coach Lou Holtz was asked, Why Ohio Wesleyan? Well, Holtz replied, when</p>
        <p>we started checking teams with open dates Oct. 3, we found just three in the nation. One was Houston, another was Oklahoma and the third was . Ohio Wesleyan.</p>
        <p>The questioners decided that was answer enough.</p>
        <p>Ohio Wesleyan brings an 0-2 record into the game with the Indians, vlio have lost so far to West Virginia, Miami and Cincinnati. They have yet to face a Southern (Conference opponent.</p>
        <p>Fullback Phil Mosser, who has gained 230 yards in three games.</p>
        <p>is expected to be at full strength after being bothered against Cincinnati by a knee injry. Quarterback Bubba Hookers a-V*lability is still questionable. (Miio Wesleyan was an addition to the W&amp;amp;M schedule, and Wednesday there was another addition in the conference^at East Carolina. But it wasnt a football game.^</p>
        <p>Just before practice, ECU (Coach Mike McGee announced his wife Ginger had given birth to a bouncing 7-pound, 2-ounce baby boytheir fourth child and</p>
        <p>By HUBERT MI2ELL Associated Press Sports Writer MIAMI (AP) - Charlie Tates most persistent tormentors among University of Miami football followers griped that he seldom did anything exciting as head coaCh.</p>
        <p>Old (Charlie crossed them up Wednesday.</p>
        <p>The pot-bellied character, called Jolly (Cholly in happier times, shocked every one from taxicab drivers to quarterbacks by' quitting as football coach-athletic director in midstream 1970.</p>
        <p>The HuriHeane players got the word on Tate minutes before an Orange Bowl wprkout. When the head coachs whistle was blc jvt., it was done by career Miari assistant coach Walt Kichefski.</p>
        <p>The 54-year-old Kichefsk, a fixture at the school since iii,s freshman year of 1936, was appointed by University President Henry King Stanford to serve on an interim basis in both of Tates positions through Dec. 31. It was Stanford who received the resignation. He said, It is a surprise and a shock.</p>
        <p>I think people outside the university put on pressure, said 244^und Hurricane tackle Dick Trower. He wouldnt just up and quit. Theres got to be something else.</p>
        <p>The pressure was evident as Tate entered ie final season of a seven-year contract. His overall record is 34-27-2 with two bowl teams, but a 4-6 campaign</p>
        <p>third son.</p>
        <p>The practice news was less exciting elsewhere in the league.</p>
        <p>in 1969 ignited rumors that it was a put out or get out season for Charlie in 1970.</p>
        <p>Tate opened with a 36-14 victory over William and Mary, but was whipped by Georgia Tech 31-21 last Saturday at Atlanta. Miami is now preparing to jriay winless Maryland Friday night in the Orange Bowl without him.</p>
        <p>When Stanford was first advised of Tate's wishes on Tuesday, he asked the coach to sleep on it.</p>
        <p>Tte slept on it. He quit Wednesday.</p>
        <p>The son of a former Jacksonville railroad man has been in coaching for a quarter of a century. He was not available to talk about his future.</p>
        <p>Its like having your father die suddenly, said quarterback David Teal. I cant believe he quit on us. We never quit on him. Im shocked.</p>
        <p>Tate expressed privately many times that the hungry Miami football fans baffled him. He complained about the lack of a true college atmosphere and was puzzled by his student body.</p>
        <p>If I live to be 95, he said off the record in August, v^en protecting his job was still a factor, Ill never understand the fans down here. TTiey want you to pass with fourth down and seven from your own 10.</p>
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        <p>Relative Lull In Vietnam; Action Up In Cambodia</p>
        <p>By GEORGE ESPER Associated Press Writer SAIGON (AP)  American combat-deaths in the Indochina war rose slightly last week to 63, and the number of American wounded went up to 344, the U.S. Command reported today.</p>
        <p>The battle deaths for the week were 11 higher than the previous week, as were the number</p>
        <p>of woundt^. Since Jan. 1, 1961, 43,737 Americans have been killed in the war.</p>
        <p>South Vietnamese military headquarters reported the number of government troops killed in action last week rose to 246, which was 51 more than during the previous week.</p>
        <p>North Vietnamese and Viet Cong battle deaths last week to</p>
        <p>talled 1,457-227 deaths higher than during the previous seven-day period, allied communiques said.</p>
        <p>In Cambodia, Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops today attacked Hmom Penhs defensive ring in daylight for the first time and were met with a naval and ground artillery fire and air strikes.</p>
        <p>The assault was in the Moat Krassas Krao region 6^^ miles southeast of the center of Phnom Penh Cambodias capital.</p>
        <p>The attack on the village on the east bank of the Mekong River was in view of the Royal Palace. It was watched by residents.</p>
        <p>The town is four miles from</p>
        <p>Police Trying To Puf Together Story Of Big Spenders Travels</p>
        <p>SYLVA, N. C. (AP) - Policemen were trying to piece together the details today of the whirlwind trip of a young textile worker who is accused of stealing $100,000 and then spending and throwing away all but about |SO,06ff of it.</p>
        <p>Police said they brought the money - galore days of James Harland Kirkland, 23, to an end Wednesday when they were tipped that someone visiting a Gastonia hospital was flashing wads of bills.</p>
        <p>Kirkland has been charged in the mountain town of Sylva with grand larceny and second - degree burglary. He is free on</p>
        <p>$12,500 bond.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Lester Arnold of Cherokee reported to the Jackson County Sheriffs Department Sept. 12 that about $100,000  they didnt know exactly how much  had been stolen from a closet in their home ^^ile they were away. The Arnolds own several tourist-oriented businesses in the mountain area.</p>
        <p>Kirkland was questioned by Henry Lambert, an unpaid Swain (Dounty deputy who works as a night watchman over the Arnold businesses.</p>
        <p>Lambert said he came to the Gaston County town of Belmont</p>
        <p>on the trail of someone who stopped in several towns between there and Cherokee spending and giving away money. He said he never saw the man he was trailing, but some people in the towns remembered him well because he gave them money.</p>
        <p>Lambert said he met one woman who said a young man gave her $50 and told her to buy some milk for her baby. He added a young boy told him he asked a man for a loan of $1.50 and the man gave him a $50 biU.</p>
        <p>Detective Sgt. Charles Flowers of Belmont said he had been told some of the money was</p>
        <p>thrown in the Tuckaseegee River near Bryson City and some more was thrown on a trash pile.</p>
        <p>Flowers said Kirkland is suspected of having bought the following items after the robbery: Two horses, western boots, a western hat, trousers, a shirt, a saddle, an automatic shotgun, a baby crib and baby clothes for the friend he was visiting in the Gastonia hospital, and a pickup truck.</p>
        <p>Police suspect Kirkland of making only a down payment on the truck because he didnt want to attract attention by paying cash.</p>
        <p>the outskirts of Phnom Penh. In the past it has been attacked during the night.</p>
        <p>In one of the sharpest ground actions in Vietnam in recent weeks, a U.S. Army patrol killed 23 Viet Cong troops early today.</p>
        <p>The U.S. command said two Americans were wounded in the 15-minute fight involving a reconnaissance unit of the 173rd Airborne Brigade. The U.S. troops were patrolling outside Firebase Washington on the central coast after a nighttime enemy mortar attack that caused no U.S. casualties, the command said.</p>
        <p>It was the most enemy killed in a single ground engagement by U.S. forces since Sept. 15.</p>
        <p>In other developments today:</p>
        <p>The U.S. (Command announced that a U.S. Air Force</p>
        <p>02 spotter plane was shot down near Kompong C!ham, Cambodia, on Wednesday, killing the two crewmen, and an Army 0H6 observation helicopter was shot down in the northern Mekong Delta, with no casualties. The plane, was the 47th lost to enemy fire over Cambodia. TTie 0H6 loss raised to 4,071 the number of helicopters lost in South Vietnam.</p>
        <p>South Vietnamese headquarters closed out a three-month operation north and west of Hue, claiming 2,383 enemy troops killed and 171 captured, with government tosses of 254 killed and 647 wounded. They said the units involved in the operations will remain in the field,</p>
        <p>Meanwhiie, North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces cut Cambodias most important highway and have almost closed the sec</p>
        <p>ond most important one in as- capital and Kompong Som, the saults southwest and northwest countrys only deep-water port, of Phnom Penh.  remained officially closed today</p>
        <p>Route 4, which connects the for the second day.</p>
        <p>DANCE</p>
        <p>KVKRY SATURDAY NIGHT WHICHARD'S BEACH PAVILION</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON. NORTH,C.\ROLINA Kasteni ( arolinas Largest Saturday Night Round-l'p!</p>
        <p>OUR PRESCRIPTION PRICES ARE THE LOWEST IN TOWN!</p>
        <p>Jack L. Tyler Pharmacist, Owner</p>
        <p>Shop And Save the Big Value way, the lowest prices in town everyday. Have your doctor call your next prescription or transfer your regular prescriptions to Big Value Discount Drugs. We appreciate the opportunity to serve you. You will agree when we say our prices are the lowest In town.</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE</p>
        <p>DISCOUNT DRUG STORE</p>
        <p>2800 E. 10th St.</p>
        <p>East 10th St. Shopping Certter Hours 9 a.m.9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Phone 758-2181</p>
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        <p>Sweat Shirts</p>
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        <p>Long Sleeves With Long Point Collar, Double Button Cuffs. 75 Percent Cotton, 25 Percent Polyester In Assorted Colors.</p>
        <p>SAVE UP TO $1.50</p>
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        <p>SAVE UP TO $2.00 TWIN OR DOUBLE FITTED</p>
        <p>No-Iron Sheets</p>
        <p>ChQose From Percale or Muslin No-Iron Fabrics. 50 Percent Polyester, 50 Percent Cotton. Elastic Corners, Pre-Shrunk. Slight Irregulars.</p>
        <p>VALUES TO $2.97</p>
        <p>VALUES TO *3.96</p>
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        <p>HOODED Sweat Shirts</p>
        <p>A Blend Of Cotton-Aery lie. Wide Assortment Of Colors. SIZES: 2 TO 4.</p>
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        <p>^irts</p>
        <p>Bat Wing Sleeves, Rib Neck. 50 Percent Kodel Polyester, 50 Percent Cotton. SIZS: S-M-L.</p>
        <p>Gadget Sale!</p>
        <p>Spice Racks, Met Grinders, Egg Beaters, Measuring Spoon Sets, Etc.</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>SAVE $1.00 GIRLS' CARDIGAN</p>
        <p>Sweaters</p>
        <p>100 PERCENT ORLON ACRYLIC, ASSORTED COLORS. SIZES: 4 TO 6X.</p>
        <p>REGULAR $3.99 VALUE</p>
        <p>GIRLS^ PERMANENT PRESS</p>
        <p>Slacks</p>
        <p>No-Iron, 65 Percent Polyester, 35 Percent-Cotton. Featuring The New Stove Pipe Look And the Bell Toe And Heel. New Fall Plaids And Solid Colors. SIZES: 3 TO 6X.</p>
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        <p>Permanent Press Fabrics In Solid Colors And Stripes. Ung Sleeves, Long f^int Collar Style. 65 Percent Polyester, 35 Percent</p>
        <p>SIZES: 8 TO 18.</p>
        <p>Cotton.</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0014" />
        <p>t-&amp;lt;-ine iMiijr ncii&amp;lt;.&amp;lt;i..v^uienvine.N.C.Tfiuriday,October 1.H7County Division Area Chairmen Of UF Announced</p>
        <p>Area chairmen tor the County Division of the Pitt County United Fund drive have been named by fund camt)aign manager Josei^ 0, Qark.</p>
        <p>The eight men and one woman heading community drives in various parts of the county will work under County Division chairman Frank Little. These are:</p>
        <p>AYDEN  Alton F. Rowe, Sr. Before his retirement in 1969, Rowe was for 47 years in the banking business. He became a senior vice president of Planters National Bank upon the merger of First National with Planters. A widower, Rowe has two children; Alton F. Jr., now vice president and manager of Planters National Bank in Ayden; and Mrs. Marjorie R. Taylor, who lives in Ahoskie. He is a past president of the Ayden Rotary Club and a past com</p>
        <p>mander of Pitt County Post No. 39, American Legion. Rowe is a member of Hancock Primitive Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>-GRIFTON  Mark (Billy) Phillips, manager of the Grifton Office of Smith-Douglas Fer-Pitt Alumni Meeting Set</p>
        <p>Public Meeting Slated Tonight</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - A public meeting to fully discuss the proposed bond issue for the purpose of water and sewer improvements for the town will be held in the courtroom in the town office building here tonight at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>Present to tell about the projects to be completed with the money raised from the sale of bonds plus federal money that will be available if the town can match funds will be Mayor Will Joyner, the Town Commissioners, Town Qerk Carl Beaman, Planning Board chairman Irving Morgan, and other members of the Planning Board.</p>
        <p>The special referendum on the bond issue will be held October 13.</p>
        <p>Pitt County alumni of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro will hold their kickoff meeting for the 1970-71 Alumni Annual Giving Program Saturday at 10 a.m. at the home of Mrs. Cameron Dudley, 1714 Forest Hills Blvd., Greenville.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Dudley and Mrs. Henry M. Johnson Jr. are co-chairmen of the Alumni Giving Campaign in Pitt County. The fund drive will be held between the dates of Oct. 3 and Oct. 5.</p>
        <p>UNC-G has a goal of $150,000 to be raised through its program this year. Such money is allocated by the Alumni Giving Council for vital campus programs not provided for by state allocations. These include 28 Alumni Scholarships, valued at $750 each and renewable for four years upon satisfactory academic progress. Other projects include an Alumni Distinguished Professorship, two alumni teaching excellence awards, an emergency scholarship fund, campus beautification and other needs.</p>
        <p>CORRECTION The telephone number of the Private Duty Nurses Registry for Pitt County was reported incorrectly in an article about the new Registry in yesterdays Daily Reflector. Tlie correct number is 752-4163.</p>
        <p>tilizer, is the father of two teenagers and one pre-teen child. He is a Mason, a Shriner, member of the Greenville Moose Lodge, and belongs to the First Christian Church of Ayden.</p>
        <p>-FARMVILLE - Dr. Bent B. Warren, Farmville dentist, heads the Farmville area drive. A Farmville native. Dr. Warren received the DDS degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and served in the U.S. Air Force with the Dental Corps. The father of three young boys, he is a member of Farmville United Methodist Church and belongs to the Rotary Club, vi^ere he was president at one time, and is president of the Farmville (immunity Chest.</p>
        <p>BELVOIR  Eugene James heads the Belvoir area fund drive. He is the father of three boys. A native of Pitt County, James served in the Army in 1944-45 and received both his BS and MA degrees from North Carolina State University. A farmer-teacher, James is a member of Gum Swamp Church and is active in community affairs, as president of Belvoir-Falkland Ruritan Club, president of the Belvoir Voluntary Fire Department, scoutmaster for Troop 160, and is on the Board of Directors for the Pitt County Farm Bureau and a trustee of Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>STOKES-PACTOLUS  J. Beverly Congleton proprietor of the Stokes-Congleton firm in Stokes, heads the United Fund effort there. He is the father of three children, two teenagers and a 20 year old. Congleton received the AB degree from Elon College and served for four years in the Air Force. He is a member of Pittt County Board of Education and belongs to the Stokes Christian Church.Sherwin-Williams</p>
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        <p>lOTH STREET  GREEN  VILLE,  N.  .</p>
        <p>CALL 752-4171</p>
        <p>-BETHEL  Alvis W. Mewbom, head of the Bethel branch of Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, is the father of a ten year old son and a native of Greene County. Mewbom was in military service for four years during World War II and saw action in the European 'Dieater of Operations. A Baptist, Mewbom is also a member of</p>
        <p>the Bethel Rotary (Hub.</p>
        <p>-WINTERVILLE - A native of Bailey, Finch is Assistant Dean of Instruction at Pitt Technical Institute, and previously taught in public schools at Chicod, Ayden and Pactolus. Finch received both the A.B. and MA degrees from East Carolina University and is doing post graduate work at N.</p>
        <p>C. State University. From 1953-55he served with the U.S. Army. He is a member of Winterville Missionary Baptist Church, and is also a member of several education associations, as well as the Pitt County Mental Health Association.</p>
        <p>BELL ARTHUR  Mrs. Kyle M. Crawford of Bell Arthur heads the United Fund drive in</p>
        <p>Conservation Project Fer Area Is Explained</p>
        <p>her area of the county. Formerly a postmaster at Bell Arthur, Mrs. Crawford now operates a general merchandise store. She is a member of Arthur Qiristian Church.</p>
        <p>FOUNTAIN  Carter Smith, manager of Fountain Milling Company, and mayor of Fountain, is a native of Greene County. He is married to the former Mary Carolyn Ridick of Fountain. They have three children, including one son ^^1lo plays with the Richmond Saints, a professional football team. Smith served with the Army in the European Theater of</p>
        <p>Operations during World War II. A Presbyterian, Smith is a graduate of Campbell College in Buie's Crefek. He is a Ruritan and on the board of directors of the Edgecombe Bank and Trust Company.</p>
        <p>THE ONLY THING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT REAL-ESTATE IS</p>
        <p>752-6140</p>
        <p>(Our Phone Number)</p>
        <p>City and Redevelopment (Dommission officials met Tuesday night with residents of the Southside Neighborhood Organization to discuss and explain the conservation project planned for that area.</p>
        <p>On hand for the meeting was the Commissions executive director. Col. A E Dubber; Commission chairman Billy Laughinghouse; mayor pro tempore and city councilman Percy Cox and other officials.</p>
        <p>Dubber said Wednesday that approximately 50 residents of the area located south of the Norfolk-Southern Railroad in Greenville, attended the meeting, held at Silvah COapel on South: Greene Street.</p>
        <p>The executive director said that the program planned for that area, if the residents request such a program, would involve a public housing and redevelopment project at the same time.</p>
        <p>ap-</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>It was emphasized that the Southside Project is not a clearance project. Dubber noted that public housing will be built on lots that are already vacant.</p>
        <p>area involves (ojtl^ately 180 lacres geneyilly embodies the neigh-borl^ods known as Long Acres, MilljVillage, Over-The-Hill and Clarkstown.</p>
        <p>Bounded on the north by the railroad, the south by Deck Street,east by Forbes, and west by Perkins, the neighborhood has been designated thie first project of the overall conservation program for the city.</p>
        <p>A staff office will be located in the area and all work will be coordinated with the residents of the neighborhoods, it was noted.</p>
        <p>Dubber said that questions were asked by residents and no opposition was voiced pertaining to the project. He added that the citizens of the area will have to appear before the aty Council and let them know that they wish to have th^ project carried out in their area.</p>
        <p>The executive director noted that verbal intentions of appearing before the October meeting of the Council to request the authorization of the project was voiced by many of the residents in attendance.</p>
        <p>After citizens appear before the Cbuncil, the (iouncil then</p>
        <p>would have to request the Redevelopment Commission to secure survey and planning money from the Department of Housing and Urban Development and then come up with a workable plan.</p>
        <p>Following/that, the Commission would be required to hold a public hearing, followed by a public hearing of the City Council before any physical work could begin.</p>
        <p>Dubber said it was pointed out that the idea of home ownership in the area would be a prime objective although there would be units for those not able to pursue the idea of buying their own home.</p>
        <p>TTie Housing Authority has made plans to include the 100 scattered housing sites approved for construction in Greenville in the Southside Project.</p>
        <p>Dubber said that $2.1 million has already been reserved for the project and applications for funds should not involve any delays.</p>
        <p>A project advisory committee is being appointed to advise and make suggestions for the successful completion of the conservation undertaking.NOTICE</p>
        <p>PERSONS WHO ARE NOW PRESENTLY REGISTERED TO VOTE, BUT WHO HAVE MOVED THEIR PLACE OF RESIDENCE SINCE THEY LAST VOTED MUST HAVE&amp;lt;-THEIR VOTING RECORDS TRANSFERRED TO THE PRECINCT WHERE THEY NOW LIVE TO BE ELIGIBLE TO VOTE IN THE NOVEMBER 3RD GENERAL ELECTION. YOU MUST BE REGISTERED IN THE PRECINCT ^N WHICH YOU NOW LIVE. OC-TOBER 5TH IS THE DEADLINE TO MAKE THIS TRANSFER. YOU CAN TRANSFER YOUR VOTING RECORDS AT THE ELECTION BOARD OFFICE AT THE COURTHOUSE MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY FROM.9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>PITT COUNTY BOARD OF ELEC</p>
        <p>TIONS.</p>
        <p>I. BRUCE KOONCE. CHAIRMAN.</p>
        <p>See these authorized Live Better Eiectricaiiy appliance dealers</p>
        <p>Fishers Appliance Corp.</p>
        <p>1024 Dickinson Ave. Telephone No. 752-3609</p>
        <p>PREVENT</p>
        <p>Goodyear Tire &amp;amp; Rubber Company</p>
        <p>821 Dickinson Ave. Telephone No. PL2-4417</p>
        <p>UGLY</p>
        <p>WRINKLES</p>
        <p>Greenville TV&amp;amp; Appliance Center</p>
        <p>200 Greenville Blvd. Telephone No. PL6-2616</p>
        <p>Maxwell Brothers Furniture Co.-</p>
        <p>569 s. Evans Telephone No. 752-6490</p>
        <p>V. A. Merritt &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>207 Evans Street .Telephone No. PL2-3736</p>
        <p>Murray's Appliance Center</p>
        <p>318 S. Evans Street Telephone No. 752-2514</p>
        <p>Sears Roebuck &amp;amp; Comp^OY</p>
        <p>West End Shopping Center Telephone No. 756-2111</p>
        <p>;  I. .  ^  i  .</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>The ecret to getting away with less ironing is to prevent it in the first4&amp;gt;!ace. With todays new wrinkle-resistant</p>
        <p>fabrics, .^ind todays new electric clothes dryer.</p>
        <p>MocTern electric dryers have a lot of new wrhikles that keep permanent pres.s an&amp;lt;| wash-and-wear clothes wrinkle free. ... &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>When they come put of the dryer, the\- re</p>
        <p>-eadv to w ear.' Liectric di vers cost le.^s to buy. and*have fewer moving part.s to maintain. Imagine laundrv without ugly wriiikles! powerful idea of tomorniw, today.Vepco</p>
        <p>Smith Electric Company</p>
        <p>415 Evans Street ^ Telephone No. 752-2114</p>
        <p>ir'w___</p>
        <p>/</p>
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        <p>ECKERDS</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
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        <p>THRU OCT. 7</p>
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        <p>Time chart on handle. Self-sealing gasket.</p>
        <p>MNDNESS</p>
        <p>Deluxe features include: lO/i" x 14/2" X 43/4" cooking area; ciear-view glass door; three rack positions; drip tray; mar-free and heat-free legs and handles; chrome finish inside and out; thermostat element control up to 500 degrees; heats from both sides when on 'warm." Cord included.</p>
        <p>.'5.88</p>
        <p>ECKERD'S PRICE</p>
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        <p>^21.88</p>
        <p>RELIANCE ELECTRIC</p>
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        <pb facs="00091101_0016" />
        <p>Pasquotank Had First Carolina School</p>
        <p>Hie light of Htotory</p>
        <p>By H. G. JONES N.C. Dept. Archivei ft Hiit&amp;lt;M*y WHUen for the AP RALEIGH (AP) - The first school In the colony of North</p>
        <p>(Carolina is bdieved to have been conducted between 1705 and 1706 in Pasquotank County by (Carles Griffin, a lay leader in the (Hiurch of England.</p>
        <p>Set Revival Series Here</p>
        <p>Another operated in 1712 at Sarum near the Virginia line in what is now Gates County. In colonial Brunswick Town, now a state historic site near Southport, the Reverend James Moir ran a school in 1745 in his home.</p>
        <p>ITiese and many other facts on the early development of our educational system are offered in William S. Powells book, Higher Education in North Carolina. Written in 1964 and of</p>
        <p>much more interest to the casual reader than might be inferred from the title, the 8-page book recently has been revised and reissued by the Department of Archives and History.</p>
        <p>The developmenVof our college and university system  both public and private  is chronicled in a brief and readable fashion, revealing that higher education in our state remained practically nonexistent before the opening in 1795 of the University of North Carolina. Prior to that it is known that North Carolinians in search of higher education, two had attended Yale, one had gone to William and Mary, one to</p>
        <p>Brown, five to Harvard, two to Hampden - Sydney, and about twenty-five to Princeton.</p>
        <p>In Chapd HiU the first building .erected on the campus of any i^te university still stands in use as a dormitory and has been declared a National Historic Landmark. Powells account of events at UNC is spiced vrith other bits of information such as the name of the first student and the fact that the original faculty consisted of one professor who doubled as president.</p>
        <p>llie secMid institution of higher learning, Davidson Ckillege, did not open until 42 years later March 1, 1837. Wake Forest</p>
        <p>opened the following jwar, but the school had operated under the name of the Baptist Literary Institute since 1834.</p>
        <p>Trinity College, later to become Duke University, was first established in 1838 as a nnall subscription school by Brantley York, an itinerant Methodist preacher.</p>
        <p>llie beginning of higher education for women in North Carolina can be traced to Salem Female Academy, a day school for girls which was established in 1772 and eventually became Salem College.</p>
        <p>In addition to sketching briefly the history of each existing institution of higher learning,</p>
        <p>Powell also gives interesting information on several Carlina colleges which have passed from the scene  examples of udiich are Carolina Fem^e College of Ansonville; Flora Macdonald Ckdlege of Red Springs; Concordia College of Conover; and Judson College of Hendersonville. Numerous illustratims are included, along with charts giving statistics on the schools.</p>
        <p>Today high school graduates in North Carolina can choose from seventy-one colleges and universities without leaving their home state, and our sdiools also attract students and teachers from many parts of the nation and the world.</p>
        <p>leges and universities than any other Southern state. Twenty-nine are public-supported, and forty-two, including one theological seminary, are private or Vlfith the exception of Texas, church-related.</p>
        <p>North Carolina has more col-</p>
        <p>Have You Missed YourDailyReflector?</p>
        <p>First Coll Your Indopondont Carrlor. If You Aro Unoblo To Roach Him Coll Tho Dolly Rofloctor, 752-6166 Botwoon 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Wookdoyt And 8 Til 9 A.M. On Sundoyk.</p>
        <p>DEAN DAVIS</p>
        <p>A missionary on furlough from Zambia, Dean Davis, will be guest evangelist at a week-long revival to be held at Mount Pleasant Christian Churdi next week.</p>
        <p>Services will be held Monday through Sunday nights at 7:30 p.m. at this church located just off the Belvoir Road. Henry Mann of Tarboro will lead the singing.</p>
        <p>Davis, his wife, the former Judy Mitchell of Mount Sterling, Dl.; and their children, Jim, 12, and Cndy, ten, have been in Zambia since 1966. During their first term there, two churches were established in the city of Ndola and leaders were trained among the congr^ation to carry on the work of th churches. The Davises also assisted in writing literature to be used in evangelizing Zambia and in making surveys of parts of the country not yet evangelized.</p>
        <p>The family plans to return to Zambia in August, 1971. During their furlough they are living at Route One, King, 27021.</p>
        <p>'Singspiration' Saturday Night</p>
        <p>A singspiraticHi will be held at Grindle Creek Cliurch of God Saturday night at 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Hie Seaires of Durham and vairous, local groups will participate.  ^</p>
        <p>Hie Rev. Wilbur Franks is pastor.</p>
        <p>West Virginia coal miners earn an average of $175 a week.</p>
        <p>ANTS?</p>
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        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - A tobacco executive says Ralph Nader has allowed himself to become a party to the familiar hit-and-run tactics of the anti-cigarette lobby.</p>
        <p>Hie executive Horace Korne-gay, is president of the Tobacco Institute. He accused Nadter of making specifically and categorically false statements about alleged additives in cigarettes.</p>
        <p>Naders allegations were contained in a letter to Miles W. Kirkpatrick, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. Nader recommended a federal investigation of the health hazards of inhaling such substances as glass and ceramic fibers, asbestos and rock wool, which he said are in cigarettes.</p>
        <p>Kornegay, replying Wednesday in a letter to Kirkpatrick, noted that neither Nader nor his associates had asked manufacturers whether they use such additives.</p>
        <p>Instead, Kornegay said, Nader and the American Clancer Society had placed a higher value on publicity than on obtaining facts ... about substances which he has not shown are even present in cigarette smoke, much less deliberately added by the in-stittes members.</p>
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        <p>OPEN DAILY: 9:30 A.M. UNTIL 9:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>H we tell eu&amp;lt; al eny edvertiteU ipeciol*.,jyoo will iej:eive e wttlten erder, Roincheck which enlitlet yeu to jkwy.fhe item ot ihete edvertited pticet when eur tteek it replenith-ed. '(excluding cleeronce item)</p>
        <p>E RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0017" />
        <p>The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>GOREN ON BRIDGE</p>
        <p>'Relativity' in Psychology</p>
        <p>Matildas question should interest everybody! Why do the days pass slowly to an older person, though the years zoom by? But to a child, time passes swiftly as it is lived but it seems an eternity between one Christmas and the next. This is the law of Relativity, applied to psychology!</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph.D.,M.D.</p>
        <p>CASE 0-546: MatUda Z., aged ' 58, is a widow.</p>
        <p>Dr. Crane, she began, why is it that as we grow older, the years seem to fly?</p>
        <p>Indeed, it doesnt seem like more than a few weeks from one Christmas to another.</p>
        <p>Yet when I was a child, I thought Christmas never would come.</p>
        <p>In those days, it seemed as if</p>
        <p>MYERS</p>
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        <p>SHOWS: 7 &amp;amp;</p>
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        <p>Starts TOMORROW!</p>
        <p>MtAMOUNTrncnjRiSm</p>
        <p>TNHT</p>
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        <p>mm</p>
        <p>rmmon' TECHNicoiar AiMAMOiMrncnjK</p>
        <p>the year was maybe 10 tilines as long as it does to me now.</p>
        <p>Other older folks agree with me, so what is the psychological explanation?</p>
        <p>We have an axion of psychology which reads:</p>
        <p>Filled time passes swiftly as you live it, but seems very long in retrospect.</p>
        <p>A corollary of that axiom also states:</p>
        <p>Empty time passes very slowly as you live it, but seems unduly short as you glance backward into the past.</p>
        <p>And this explains why Matilda, plus most of us older folks, feel that the years are zipping past.</p>
        <p>For we usually begin to cut off our outside activities and settle down to a quieter life within our own home.</p>
        <p>Thus, not many outstanding events absorb our attention from one week to another.</p>
        <p>Except for the mailmans call and the newspaper boys arrival, very little upsets the smooth monotony.</p>
        <p>Remember the old adage that a watched pot never boils? Well, with vei7 few things she can look forward to, Matilda thus finds that the days pass slowly.</p>
        <p>But the months and years streak past.</p>
        <p>On the contrary, her grandchildren are so preoccupied with ball gams, dates, parties and other exciting events, that time passes swiftly to them.</p>
        <p>Send a child to the store for a loaf of bread and a fire truck may captivate his attention till he doesnt even realize an hour has elapsed, while his parents are yelling for that bread.</p>
        <p>And this filled time for the child then seems interminably long when he looks back upon the past.</p>
        <p>For we subconsciously estimate time by the many outstanding events that have transpired meanwhile.</p>
        <p>The child thus feels that it has been almost an eternity since last Christmas, for he may have had 20 exciting events fill each day.</p>
        <p>His grandparents dont have</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN</p>
        <p>{ im: fev TIM CMcaw TrHMMl</p>
        <p>Both vulnerable. South deals.</p>
        <p> NORTH A K2 9? A J 10 8 0 QJ8 4k J 54 WEST  EAST</p>
        <p>AA8  AOS</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;;?K43  &amp;lt;9007652</p>
        <p>0 K76  0 032</p>
        <p>AKQ 10 87 4k03 SOUTH 4k 0 J 10 7 4 3 ^ Void 0 A 10 5 4 4b A 62 The bidding:</p>
        <p>South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1 4k  Dble.  Rdble.  2 &amp;lt;9 .</p>
        <p>2 4  Pass  4 4b  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead: King of A A shrewd diagnosis of the declarers predicament enabled West to pin a defeat on Souths four spade contract by pressing home a lethal assault against which the latter had no effective coun ter measure.  ^</p>
        <p>West opened the king of clubs against the final contract and East followed with the nine as the beginning of an echo to show a doubleton. South realized that if he won the trick. West could be expected to put up the ace of spades when trumps were led and then give his partner a club ruff.</p>
        <p>, In an attenq)t to disrupt hi^</p>
        <p>maybe even ONE out-of-the-ordinary event in an entire week.</p>
        <p>So Matilda looks backward and, seeing few intervening exciting episodes, finds that time telescopes. Her years flee by.</p>
        <p>Much this same rule of psychology holds true in estimating linear distance.</p>
        <p>On the ocean, you misjudge how far another ship may be away from you, for you have no intervening trees or houses.</p>
        <p>So the unfilled space seems shorter than it really is, much as unfilled time telescopes in retrospect.</p>
        <p>Army sharpshooters thus can be upset by shooting across a stretch of water!</p>
        <p>So the theory of relativity is also true in psychology.</p>
        <p>Even auto speeds are misjudged on the plains. A speed of 50 mph through a forest may seem as fast as 90 mph on open prairie.</p>
        <p>opponents line of communications, declarer followed with the deuce of clubs permitting West to hold the trick. Now it was the latters turn to deliberate.</p>
        <p>South was marked with both of the missing aces to warrant his opening bid. Altho a club continuation would ostensibly present the declarer with a trick, West might still give his partner a ruff on the third roundproviding that he made the proper lead at trick two.</p>
        <p>West continued with the queen of clubs, not a .small one, and South was in with the ace. A spade was led and West put up the ace to lead a third club. East ruffed and returned a diamond. South played the four from his hand and West scored the setting trick with the king.</p>
        <p>Observe, that if West had led a small club at trick two, declarer can put up Norths jack and then discard the ace of clubs on the ace of hearts. When West gets in with the ace of spades to lead a third club, South is in position to overruff East and thereby limit his losses to one spade, one diamond and one club.</p>
        <p>By continuing with the queen of clubs, West placed the lead in the declarers hand and inasmuch as the latter had no quick entry to the dummy for the discard on the ace of hearts, he was unable to prevent the ruff.</p>
        <p>DUTCH MORE BOOKISH</p>
        <p>AMSTERDAM (UPI) Sales of books in Holland in 1%9 totaled $100 million, an increase of 11 per cent over 1968. The average Dutchman spent $8 on books last year.</p>
        <p>Bette Enjoyed 'Star Sysfem*</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector.Greenville, N,C.11iiirsilay. October 1. If7b-I7</p>
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        <p>V52-7649  DOWNTOWN GREENVIULE</p>
        <p>STARTS SUN. '^WEDDING NIGHT"</p>
        <p>By BOB THOMAS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (AP) - In our day, stars had it lucky. *1110 studios built our careers with care and bought vehicles or created them especially for us. Todays stars must take what comes to them. And if they make the wrong choices, theyre dead.</p>
        <p>lilis was Bette Davis holding forth on the star system, a subject on which she is one of the worlds greatest experts. For 15 years she reigned as the dramatic queen of Warner Bros., exacting two Academy Awards and a score of memorable performances.</p>
        <p>She was here briefly, en route from her Westport, Conn., home to locations for her new film Bunny 0 Hare in Albuquerque.</p>
        <p>The studio have men who</p>
        <p>MOURNING DOGS DIE</p>
        <p>CAIRO (UPI) The dog show at the National Circus has been cancelled.</p>
        <p>Qrcus officials said three of the performing dogs died of broken hearts after the death of their trainer.</p>
        <p>could build sets that are just as good as any location. You can shoot better inside a studio. And cheaper, too.</p>
        <p>Bette Davis is not the kind of star to hanker for the good old days. Ever the realist, she reflects that some of those days were pretty bad, especially when stars could be dictated to by studio bosses. Still, there were distinct advantages to the studio system.</p>
        <p>For all of its abuses, the stu</p>
        <p>dio system was pretty damned good for a lot of us, she admitted. Those old boys knew how to build stars-not create them, because only the public could do that.</p>
        <p>Once a star was established, the studio could provide a continuity of career by providing pictures tailored to his talents. And dont forget those fantastic publicity d^artments. They could spend a year creating a demand for a certain picture.</p>
        <p>Today there is no area for failure. If an actor doesnt make it in his first big role, hes finished. If Dustin Hoffman hadnt hit big in The Graduate, he</p>
        <p>would have been out of the business by now."</p>
        <p>Miss Davis remains as active as she would like to be-a picture a year suits her. She could wtxrk more often if she accepted the roles offered her-mostiy nutty (dder women."</p>
        <p>THE ONLY THIN</p>
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        <p>I FOUND IT A RARE EXPERIENCE; ANP feel THAT I AM A BETTER PERSON FOR HAVINO REAP IT</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT</p>
        <p>THURSDAY</p>
        <p>4:30 Flipper 5:00 Daniel Boone 5:55 Paul Harvey</p>
        <p>- Ch. 9</p>
        <p>12:15 Farm News 12:25 Weather 12:30 Search 1:00 The Heart 1:25 Timely Tips 1:30 World</p>
        <p>HOul CAN NtlU 5AV THIN65 ^lk THAT x'iTh A</p>
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        <p>Affair  3:00  Secret</p>
        <p>8:00 Jim Nabors Storm</p>
        <p>TUB R R. PEOPLE: FBBL IF WE &amp;lt;JC&amp;lt; CPF-</p>
        <p>(DUR FIR^T SWOW WITW</p>
        <p>UNUSUAL, WE CAM CDPAMi6MER RATlNS.</p>
        <p>SOOMPS &amp;lt;&amp;amp;REAT, WMAr DO TMEY HAVE IN NMNP</p>
        <p>the late MCViE.</p>
        <p>9:00 Movie 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Merv Griffin</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 Carolina 8:15 Sewjog 8:25 Meditations 8:30 News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 Lucy Show 10:30 Hillbillies 11:00 Family Affair</p>
        <p>11:30 Uve of Life 11:00 Merv 12:00 News  Griffin</p>
        <p>3:30 Edge of Night</p>
        <p>4:00 Gomer Pyle 4:30 Flipper 5:00 Daniel Boone 5:55 Paul Harvey</p>
        <p>6:00 Early News 6:30 News 7:00 Truth or 7:30 The Interns 8:30 Headmaster 9:00 Movie 11:00 Firtal REPORT</p>
        <p>B L O N D I E</p>
        <p>WITN  Ch. 7</p>
        <p>THURSDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Real McCoys</p>
        <p>7:30 Flip Wilson 8:30 Ironside 9:30 Nancy 10:00 Dean Martin 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight FRIDAY '</p>
        <p>7:00 Today Show 9:00 Virginia Graham 10:00 Dinah 10:30 Concentration 11:00 Sale 11:30 Hollywood 12:00 Jeopardy 12:30 Who, What</p>
        <p>12:55 NBC News 1:00 Somerset 1:30 Words and Music</p>
        <p>2:00 Our Lives 2:30 Doctors 3:00 Bay Cify 3:30 Bright Promise</p>
        <p>4:00 Star Trek 5:00. Big Valley 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Real McCoys</p>
        <p>7:30 Chaparral 8:30 Name^ of Game</p>
        <p>10:00 Bracken 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>WCTI-TV - Ch. 12</p>
        <p>THURSDAY 12:00 Bewitched 4:30 Flintstones 12:30 World Apart 1:00 My Children 1:30 Make Deal 2:00 Newlywed Game 2:30 Dating Game</p>
        <p>3:00 Hopital 3:30 Life to Live 4:00 Dark Shadows 4:30 Flintstones 5:00 D. Frost 6:00 Reynolds 6:30 Gilligan 7:00 News 7:30 Brady Bunch 8:00 AAovie 10:00 Tm Jones 11:00 N jws 11:30 AAovie 1:00 D. Cavett</p>
        <p>5:00 D. Frost 6:00 Reynolds 6:30 Gilligan 7:00 News 7:30 Matt Lincoln 8:00 That Girl 8:30 Bewitched 9:00 Barefoot 10:00 The Immoral 11:00 News 11:30 AAovie 1:00 D. Cavette</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Contact 8:00. Romper Room 8:30 Sesamee St. 9:30 Cartoons 10:30 Lalanne 11:00 Gourmet 11:30 That Girl</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
        <p>ALSO</p>
        <p>Tpr DRIVE-IN THEATRE</p>
        <p>A COCKEYED MASTERPIECE!*</p>
        <p>Joseph Morgenstern. Newsweek</p>
        <p>2a</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>An Ingo Preminger Production Color by DELUXE*</p>
        <p>Panavision</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0018" />
        <p>l*-~Tie Daily Reflector. Greenville. N. C.lliMraday. October l. lf7t</p>
        <p>JKKl'SALEM PATROL  hraril aecurlty</p>
        <p>police patrol the /Vrab section of Jerusalem as a precaution against Arab demonstrators niourning the death of Egyptian President</p>
        <p>Nasser. Jerusalem was quiet following clashes Tuesday between police and Arab students. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Reflector Classified</p>
        <p>CHECK</p>
        <p>THESE</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED</p>
        <p>COLUMNS</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>Japanese Seriously At Work On Electric Car</p>
        <p>By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Perhaps it is their nature or the flexibility of their businesses or simply the desire for profit, but the Japanese, it appears, are taking the electric car a bit more seriously than American manufacturers.</p>
        <p>True, electric cars are being manufactured in small quantities in the United States, and many big name corporations have prototypes of these vehicles of the future. But the market, it appears, exists now rather than tomorrow.</p>
        <p>A survey by Opinion Research C^rp. indicates that 50 million Americans would consider buy-ing a short-range, limited-speed</p>
        <p>electric car if one were on the market at less than $2,000.</p>
        <p>This vehicle would be designed to go 40 miles an hour and to travel about 150 miles before having its batteries charged in a home charging unit, specifications that many engineers feel can be met through intensive effort.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, two big Japanese battery manufacturers have begun setting up the machinery for making electric cars operable and efficient in that country by developing a nationwide battery rental system.</p>
        <p>The incentive to Japanese manufacturers is a decision by the government to replace many delivery cars, public service vehicles and midget vans</p>
        <p>and other short distance vehicles now operating in major cities within the next three to five years.</p>
        <p>ITie battery stations are absolute essentials in the eyes of the Japanese, because the present designs of electric vehicles restrict them to less than 100 miles without recharging.</p>
        <p>Without such stations, therefore, travel by electricity would be seriously limited, to say nothing of the possibility of cars being stranded all over the highways.</p>
        <p>Hie Japanese are embarking on their electrification program despite drawbacks to using lead batteries that have * caused American manufacturers to proceed cautiously. noise ai^d poIfCffiri, the Japanese feei.</p>
        <p>must be dealt with now.</p>
        <p>To make the lead battery more efficient, both companies are working on the development of high speed chargers, and one of them already has completed an experimental device that reduces recharging time from 8 to 5 hours.</p>
        <p>A prevalent American attitude is that the electric car is impractical with existing batteries, and that for the electric car to be really worthwhile, a revolutionary fuel cell must be developed.</p>
        <p>The Japanese seemingly have decided to go with what they have rather than to wait for perfection. And American people, judging from the OPR survey, may be in a somewhat similar mood.</p>
        <p>Ayden News</p>
        <p>Patrolman Shot, Slain</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. flallie Stocks and Dava of Norfolk, Va., spent the weekend with relatives.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Leslie Stocks has returned home from Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Miss Debra Hart of Mount Olive Ck)llege spent the weekend with her parents.</p>
        <p>Maj. and Mrs. Tommy Edwards and family of Washington, D. C., spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Hal Eldwards.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Tripp Jr., Trudy and Paula spent the weekend in Apex.</p>
        <p>Miss Ann TVipp, a studoit at Atlantic Christian College, spent the weekend at home.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Elks spent Sunday at Duke Hospital with Mrs. Juanita Elks.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Joe Respess, Patsy and Mary Lynn spent the weekend at Atlantic Beach.</p>
        <p>Daniel Wade Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dixie Harris, is enrolled at the University of North Carolina. '</p>
        <p>Mrs. Eva Mallard has returned home from N. C. Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Mrs. E. B. Britt has returned home after visiting Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Pope in Dunn.</p>
        <p>Rev. Willis Wilson is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Hattie Cox is visiting relatives in Florida.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Earl Arnold were honored at a house warming at their new home given by Mrs. Jewel Arnold and Mrs. Mildred McKeel.</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)  A patrolman was shot to death today when a man he stopped for questioning fired a shotgun blast at point blank range, police reported.</p>
        <p>Patrolman John Burke, 27, died of a neck wound.</p>
        <p>His death was the 15th in the nation this year in apparently unprovoked attacks on police officers.</p>
        <p>Police said Burke, a member of the citys K-9 squad, had gotten out of his station wagon in the heart of the citys main business district to question two Negro men.</p>
        <p>Without warning, police said, one of the men drew a shotgun and fired. Burkes dog, Thor, was still in the wagon, tied to a post.</p>
        <p>Police later issued a warrant for the arrest of Qarence D.</p>
        <p>" Holmes, 22, of Atlantic City.</p>
        <p>Burke, married, without children, had Iteen a policeman for two years.^</p>
        <p>The victim, white, was one of the first officers to join the 11-member K-9 corps when it was established this year. He made the corps first arrest in February, when he and his dog captured two auto-theft suspects, police said.</p>
        <p>To Greenville Graduate MSU Fellowship Goes</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE BY TRUSTEE</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust dated September 10, 1962 executed by Fred Foster and wife Elizabeth Hardee Foster; Lawrence F. Foster and wife, Nancy R. Foster and Jimmy Manning and wife, Janice F. Manning,to J. H. Harrell, Trustee recorded in Book H-33, at Page 641 of the Pitt County Registry, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and the owner of said indebtedness having requested the undersigned Trustee to advertise and sell same under the power of sale contained in said Deed of Trust, the undersigned Trustee will on the 5th day of Oc tober, 1970, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door in Greenville, North Carolina, at 12 o'clock. Noon, the following described real property, to wit:</p>
        <p>That certain tract of land situate in Swift Creek Township, Pitt County North Carolina, described as follows</p>
        <p>Knovm as the "Tink" Hardee Farm, containing 36 acres, mofe or less, adjoining the lands of Snodie Haddock on the North; Persimmon Branch and Bob Stokes on the East Helen Hardee on the South; and Zeno Haddock on the West.</p>
        <p>For a more complete description reference is made to Will recorded in Will Book 8, Page 182 in the Office of the Clerk of Superior Court, Pitt County, North Carolina. The property offered for sale herein is the life estate of Elizabeth Hardee Foster and a one-half undivided interest in the remainder owned by Lawrence F Foster and wife, Nancy R. Foster and Jimmy Manning and wife, Janice Manning.</p>
        <p>This sale is made subject to a prior encumbrances of record and 1970 Ad Valorem taxes against the property.</p>
        <p>The highest bidder at said sale will be required to deposit with the un dersigned Trustee ten (10 percent) percent of his bid to await con firmation of the sale and to show his good faith in the bidding.</p>
        <p>This the 3rd day of September 1970.</p>
        <p>J. H. Harrell, Trustee Harrell 8. Mattox, Attys.</p>
        <p>September 17, 24, and October 1,1970</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>North Carolina Pitt County The undersigned having qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Emmet Whitney, deceased, late of Pitt County.</p>
        <p>This is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 9th day of July, 1971, or this Notice will pleaded in bar of their recovery.</p>
        <p>ALL persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the 15th day of September, 1970.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lula Whitney Coburn, Administratrix of the Estate of EjDmet Whitney, deceased P.O. Box-597 Bethel, North Carolina Richard Powell, Atty.</p>
        <p>P. O. Box-951 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 1970</p>
        <p>EAST LANSING, Mich. -Marvin Duncan, a native of Greoiville, N. C., has been named recipient of a years study fellowship for advanced graduate study at Michigan "^ate University.</p>
        <p>Duncans selection was made by the Instructional Media Center at Michigan State University.</p>
        <p>The fellowship for the 1970-71 school year, is funded under the Education Professions Development Act Title V-D of 1969. Duncan will be studying in an institute for advanced professional preparation of educational media specialists to</p>
        <p>work in schools, teacher training institutions and community colleges.</p>
        <p>The program is designed so that special emphasis is given to the work of the instructional media specialists in pre-service and in-service teacher training, vocational education, and the education of the disadvantaged from both rural and urban areas.</p>
        <p>Duncan, a 1958 graduate of Eppes High School, was for merly the assistant director of the Learning Resource Center of North Carolina Central University at Durham, N. C.</p>
        <p>CROSSWORD</p>
        <p>PUZZLE</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>Fewer Deaths Due Abortions</p>
        <p>I. Tapestry 6. Hurry</p>
        <p>12. Watered silk</p>
        <p>13. Breathe out</p>
        <p>14. Consecrated</p>
        <p>16. Weird</p>
        <p>17. Zenana</p>
        <p>19. Girl student</p>
        <p>20. Follow orders 22. Song thrush</p>
        <p>24. Jitney</p>
        <p>25. High nest</p>
        <p>26. Provided 28. That thing</p>
        <p>29. Paper money</p>
        <p>30. Particle</p>
        <p>31. Dress material</p>
        <p>32. Delineated</p>
        <p>33. Hairless 35. Drift 37. Sojourn 39. Weak 42. Cores</p>
        <p>44. Spun</p>
        <p>45. Hardens</p>
        <p>46. Trample</p>
        <p>asa Qnam</p>
        <p>axunm qnn</p>
        <p>DCa QSODB fZlKn</p>
        <p>css</p>
        <p>QQSB ao:^Q[lSS| nu ansQ SHiama Basam aa maB tsmm raan qqbb (sqb</p>
        <p>SOLUTION OF-YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Mornings; abbr.</p>
        <p>2. Kiwi</p>
        <p>3. Wealth</p>
        <p>4. Clothe</p>
        <p>5. Prophet</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Deaths from abortions have declined sharply in California since the state liberalized abortion laws three years ago, a University of California Medical School professor reports.</p>
        <p>Dr. Gary Stewart told ,3,000</p>
        <p>physicians attending the American Academy of General Practice convention Tuesday that C^alifornias death rate from aiwrtions dropped from eight per 100,000 births to three per 100,000 last year.</p>
        <p>Stewart ' estimated there would be 50,000 legal abortions this year.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>T"</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>I;</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>lO</p>
        <p>If</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>(8</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>lb</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>it</p>
        <p>JW</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>di</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Jm</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>S7</p>
        <p>h</p>
        <p>*K5</p>
        <p>Ml</p>
        <p>M2</p>
        <p>M3</p>
        <p>I'W</p>
        <p>M5</p>
        <p>6. Himself</p>
        <p>7. Chopping tool</p>
        <p>8. Coin</p>
        <p>9. Weather satellite</p>
        <p>10. Canal</p>
        <p>11. Require *</p>
        <p>15. Black mark 18. Leathernecks</p>
        <p>20. Kimono sash</p>
        <p>21. Save</p>
        <p>23. Notable person</p>
        <p>25. Statute</p>
        <p>26. Freeze</p>
        <p>27. Not many .</p>
        <p>29. Equestrians -seat</p>
        <p>30. Attain fame</p>
        <p>31. Cut"</p>
        <p>32. Philanthropist</p>
        <p>33. Prohibits</p>
        <p>34. Adjoin</p>
        <p>36. Salamander 38. lamprey</p>
        <p>40. Greensward</p>
        <p>41. Boundary , 43. Exists '</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF ELECTION</p>
        <p>NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the question of the approval or rejection of a bond order authorizing the issuance of $9,000,000 bonds for the purpose of paying the cost of ercting a new County Hospital and purchasing the necessary iand, furnishings and equipment therefor and the ievy of a tax therefor, wiii be submitted to the voters of Pitt County at the general eiection to be heid on November 3, 1970. The resolution adopted by the Board of Commissioners of Pitt County authorizing the submission of said bond order at said general election is pubiished in fuil below as notice of such election. RESOLUTION ORDERING THE SUBMISSION OF A BOND ORDER AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF $9,000,000 HOSPITAL  BONDS OF</p>
        <p>THE COUNTY OF PITT, NORTH CAROLINA, AT THE GENERAL ELECTION TO BE  HELD ON</p>
        <p>NOVEMBER 3, 1970.</p>
        <p>WHEREAS, a certain Bond Order entitled "BOND ORDER OF THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF PITT COUNTY,  NORTH</p>
        <p>CAROLINA, FOR  $9,000,000</p>
        <p>HOSPITAL BONDS," (Herein called "Original Bond Order") was duly adopted by the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Pitt, North Carolina, on the 3rd day of August, 1970; and WHEREAS,  A Bond Order</p>
        <p>amending said Original Bond Order (herein called "Amendatory Bond Order") was introduced and passed on first reading at a meeting of this Board held on September 8,1970; and WHEREAS, said Amendatory Bond Order shall be adopted at a meeting of this Board to be held on October 5, 1970; and WHEREAS,  said Amendatory</p>
        <p>Bond Order provides that Bonds of the County in the aggregate principal amount not exceeding $9,000,000 shall be issued to erect a new County Hospital instead of constructing an addition to the existing County Memorial Hospital as provided in said Original Bond Order; and WHEREAS, said Amendatory Bond Order is to take effect when approved by the voters of the County of Pitt, North Carolina; now, therefore,</p>
        <p>BE IT RESOLVED BY THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM MISSIONERS OF PITT COUNTY NORTH CAROLINA:</p>
        <p>Section 1. That the question of approval or rejection of the Amendatory Bond Order to be adopted by the Board of County Commissioners of Pitt County, North Carolina on the 5th day of October, 1970, as mentioned in the preambles hereof, shall be submitted to the qual if led voters of Pitt County at the general election to be held on November 3, 1970.</p>
        <p>Section 2. That ail qualified voters residing in the County of Pitt, North Carolina swho are permanently registered or make application for permanent registration, pursuant to Section 163-67 of the General Statutes, not less than 21 days (excluding Saturdays and Sundays) immediately preceding the general election to be held November 3, 1970, shall be entitled to vote at said election.</p>
        <p>Section 3. That said election shall be held at the same places at which the'last preceding election was held for members of the General Assembly, and the same election officers who served at the last preceding election for members of the General Assembly be and are hereby appointed and designated to serve at said election.</p>
        <p>Section 4. That a copy of 7his resolution signed by the Clerk of the Board of County Commissioners of Pitt County, North Carolina, shall be published as a notice of safd election, together with the requird Notice. Such publication shal) be made in The Daily Reflector, a qualified newspaper published in tbe County,* for three consecutive weeks beginning September 10, 1970.</p>
        <p>Section 5. That the form of the ballot to be used in said special election shll be substantially as follows:  *</p>
        <p>PITT COUNTY NORTH Carolina</p>
        <p>BONDILICTION</p>
        <p>November 3,1970</p>
        <p>OFFICIAL BALLOT</p>
        <p>FOR the order authorizing $9,000,000 bonds of Pitt County for the purpose of financing the cost of the erection of a new County Hospital and other purposes 1^ appurtenant, necessary or ^ incidental thereto, and the levy of a sufficient tax on all taxable property in Pitt County for the payment of the principal of and interest on said bonds.</p>
        <p>against the order authorizing $9,000,000 bonds of Pitt County for the purpose of financing the cost of the erection of a new County Hospital and other purposes appurtenant, necessary or incidental thereto, and the levy of a sufficient tax on all taxable property in Pitt County for the payment of the principal of and Interest on said bonds.</p>
        <p>INSTRUCTIONS</p>
        <p>1. To vote in favor of the proposed bonds, make a cross (X) mark in the square to the left ot the word "FOR".</p>
        <p>2. To vote against the proposed bonds, make a cross (X) mark in the square to the left of the word "AGAINST".</p>
        <p>Section 6. This resolution shall take effect immediately.</p>
        <p>I, H. R. Gray, the duly qualified Clerk of the Board of Commissioners of Pitt County, North Carolina, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a true and compared copy of an originai resolution nowon file and of record in my office which was duly adopted by said Board of Commissioners at a regular meeting held on the 8th day of September, 1970.</p>
        <p>IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I hereunto set my hand and the seal of this Board this 8th day of September, 1970.</p>
        <p>H. R. Gray Cierk of the Board of Commissioners of Pitt County North Carolina PITT COUNTY ATTORNEY W.W. SPEIGHT Sept. 10, 17, 24, 1970 Oct. 1, and 8, 1970</p>
        <p>AUCTION SALE</p>
        <p>FARM MACHINKRY auction sale, Tuesday Oct. 6 at 10 a.m. 100 Farm tractors, 200 implements of all kinds. Wayne Implement, Inc., Goldsboro, N. C., phone 734-4234.</p>
        <p>Bl A SUMMIR PUT ONI Add a new</p>
        <p>room or bath from a home Improvement specialist In today's Classified Ads!</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autos For Salo</p>
        <p>BUICK Riviera, 1970, air conditioned, power seats and steering, power</p>
        <p>windows, AM-FM radio, call 752-6124 day, 524-4725 Grifton aft- 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>IT PAYS TO LOOK TWICE at the autos for sale In today's Classified AdsI</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET IMPALA, 1969 4 dr.</p>
        <p>hardtop, radio, heater, automatic, power steering, factory air, gold with black vinyl interior, $2695. Phelps Chevrolet, 756-2150.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET 1966 Impala stationwagon, Sir condition, power steering, good condition, $1100. Call 758 3940.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET 1968 Bel Aire, 4 door, 13,000 miles, gold with white top, 756-4732 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET1965 Bel Air, automatic, 4 dr. excellent condition, 1 owner. Call 746-6498.</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned. North Carolina National Bank, N. A., having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Luia Mae Briiey, decased, iate of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned at the address indicated below on or before the 1st day of April, 1971, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate wili piease make immediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the 28th day of September, 1970.</p>
        <p>North Carolina Nationai Bank, N.A.</p>
        <p>State Bank Office</p>
        <p>WeenWnC'^NoFTh^^</p>
        <p>Oct. I, 8, 15, 22</p>
        <p>CHRYSLER 1987 New Yorker, 4 door, beautiful blue &amp;amp; white, loaded with extras including air conditioning, 1 local owner. Splendid condition inside &amp;amp; out. Brown-Wood, Inc. 752-7111.</p>
        <p>CORVETTEr-1969 Excellent condition. Less than 9,000 miles, 4 speed. Removable top, electric windows, AM-FM radio, 756-4285 between 8:30 a.m. 8i 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>COUOAR, 1969 2 dr. hardtop, radio, heater, power steering, factory air, red with black interior, 28,000 mile factory warranty left $2695. Phelps Chevrolet, 756-2150.</p>
        <p>ELECTRA 1967, full power. Call 758-5935 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>CARDOFTHANKS</p>
        <p>WE WISH TO thank each and every one for furniture, household items, food, clothing and donations given to us in the loss of our home by fire on September 17, 1970. God bless every one of you. Willie Nicholson and Family.</p>
        <p>TtlE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Classified Advertising Rates</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>Place your Classified ad for 7 days. The cost is less.</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>3 Line Minimum</p>
        <p>1 Day30c Per printed line 4 Days27c Per printed line 7 Days or more25c per printed line</p>
        <p>Contract Rates Available</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>S.60 Per Column Inch Contract rates available</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>All linage deadlines are 12:00 noon on the preceding day. Excepting Sunday which is 12:00 Friday and Monday which is 4:00 p.m. Friday. Ail display deadlines are 4:00 p.m. two days in advance of publication. Excepting Monday &amp;amp; Tuesday which are both due by 4:00 p.m. Friday.</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowances for errors after the 1st day.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.</p>
        <p>FALCON 1966 Futura, one owner, low miles. Call 752-4691.</p>
        <p>FORD1966 Custom 500 2 door sedan, 289 Motor, Automatic, 30,000 Miles, Very Clean Only $845. Harris Used Cars. 105 W. Greenville Blvd., 756^5470.</p>
        <p>FORD 1967 Convertible, V8 Automatic, Very Low Miles, A Cream Puff. Mag Wheels. Only $1495. Harris Used Cars, 105 W. Greenville Blvd., 756-5470.</p>
        <p>FURY II 1968 V8, air conditioned. Call 752-2652.</p>
        <p>GALAXIE 1969 2 dr. hardtop, power steering, radio, tinted glass, factory</p>
        <p>Air,, vinyl cooL WSW tira, inw</p>
        <p>mileage, very clean. F 8, D Motor Co., Bethel, 758-4408.</p>
        <p>IMPALA 1966, 4 door hardtop, power steering, radio and heater. Excellent condition. Call 752-2925 after 6:00</p>
        <p>p.m.</p>
        <p>FOR A-1 USED cars and trucks see Hastings Ford, Inc., E. 10th St., 758-0114.</p>
        <p>JAGUAR XKE, 1963, wire wheels, coupe, yellow. Excellent condition. $1795. Call 823-8878, Tarboro.</p>
        <p>KINGSWOOD wagon, 1970, fully equipped, V8, automatic, air, power steering 8, brakes, 7,000 actual miles.' Pinner-White Chevrolet, Ayden 746-</p>
        <p>MUSTANG 1965, 6 cylinder, 3 speed standard drive, looks like new and drives like new. Call J. D. Aman 752-1929.</p>
        <p>PORSCHE1961, 1600 Super, never been raced, excellent condition. Call at noon or after 5:00 p.m. 758-3598</p>
        <p>PICKUP truck campers, covers. Ford, Chevrolet, Dodge, GMC, Datsun, Toyota, El Camino 8, Ran chero. Campton Campers, Inc. Manufacturers, Ayden, N. C. 746-</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN 1970. Take up payments. 758-0053.</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN1966 Square Bak Station Wagon, Radio and Heater, Very Clean. $995, Harris Used Car, 105 W. Greenville Blvd., 756-5470.</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN1969 1300 Series, Radio and Heater, Beautiful Blue Finish with white interior. Excellent Condition. Only $1395. Harris Used Cars. 105 W. Greenville Blvd., 756-5470.</p>
        <p>Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>1969 CB 350, green, 6,500 miles, $0. Call 752-2741 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>FORD, 1961, '/3 ton pickup, V8, straight drive, 22,000 actual miles. Pinner-White Chevrolet, Ayden, 746-3141.</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL1966 dump truck. Call Walter Hearne 756-0712.</p>
        <p>BOATS&amp;amp; EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; COAAPANX</p>
        <p>3008 S. MEMORIAL DRIVE</p>
        <p>PHONE: 756-2557</p>
        <p>SERVICE DIRECTORY</p>
        <p>QUICK &amp;amp; EASY REFERENCE FOR BUSINESS &amp;amp; PROFESSIONAL SERVICES. EXPERT SERVICE AT YOUR FINGERTIPS!</p>
        <p>CARPET</p>
        <p>IF YOU need carpet installed or repairs donecall Robinson's Carpet Service, 756-1437 nights. All work guaranteed!</p>
        <p>CAST YOUR EYES on the wide selection of values in the Want Ads</p>
        <p>BUSINESS MACHINES</p>
        <p>HUDSON BUSINESS MACHINES Victor factory services 103 Trade St.  756-3175</p>
        <p>REACH YOUR PROFESSIONAL GOAL quickly. Check the schools in today's Classified Ads.</p>
        <p>ELECTRICIANS</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>WATSON CLECTRfCAL CONSTRUCTION CO.</p>
        <p>3121 Bismark St.</p>
        <p>For any type of service, call Nights, SBndbys, &amp;amp; Holidays 756-3981  758-4772</p>
        <p>woOld you rather DO</p>
        <p>SOMETHING ELSE? Advertise your business for sale with a Classified Ad. Dial 752-6166.now!</p>
        <p>HEATING</p>
        <p>Heating 8, Air Conditioning Residential 8, Commercial Twenty-five years of Continuous service to residents of Pitt County Free estimates gladly given General Heating Inc.</p>
        <p>.1100 Evans St.  Tel. 752-4187</p>
        <p>HOME IMPROVEMENT</p>
        <p>Roof ing &amp;amp; hiding installed by skilled mechanics.</p>
        <p>Goodson Roofing &amp;amp; Aluminum Co. inc.</p>
        <p>264 By-Pass 756-3103 Day756-2572 Nighf</p>
        <p>BRICK a BLOCK work, house underpinning, walkways, patios, shrubbery boundaries and general repair work. Call 753-3503, nightSi</p>
        <p>DRIVEWAY</p>
        <p>PAVING</p>
        <p>Asphalt A concrete driveways installed. Concrete sidewalks &amp;amp; patios. Free estimates. All work guaranteed, 825-1261, Bethel. .</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>DOGS A PETS</p>
        <p>GERMAN SHEPHERD, male, 4 month old, purebred, hots, $30. 752-3005 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>BUSINESS WITH WANT ADSI Advertise home im provements for fall nowl Dial 752-6166.</p>
        <p>IRISH SETTER puppies, registered, F.D.S.B. Field and Show championship lineage. Write or call Mr. Trail, 1606 E. 3rd. St., Greenville, N.C., 758 2080.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Female Help Wanted</p>
        <p>BRODY'S Millinery Dept, has openings for three day week job. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday only, selling hats and wigs. Apply at Brody's Downtown.</p>
        <p>WANTED: . WAITRESS and cook, experienced. Apply in per-xm, Tom's Restaurant.</p>
        <p>AVON</p>
        <p>It's easy to sell the best  Avon will do the rest. For a fun &amp;amp; profitable business/ write or call Willa M. Wooten, Box 215 Leon Dr. Greenville, 758-2444.</p>
        <p>Ads</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>AAalc-Famala Help</p>
        <p>IF YOU LIKE meeting people and would like selling well known household products and cosmetics. Contact T. E. Lewis 758-0987 after 7</p>
        <p>p.m.</p>
        <p>DUNHILL</p>
        <p>A National Personnel Se</p>
        <p>Service 758 2107</p>
        <p>SURVEY</p>
        <p>INTERVIEWERS</p>
        <p>To work in Gratnvillo for 2-3 week period beginning middle October. NO SELLING INVOLVED. Hourly rate, plus expenses. Some evening work, car necessary. No experience necessary, will train. Write Opinion Research Corporation, North Harrison St., Princeton, New Jersey 08540 stating education, experience and telephone number.</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>WANTED: Alteration lady, ex perienced in men's and ladies clothing. Apply Leder's Dept. Store, Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>OFFICE NURSE for afternoon office hours. Prefer RN or LPN with office experience. Interviews to selected applicants. Write fully to Nurse, P. O. Box 1967, Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>LADY TO care for house and 2 children Thursday, Friday 8, half day Saturday. Transportation required. 756 0882.</p>
        <p>Male Help Wanted</p>
        <p>MANAGER AND Assistant Manager for Service Stations. Apply in person to M. E. Sutton, Sutton's Service Centers, Inc., 1105 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Experienced carpenters and helpers for year round work. To aoolv call 752-4836 or come to the construction office at Ravenwood (formerly Sherwood Greens).</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION LABOR wanted. Steady work. Apply at new school site 2200 block of East 5th St. J. H. Hu'dson Inc. An equal opportunity employer.</p>
        <p>LP GAS tank wagon driver. Apply in person at Doxol Gas, Winter vil le, N C.</p>
        <p>Mafe=Fma1e tietp</p>
        <p>DESK CLERK, 3-11 shift. Holiday Inn. Apply in person from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTING</p>
        <p>Wanted: Accounting graduate or person with several years accounting experience to do general ledger work. Apply National Boat Works, Inc. 714 Albemarle Ave., Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>LANDSCAPING, LOT clearing and cleaning. Septic tank instiillation., any type foundation ^digging. 18'f or 24" bucket., small dozer work. Call Bills Digging Service 758-1222 or see Bill Harrelson, 1106 Forbes St. after 5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>SIEGLER OIL heater, equipped with floor sweep. In very good condition. Call 756-4202.</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>HEADQUARTERS OF sales and service for Siegler and Warm Aborning heaters. Home Furniture, 701 Dickinson Ave., 752-2879.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL ON new chrome dinettes with 4 Chairs, this week only $49.95. Thompson's Discount Furniture, 802 Clark St.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>BUY or RENT IN GRIFTON</p>
        <p>15 to 20 minutes from most areas in Kinston  20 to 30 minutes from most areas of Greenville.</p>
        <p>3 &amp;amp; 4 Bedroom Houses</p>
        <p>SAM E. NELSON</p>
        <p>Realtor Grifton, N. C.</p>
        <p>PH. 524-4147 1-524-4146</p>
        <p>HOLT'S</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>BEST BUYS</p>
        <p>'69 Volkswagen, automatic transmission, 1 owner</p>
        <p>$1795</p>
        <p>'68 Olds 98 Holiday Sedan, full power, air conditioned, stereo, radio, reduced to</p>
        <p>$2595</p>
        <p>'68 Olds 442, automatic transmission, vinyl top, reduced to</p>
        <p>$1950</p>
        <p>'68 Chevrolet Impala Custom Coupe, V8, automatic transmission, air conditioned, 1 local owner, like new</p>
        <p>$2395</p>
        <p>'68 Chevrolet Impala 4 dr. hardtop, clean. Only</p>
        <p>$1995</p>
        <p>'67 Olds 442, vinyl top, 4 speed, extra nice</p>
        <p>$1895</p>
        <p>'67 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 4 dr. hardtop, vinyl top, air conditioned, 1 owner, reduced to</p>
        <p>$1995</p>
        <p>'67 Olds Delta Custom Coupe, automatic in the floor, bucket seats, air conditioned, really sharp.</p>
        <p>$2195</p>
        <p>'67 Buick Wildcat, 4 dr. harittop, cream with black vinyl top, air conditioned, 1 local owner.' Like new,</p>
        <p>$2495</p>
        <p>'67 Chevrolet Impala convertible, red with white top, V8, automatic transmission. Reduced to</p>
        <p>$1395</p>
        <p>'66 Volkswagen, excellent condition, reduced to</p>
        <p>$895</p>
        <p>'65 Chevrolet Chevelle 4 dr. reduced to</p>
        <p>$1095</p>
        <p>'64 Ford Galaxie 500, 4 dr. hardtop, V8, automatic transmission. Reduced to</p>
        <p>$695</p>
        <p>'65 Ford Galaxie 500 Sport Coupe</p>
        <p>$795</p>
        <p>'63 Olds 88, 4 dr. In excellent condition.</p>
        <p>$595</p>
        <p>HOLT</p>
        <p>OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN</p>
        <p>101 HOOKER ROAD 708.3113</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0019" />
        <p>Hi* Dlly Reflector. Greenville, N. C.-Him4ny, Oetokcr I,Treat Yourself to A Shopping SpreeRIGHT HERE IN THE WANT ADS-AND SAVE</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Miscolioneous For Sale</p>
        <p>PIANOS!</p>
        <p>NO FREE LESSONS NO FREE TEACHERS ^ NO FREE ANYTHING</p>
        <p>BUT</p>
        <p>Check our price and you will know why!</p>
        <p>HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH, INC.</p>
        <p>401 EVANS ST.</p>
        <p>ONE COUCH, nice, 1 steel desk, large, good, one automatic record player, 2 electric guitars, 1 3m Wollensak tape recorder, 1 radio broadcasting set, complete, 1 glass mowcase, nice, 1 lawnmower, gas, extra good, one file cabinet, good. Frank Harrington, 2020 Dickinson Ave., 7Sn-3983._</p>
        <p>MAGNUS 12 CHORD organ with 4 books and stool. Easy to learn to play. In excellent condition. Call 758-4572 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>SICOLER OIL heater with blower, new condition, original cost $280. Priced to sell. Call 758-3327 or see 1103 Myrtle Aye.</p>
        <p>EROKE BEAGLE, $40; 12 gauge Shotgun, 36" barrel, $20. Call 756-2260.</p>
        <p>USED ELECTROLUX, good running condition, $10. 752-3005 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>MiscRllaneous For Solo</p>
        <p>FOUR PIECE bedroom suite, practically new. 758-4579.</p>
        <p>WHOLESALE</p>
        <p>FACTORY</p>
        <p>OUTLET</p>
        <p>offers tremendous savings on first quality ready-made drapes, manufactured at our store. Even more savings on our line of factory irregulars in drapes, towels, sheets, and bedspreads.</p>
        <p>Open from 9 a.m. till 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.</p>
        <p>Located at intersection of Highway 58 and 258 East of</p>
        <p>Snow Hill 747-3012 Master Charge</p>
        <p>INSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>STARTING TYPING course at night, Oct. 7, Greenville School of Commerce, 752-3177.</p>
        <p> GUITAR LESSONS</p>
        <p>Student 8i Adult lessons. Qualified instructors. Harmony House South, 752-3651.</p>
        <p>DRIVERS NEEDED</p>
        <p>Train now to drive semi truck, local and over the road. Dlasal or gas; experience heipfui out not necessary. You can earn over $4.00 per hour after short traininfl. For interview and application, call 703-045-7033, or write Safety Dept., United Systems, Inc., 3600 Campbell Avenue, Lynchburg, Virginia, 24501.</p>
        <p>LIVESTOCK</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Gentle Pony with saddle riding cart, and harness. Ideal for children. 402 Oak Dr., Washington, N. C. Phone 946-3531.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mohllt Homt For SbIb</p>
        <p>FOUR RENTAL trailers, income approximately $400 per month. Oood rental location. 752-3609 or 732-2993.</p>
        <p>IF IT WASN'T A JOY FOREVEE sail</p>
        <p>it wih a Want Ad. Dial 752-6166 npwl</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>LIST YOUR PROPERTY with us. J. L. Harris 8&amp;gt; Sons, Raaltor, Property Management, 204 West 10th, 758-4711.</p>
        <p>KEEP RUOS beautiful. Rent Hoover Shampooer. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 E. 10th St.</p>
        <p>NEW FALL samples now arriving. Exciting new colors, fibers and patterns. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 E. 10th St.</p>
        <p>THE HOOVER CLEANER tor the</p>
        <p>homes that care. You will like Hoover Convertible, 2 cleaners In 1. Smith Electric Co., 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>UNCLAIMED FREIGHT CO. Sewing Machines</p>
        <p>We have just received 9 new White Zifi Zap sewing machines. Makes designs, buttonholes, hems, monograms, 25 year warranty. Regular price $229.95, our price, $97. Can be seen at 2904 E. 10th St. Greenville, N.C. Call 752-4053.</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONER COVERS</p>
        <p>Protect your air conditioner with covers from Fisher's Appliance &amp;amp; Furniture, Dickinson Ave._</p>
        <p>CHROME DINETTE table and 4 Chairs. $35. 758-4665 after 6:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>KENMORE WASHER, Norge Dryer. Good condition. $100 tor both. Call 756-3431</p>
        <p>KING CLEVELAND Trumpet used only three mo. Condition like new. Call 756-5111</p>
        <p>4 PIECE CHEOME dinette set, like new. Phone 756-5170</p>
        <p>HAMMOND ORGAN, full pedal board, separate tone chamber, ex-cellent condition. 756-2459._</p>
        <p>STEREO Components, Kenwood tuner. Dual changer, Heathkit am-plitier, 12" 3 way speaker systems. Originally $500, Practically Va price. Call 756-0173.  .  .</p>
        <p>SENTRY SAFES</p>
        <p>These Safes Are Certified UL Label For Fire Protection</p>
        <p>*79.50 UP</p>
        <p>TAFFOFFICE EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>LOST &amp;amp; FOUND</p>
        <p>LOST: Black miniature poodle, 1 year. Answers to "Max". Vicinity of 1st St. Reward. Call 752-6890.</p>
        <p>LOST4 month old German Shepherd, female, answers to Angel, mostly black with brown spots on tail and throat, E 10th St. area, reward. 752-5385.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>214 E. 5th St.</p>
        <p>752-2175</p>
        <p>PHONO NEEDLES must be changed -yeariy.,40 -avoid record damage and get best sound. We will clean, lubricate, adjust your phono and install Diamond Ceramic needle tor $8. (In Home service, $12.) Harmony House South, 752-3651.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SHEET ALUMINUM. 23" X 36" Size, .009 th inch thick. Used but not damaged. Excellent tor outside Sheeting of pack houses, barns, etc. 20c each or $15 per hundred. Contact Lynwood Owens, The Daily Reflector, 209 Cotanche St., Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>NEED NEW CARPET? Carpet binding or rent residential 8i commercial shampooer. Call Whitehurst Floors, 756-2747.  _</p>
        <p>AAobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>LARGE TWO bedroom mobile home at Shady Knoll, air conditon, washer, carpet, call 237-1219 Wilson.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home in Ayden, air conditioned and automatic washer, phone J. D. Tripp 746-3542.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM furnished air conditioned mobile home, washer, IVj baths, large parking area. Call Larry Dunsan, 752-7770, Lot 60, Oak-wood Acres.</p>
        <p>for better buy$ in</p>
        <p>real estate</p>
        <p>CALL OR SEE</p>
        <p>E. H. Williford</p>
        <p>List Your PropeftV With Us 313 Cotanche PL 8-3911. Night PL 2- 44?_</p>
        <p>STOP WORRYING</p>
        <p>Greenville Realty Co. 752-2106</p>
        <p>Will help you Find A house to meet your requirements.</p>
        <p>Anytime:</p>
        <p>752-4224</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>COUNTRY HOUSE, on approximately 4 acres, 8 rooms, 2 baths, cantral htat, 25 minutes S. of Greenville. Will finance. Call 524-5507 Oritton.</p>
        <p>404 LEWIS, Vt block from campus, 3 bdrmt., living room, dining room, family room, 2 batht, easy financing. Bill Williamt Real Estate 752-2615.</p>
        <p>BRBNTWOOD 3 bdrms. carpeted, 2 complete baths, large comfortable family room with old brick fireplace, living and dining rooms carpeted and draped, air conditioned, kitchen with eating area and adioining laundry. Beautiful yard with trees, centlpeded grass, shrubbery and split rail fencing. Call 756-3417.</p>
        <p>REDWOOD APTS., one bedroom Jdfnishedapt., 806 E. 3rd St., call 752-6137 day or 756-3465 night.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM trailer for rent or sale. Call 756-5806 after 5 p.m. ,</p>
        <p>10' ANO2' wides, paved roads, free water, call 752-6816 after 5 p.m. West Pineview Court, Port Terminal Rd.</p>
        <p>SPACES, PAVED roads, tree water. Call 752-6816 after 5 p.m. West Pineview Court, Port Terminal Rd.</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>8 X 22 Travel Trailer, ideal tor coupl% or camping. Air condition, tub and Shower. $650. A. G.'Thompson, Lot 44, Meadowbrook Trailer Park.</p>
        <p>17' SHASTA Camper, sleeps 8, call 746-3073 anytime.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROOFING-HARDWARE</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS DOORS 8. AWNINGS</p>
        <p>C. L LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>752-6116</p>
        <p>50' 2 BEDRM. trailer, air con-ditTha, autniatTT washer, rm Forbes St. Call after 6:00 Thursday and Friday. Anytime Saturday and Sunday.</p>
        <p>10 X 45 WITH washer and air conditioner. $60 per mo. Call 756-2847</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME tor rent. 2 bedrm., air conditioned, private lot and garden spot. Call 756-0264</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>12 X 56 MOBILE home, small eouitv take over payments. Call 746-4249 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>COME BY AND see our tine mobile homes by Taylor. 12 X 60, 65, 48, 56, and 44s. See or call Ivey Coward about these tine homes built by Taylor AAobile Homes of Troy, N.C. Good sizes and prices to suit your budget. Let's make a deal. Located N. Greene St., Hwy. 30 intersection. Call 752-5202, it no answer 752-5176.</p>
        <p>CLASSIRED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ED TIPTON AGENCY</p>
        <p>756-0911 REAL ESTATE ANDINSURANCE</p>
        <p>264 By-Pass TIPTON ANNEX GREENVILLE'S ONLY PROFESSIONAL REAL ESTATE BROKER</p>
        <p>FOR LGASfiApproximataly 3,500 sq. ft. prime retail space. Walking traffic generated by chain supermarket, large drug store, etc. Not affected by CBD Redevelopment Project. Free parking at door. Call 756-1341.</p>
        <p>S03WKST HAVBN AVB. Ayden, N.C. 3 bedroom, 2 full batht, living room, kitchen-den combination, tile front porch. Carport with atorage, brick veneer, excellent location. Call Chester Stox. 746-6116 or 746-3308.</p>
        <p>RAVENWOOD, 205, 3 bdrmt., living room, kitchen, 2 baths, wall to wall carpet, carport, very smalt equity and assume good loan. 758-0562.</p>
        <p>OWNBR wishes to sell 3 bedroom, 1*/!&amp;gt; bath home near Eastern School. Many extras. Pay equity 8, assume loan. Phone 758-4462.</p>
        <p>MOVE IN for $600. 2201 S. Village Dr., 3 bedroom (or den) one bath, carpet, air condition unit, large yard excellent condition. Call Trish Thompson, Bowen Realty 752-7194 nights 758-5017.</p>
        <p>YORK RD., One of Brook Valley's finest homes  3 bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, large family room sewing room, office or 4th bedroom, 2 car garage. Call now tor details of all the extras. Estate Realty Co., 752-5058.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rant</p>
        <p>WANTED: Graduate student or working girl to share furnished apt. Write Apartment, P. O. Box 1967, (ireenville giving references and phone no.</p>
        <p>3 ROOM furnished apt., near collagt and town. 752-4358 after 6:30 p.m. thru Saturday.</p>
        <p>THREE ROOM apt., furnished, men only. See at 311 W. 5th St., Greenville.</p>
        <p>OAKMONTSQUAR</p>
        <p>Apartments</p>
        <p>2-bedroom, air condition, 6-clos'ets, fully carpeted, disposal, dishwasher, club house, swimming pool, laundry facilities.</p>
        <p>1212 Redbanks Rd. Tel.: 756-4151</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>ROOF LEAK? Turn to the Want Ads and check tha services</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>IT FAYS TO LOOK TWICE at tbe servlets ottered In today's Classified</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER ESTATES APTS. 1,2, A 3 Bedrooms Available Washar-Oryar Hook-Ups  Hot Point Equipped 7S2-422S</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment, wall to wall carpet, dish washer, garbage disposal, hot and cold water, heat furnished, S135 per mo. Call M. E. Sutton 752-6121.</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS Apts., 1900 S. Charles St. An exclusive community designed to provide the ultimate in gracious living. Modern 1, 2 and 3 bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom Townhouses. Furnished or unfurnished. 756-4800. __</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>102 N. WARREN ST.$500 DOWN Possible loan assumption or small down payment. Living room, dining room, kitchen with breakfast nook, 3 bedroom, utility room, diswasher, 27,000 B TU air conditioner, fenced in yard. $18,500. Thomas Realty, 756-5166, nights, 756-5132.</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>CORNER LOT, Hardee Acres. $3,000. Call 758-4313</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>FOR SALE; new 4 bedroom house in O-exel Brook, built by Harry E Wilson, 756 0741 or 756-2458.</p>
        <p>2806 CROCKETT OR. VA assumption loan. 3 bedroom, brick house with carport, $18,500. Bill Williams Real Estate. 752-2615.</p>
        <p>CAREER OPENINGS FOR PART TIME OPERATORS.</p>
        <p>High school graduates. Variety of hours. Excellent benefits. Extra pay for weekends, holidays, nights. CAROLINA TELEPHONE Call 758-9040.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER, 3 bedroom house, den, living - dining room combination, kitchen, 1'/j baths, large utility room, electric heat, fenced back yard, in Ayden, 746-6601.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>THEONLYTHINGYOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT REAL-ESTATE is 752-6140 (Our Phone Number)</p>
        <p>ISO ACRES of Woodsiand. 2V2 miles from Greenville City Limits. Contact M.E. Porter. 756-1100 or 756-2361. (yreenville^ _</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>APARTMENT HUNTERS Look! &amp;lt;rier Rental Agency has a listing of the best in Greenville. Check with us First! 752-5700.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>LOCATEfigpi Bethel, 2 bdrm. apt., 2 bdrm. house and 2 bdrm. trailer. All reasonably priced Conveniently located. 825-1796, Bethel.</p>
        <p>205 N. JARVIS ST., 3 room furnished house, $80 per month. Contact Larr,y Mozingo 7M-5234.</p>
        <p>5 RM. air conditioned brick house, built In stove. Available Oct. 5. Call 758-3009 between 5:15 p.m. and 6:15 p.m.</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO ROOMS with connecting bath for girls. Call 752-2396 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>RESORTS</p>
        <p>(ottages For Rent</p>
        <p>ONE THREE bedroom cottage and 46' hbuse trailer at Atlantic Beach. Oft season rates. Jackson's Cleaning and Upholstery Service. Call 758-3276 day or 758-1505 nite.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WAREHOUSE SPACE FOR RENT</p>
        <p>1500 Sq. Ft. 100 percent sprinkled.</p>
        <p>Truck level loading.</p>
        <p>Easy access. Low, low insurance rate.</p>
        <p>38c per hundred.</p>
        <p>Immediate occupancy. Bostic-Sugg Furniture Co.</p>
        <p>401 West 10th St. Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>ROUTE SALES</p>
        <p>Lance, Inc., nut food products, excellent opportunity, opening due to transfer, 5 days, commission, own trucks, retirement, other benefits. Established route.</p>
        <p>SALES TRAINEE</p>
        <p>Lance, Inc. learn Snack food business with leader, car necessary, salary, mileage, lunch, all benefits. Send Resume to Lance, Inc. 533 Kings Grant Rd., Virginia Beach, Va.</p>
        <p>M&amp;amp;M MOTOR CO. 4th &amp;amp; Cotanche Sts. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>752-4616</p>
        <p>'70 Ford LTD, brown with black vinyl top, fully loadad, factory air conditioning, 2 dr. hdtp.</p>
        <p>$3595</p>
        <p>'70 Olds., Cutlass, whita with black vinyl top, pOwtr stoaring and brakas, 2 dr. hdtp.</p>
        <p>$3295</p>
        <p>'70 Chavrolat, Impala, 2 dr. hdtp. blua, powtr staaring and brakas, factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$3595</p>
        <p>70 Buick, Elactra 225, brown with black vinyl top, 2 dr. hdtp., fully loadad.</p>
        <p>$5295</p>
        <p>'69 Riveria, brown with black vinyl top, fully loadad, factory air conditioning, 2 dr.^M^.</p>
        <p>'69 Oldsmobila, Dalta 88, 4 dr. sad^ powar staaring and brdicas.</p>
        <p>\  $2495</p>
        <p>'69 F^mouth, rad and whita, 2 dr. hdtp., power staaring and brakas, factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$2795</p>
        <p>'68 Chevrolet, I m pa la, white with black vinyl top, power steering and brakas, factory air conditioning, 2 dr.</p>
        <p>$2195</p>
        <p>'68 Chevrolet, Impala, yellow and black, 2 dr. hdtp., power steering and brakas, factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$2095</p>
        <p>'68 Voldswagon, green.</p>
        <p>$1495</p>
        <p>'68 Mustang, green with black convertible top, powar steering.</p>
        <p>$1695</p>
        <p>'68 Pontiac, Tempest, 4 dr. hdtp., yellow and black, power steering and brakes, factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$2195</p>
        <p>'67 Pontiac, GTO, white, 2 dr. hdtp., power steering.</p>
        <p>$1595</p>
        <p>'68 Rambler, Ambassador, red, 4 dr. sedan&amp;gt;, power steering and brakes, factory air conditioning.  51595</p>
        <p>'69 Mercury, Montego, yellow, 4 dr. hdtp., power steering and brakes, factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$2495</p>
        <p>'67 Chevrolet, Impala, blue, 2 dr. hdtp., power steering.</p>
        <p>$1495</p>
        <p>67 Ford, Galaxia 500, power steering and brakes, 2 dr. hdtp., red.</p>
        <p>$1495</p>
        <p>67 Pontiac, Bonneville, red with white convertible top, 2 dr. power steering and brakes, factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>  .  $1495</p>
        <p>'67 Pontiac, Bonneville, grey with black vinyl top, power steering and brakes, factory air conditioning, 2 dr.^M^.</p>
        <p>'67 Chevelle, gold with whita top, 2 dr. hdtp., factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$1595</p>
        <p>'66 Ford, custom, blue, 4 dr.</p>
        <p>$895</p>
        <p>'66 Buick, white Le Sabre, 4 dr. power steering and brakes, air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$1495</p>
        <p>'66 Buick, Wildcat, convertible green, power steering and brakes, factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$1695</p>
        <p>'66 Volvo, grey, automatic transmission, radio.</p>
        <p>$1095</p>
        <p>'66 Buick, Electra 225, beige with black vinyl top, power steering and brakes, factory air conditioning.</p>
        <p>$1895</p>
        <p>'66  Ford,  Galaxia 500,</p>
        <p>burgundy, 4 dr. hdtp., power steering and brakas.</p>
        <p>$1295</p>
        <p>'65 Comat, white, 4 dr. automatic.</p>
        <p>$895</p>
        <p>'65 Chevy II, beige, 2 dr. hdfp.</p>
        <p>$1095</p>
        <p>'65 Olds, Vista Cruiser station wagon.</p>
        <p>$1395</p>
        <p>'64 Oldsmobifo, green with white top, power steering and brakes.</p>
        <p>$795</p>
        <p>'64 Cadillac, blue, sedan, power steering and brakas, factory air.</p>
        <p>$1095</p>
        <p>'64 Buick, stationwagon, blue.</p>
        <p>$595</p>
        <p>'64 Ford, blue, 2 dr. hdtp.</p>
        <p>$695</p>
        <p>'63 Pontiac, Lemans, rad, power steering and brakas $495</p>
        <p>'62 Buick, blua convertible.</p>
        <p>$495</p>
        <p>'61 Ford, Va-ton truck.</p>
        <p>$495</p>
        <p>We AI$o Buy U$ed Car$.</p>
        <p>Feel Free To Call On Our Friendly Sale$ Staff For Service And Information Anytime.Sails Fords Histings Sells Fords ' Hastings Sells Fords Hastings Sells Fords Hastings S&amp;gt;lls Fords Hasting Sellt Fords Hattinis Sells Fords Hastintt Sells Fords Hastings Sells Fords |</p>
        <p>U</p>
        <p>(/&amp;gt;</p>
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        <p>to</p>
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        <p>Butch Grubbs Sales Manager</p>
        <p>HASTIN6SHASIT</p>
        <p>IT HAS BEEN A TREAAENDOUS AAONTH HERE AT HASTINGS, IN FACT WE HAVE TRADED FOR SO AAANY NEW CARS, OUR USED CAR LOT IS OVERFLOWING. WE HAVE 55 EXCELLENT USED CARS READY FOR lAAAAEDIATE DELIVERY. SCHOOL HAS STARTED, SO WHY NOT BUY THAT SON OR DAUGHTER THEIR OWN CAR. COAAE SEE US AND YOU'LL KNOW THAT HASTINGSHASIT.</p>
        <p>Brownie Tripp A$$t Manager</p>
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        <p>Kenneth Nel$onHASTINGS FORD INC.  East  10th  St.  .  758-0114 Hastings Sells Fords Hastings Sells Fords  Hastings Sells Fords Hastings Sells Fords Hastings Sells Fords Hastings Sells-Fords Hasting Sells Fords Hastings.I     '  '    ..  .  III .........  Nil  .1  '  'J  ,  .  .  .    I  ^</p>
        <p>Soils Fords Hastings</p>
        <p> -   -T</p>
        <p>Sells</p>
        <pb facs="00091101_0020" />
        <p>*~The Daily Reflector,Gleenville. N. C.Hiuraday. October 1, Il7t</p>
        <p>Decision On NATO Roie is Coming</p>
        <p>By ELIZABETH WHARTON WASHINGTON (UPI) -Within the next few weeks, President Nixon must make a crucial decision on whether to reduce the size of the U.S. troop commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).</p>
        <p>It's a tough one. America's European allies are exerting powerful pressures against any cuts, while a strong bloc in Congress is demanding significant reductions.</p>
        <p>Vital to any decision is a clear assessment of Russian intention. So- American and European diplomats and military planners are busily trying to figure out just what the Russians are up to.</p>
        <p>In recent weeks they have made what appear to be a number of moves aimed at relaxing tensions in Europe. Search For Hidden Answers None of the NATO partners wants to do anything which might reverse this promising trend, but all are looking closely for hidden Russian motives.</p>
        <p>If, for example, the Russian gestures were a result of recognition of NATO determination to maintain the status quo indefinitely, any unilateral U.S. withdrawal, no matter how small, could upset the apple*^</p>
        <p>cart.</p>
        <p>If, on the other hand, the Soviet Union is prepared to undertake a genuine easing of tensions in Europe, moving from its new nonaggression pact with West Germany to even more meaningful efforts at disengagement, the number of U.S. troops stationed there would become of only secondary importance and have little or no impact on future events.</p>
        <p>Diplomatic, military and congressional experts who are attempting to ^ve the problem are under pressure from two approaching deadlines; the NATO ministerial meeting Dec. 10, at which force levels for the coming year are to be announced, and the federal budget, which must be ready for submission to Congress in early January.</p>
        <p>Planners vs Chiefs But the experts are still at odds on the question. Favoring a continuation of the status quo for at least one more year is an alignment which includes the State Department and the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Defense Department.</p>
        <p>Arguing for reductions are International Security Agency (ISA) planners in the Pentagon and a sizeable bipartisan bloc in Congress.</p>
        <p>Four Injured Here In Traffic Mishaps</p>
        <p>Four persons were rep&amp;lt;ted injured and more than $2,400 IM-operty damage caused in a series of traffic collisions here yesterday.</p>
        <p>Police reported heaviest damage resulted from a 3:58 p.m. collision on Memorial Eh'ive m Feet North of the Trade Street intersection.</p>
        <p>Cars driven by Donald R. Pentecost, 37 of Cherry Point and David Wilson Jones, 33 of Bethel collided, officers said. That collision resulted in cars driven by Bobby Lawhead, 41 of Washington and Jerome Fleming, 36 of Route 1, Ayden, colliding.</p>
        <p>Investigators, who charged Jones with failing to reduce his speed enough to avoid an accident, estimated damages at $1,000 to the Pentecost car, $80 to the Jones \;/ehicle, $90 to the Lawhead auto and $90 to the Fleming auto.</p>
        <p>Four persons were I'eported injured in an 8:51 p.m. collision</p>
        <p>at the intersection of 10th and Evans Streets involving cars driven by Chester Walter Bowen Jr., 16 of Ayden and Fanney Jane Jolly of 1008 Myrtle Avenue.</p>
        <p>Police said both drivers and one passenger in each of the cars were injured. i&amp;gt;anrage was placed at $200 to the Bowen car and $500 to the Jolly auto.</p>
        <p>Both drivers were charged with failing to stop for a stop light.</p>
        <p>Vickie Marie Tetterton, of Route 1, Bethel was charged with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a 4:40 p.m. collision at the intersection of Fifth and Reade Streets.</p>
        <p>Police reported the Tetterton vehicle collided with a car driven by Michael David Jarrell, 25 of Route 3, Greenville.</p>
        <p>Damage was estimated to be $150 to the Jarrell auto and $400 to the Tetterton car.</p>
        <p>77$</p>
        <p>Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield is prime mover and spokesman for the latter grovq). He first called in 1963 for reducing U.S. strength in NATO unless the European partners met their own group quotas.</p>
        <p>Three years later, in June, 1966, he made a major speech demanding substantial U.S. troop reductions and introduced a resolution demanding the return to the United States of all the 75,000 troops and dependents then living in France, plus an additional 10 per cent of the U.S. troops in West Germany.</p>
        <p>NATO A Symbol?</p>
        <p>His proposal stirred furious opposition in western Europe and among U.S. diplomats and military planners, and Mansfield has never tried to press it through Congress. However, he told UPI his proposal still stands.</p>
        <p>I have been holding back on it to see what the administration would do on their own, he explained.</p>
        <p>He added that conditions are looking up for troop reductions because of the recent Russo-German nonaggression treaty, and other indications that Germany is seeking an accommodation with the Communist bloc.</p>
        <p>Chairman J. William Ful-bright of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee would go even further than Mansfield has proposed. He recently described the U.S. troop contribution to NATO as a symbol, and said he sees no reason for maintaining more than 50,(X)0 American troops in Europe as a token presence.</p>
        <p>They face between 700,000 and 900,000 Warsaw Pact forces in the Communist blocs equivalent center region (East Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia), an increase from approximately 600,000 in mid-1968.</p>
        <p>Allied Status Quo</p>
        <p>Most of the increase is represented by Soviet forces moved into the region at the time of the Czechoslovakian crisis. Some, but not all, have been withdrawn. The total also includes eight Czechoslovakian divisions which could prove of dubious value to the Warsaw Pact in event of war with the West.</p>
        <p>Approximately half of the NATO total in the center region is provided by U.S. forces, now numbering approximately 310,000, most of which are in West (Germany. Likewise,. the Soviet Union provides approximately one-half of the Warsaw Pact line-up.</p>
        <p>Long-range planners in the ISA argue that political conditions have changed drastically in the 20 years or so since the force levels were settled on, but stress that there have been no corresponding changes of policy.</p>
        <p>One ISA man said the present force is far too small to fight a war, but far too large to be a mere symbol.</p>
        <p>WEATHER OUTLOOK  This is the way the nations weather shapes up for the next 30 days in terms of precipitation and temperatures, acceding to the U.S. Weather Bureau in Washington &amp;lt;AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Planners Viewp&amp;lt;dnt The ISA experts, pq[)ularly known as the Pentagons think tank, mostly agree with his view. They Teel the erig^inal force levels of NATO were formulated during an era when there  was  a  very real</p>
        <p>possibility of Soviet aggression in Europe.</p>
        <p>Cost Factor, Too</p>
        <p>The decision, thus, hinges in part on a basic estimate of whether the Soviet Union is likely to begin a conventional war in Europe. Mansfield and the ISA staff consider this so unlikely as to be unworthy of serious consideration.</p>
        <p>This faction also argues that the United States has borne a disproportionate share of NATO costs.</p>
        <p>The forces never were large enough to fight a long-term war, but were intended only to provide a respectable holing action while additional forces were'mobilized.</p>
        <p>Total NATO combat and support forces in Europes key center region (West (Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and France) range between 600,000 and 700,000, including five frYehch divisions not now under NATO control but presumably on Natos side in the event of war.</p>
        <p>NATO was devised primarily to shield western Europe from the Communist threat, they say, and if western European nations are not concerned enough to bear their fair share of the burdenmuch less help, the United States finance its sharethen it is not Up to the United States to continue to carry the load.</p>
        <p>It is difficult to fix the total cost of the U.S. share of European defense because of variable factors. It may range from $2.9 billion (which covers only the expense of maintaining U.S. personnel in Europe, the operation of the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean and maintenance of troop facilities) all the way up to a maximum of $14 billion.</p>
        <p>Looking To December</p>
        <p>The larger sum includes indirect logistic and administrative expenses for support, major procurement costs, costs of U.S. general purpose forces maintained primarily for use in a European emergency, U.S.-based support for all of the above forces, and a proportionate share of the estimated costs of training bases, other U.S.-based support forces, and the military aid program.</p>
        <p>NATO groups already are discussing the problem of cost sharing in advance of the December meeting. To keep U.S. troops in Europe, West (Germany is said now to be</p>
        <p>prepared to forego its present offset arrangements with the United States and to pay in cash if necessary. The outcome of these talks certainly will influence the U.S. decision.</p>
        <p>Japan buys 90 per cent of Alaskas exports of minerals, wood and liquified gas.</p>
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        <p>(Our Phone Number)</p>
        <p>WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH (XIMPANY</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF HEARING DOCKET NO. WU-82</p>
        <p>BEFORE THE NORTH CARQLINA UTILITIES COMMISSION</p>
        <p>jiven that Western Union</p>
        <p>igrapl th Ca</p>
        <p>authority to increase its intrastate fective in the State of North Carolina. Following is a brief description of the principal changes proposed:</p>
        <p>Notice is hereby give Telegraph Company has filed tariffs with the North Carolina Utilities Commission seeking</p>
        <p>rates e^</p>
        <p>1. An overall increase in the fees for money orders of approximately 16 percent.</p>
        <p>2. An increase in the Tel (T) ex terminal handling charge from $1.25 to $1.40 per message.</p>
        <p>3.</p>
        <p>An increase in the basic rate of the Telegram classification of messages for 15 words or less fro^m $1.70 to $2.25.</p>
        <p>4.</p>
        <p>An increase in the basic rate of the telegraphic portion of Money Order messages to coincide with the basic Telegram rate.</p>
        <p>A copy of the complete tariff filing is available in the Commission offices, Raleigh, North Carolina, which may be inspected by any interested party.</p>
        <p>The Commission has set said application for hearing in the Commission's Hearing Room, Ruffin Building, Raleigh, North Carolina, on October 13, 1970, at 10:00 A.M. at which time the Commission will hear testimony in support of or in opposition to the granting of said proposal.</p>
        <p>Protestants, or other parties having an interest in this filing, are hereby ordered to file their protests and petitions for intervention in accordance with Commission's Rules Rl-6, Rl-7, and Rl-19.</p>
        <p>Issued the 5th day of June, 1970.</p>
        <p>By Order of the Commission.</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA UTILITIES COMMISSION</p>
        <p>BY Mary Laurens Richardson ' Chief Clerk</p>
        <p>AN INVITATION TO STYLE CONSCIOUS</p>
        <p>YOUNG COUPLES</p>
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        <p>LADIES, WE HAVE THE AND AT GREAT SAVINGS TO YOU. NEVER BEFORE HAVE YOU HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE A WIG AT SUCH A LOW PRICE</p>
        <p>MGR. MRS. CAROLYN TRIPP, PHONE 758-5990 ST.Colonial Hgts. Shopping.Center OPENED Mon.-Thurs. 10-6, Fri. 10-10, Sat. 10-6</p>
        <p>100 PER CENT</p>
        <p>KANEKALON SYNTHETIC FIBER WIGS.</p>
        <p>ON A RECENT SHOPPING TRIP TO A'NUMBER OF FURNITURE FACTORIES OUR BUYERS DISCOVERED WHAT THEY FELT TO BE AN UNUSUALLY GOOD VALUE IN A VERY SMART LOOKING MEDITERRANEAN BEDROOM SUITE. THE BUYERS WERE SO IMPRESSED THAT THEY PURCHASED OVER 100 OF THESE SUITES FOR OUR RALEIGH DIVISION . . . AND AT A VERY SPECIAL REDUCTION FOR SUCH A QUANTITY. WE WOULD LIKE FOR YOU TO SEE THIS GROUP. IT IS WELL CONSTRUCTED, GOOD LINES, AND WITH A DEEP</p>
        <p>RICH FINISH.</p>
        <p>SPECIFICATIONS:</p>
        <p>TRIPLE DRESSER: A FULL 68 INCHES CHEST: 5 DRAWERS</p>
        <p>BED: ACCOMMODATES DOUBLE OR QUEEN SIZE BEDDING</p>
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        <p>I (You Would Expect To Pay $399 And Rightly So)</p>
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        <p>WEST END CIRCLE - GREEi^VILLE,  Phone 75(6-5177</p>
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