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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>Showers tonight, partly cloudy and mild Thursday.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page 2 ~ Tonrism Chmds Page 8  Nixons Pledge Page 14  Mekong Battle</p>
        <p>92ND. YEAR NO. 279</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 21, 1973  30  PAGES  2_SECTIONS' PRICE 10 CENTS</p>
        <p>Consumer Prices Continued to Climb Upward During October</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Con- m(Hith foUowmg Septembers energy crisis and higher prices government said today.  ported that the cost of living in September  and prices for</p>
        <p>sumer prices rose sharply last slowdown, owing partly to the for fud oil and gasoline, the The Department of Labor re- climbed eight-tenths of one per beef and veal declined as well,</p>
        <p>cent in October and pushed but prices for most other food</p>
        <p>Egypt,Israel Deadlock On Setting Cease-Fire Lines</p>
        <p>TablG-Bound</p>
        <p>FOWL FATETurkeys don't usually get carried away, but then Its not everyone who can boast of being an honored guest at so many Thanksgiving Day tables across the nation. Scene took place yesterday at Parsippany, N. J. turkey farm, where preparations were underway to help the nation celebrate Thursday in its accustomed style. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>'Brownouts'</p>
        <p>Alternative</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>The United Nations said today Egypt and Israel will finish their prisoner exchange on schedule, but the two nations remained deadlocked on establishing cease-fire lines along the Suez (anal.</p>
        <p>Ttie end of the prisoner airlift between Cairo and Tel Aviv will coincide with resumption of talks Thursday aimed at resolving the cease-fire line issue, the U.N. sp(^esman in Cairo said.</p>
        <p>Negotiators for the two countries will meet again Thursday on the Cairo-Suez road in an effort to resolve what has been described as the last stumbling block in implementation of the six^wint Middle East ceasefire agreement.</p>
        <p>Egypt has demanded that Israeli forces return to where they were on Oct. 22 when the first U.N. cease-fire went into effect. During fighting for two</p>
        <p>By STAN BENJAMIN , Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Interior Secretary Rogers C, B. Morton said today the eastern United States faces possible power brownouts by December because of the fuel crisis and said things could be even worse after the first of the year. ^</p>
        <p>Morton said that petroleum supplies will be some eight per cent below current consumption by the end of the year. He said the shortage could jump to 20 per cent during the first quarter of 1974, substantially higher than previous official estimates.</p>
        <p>In his energy message earlier this month. President Nixon estimated petroleum shortages might range between 10 and 17 per cent.</p>
        <p>The United States currently consumes an estimated 17 million barrels of oil daily.</p>
        <p>A deputy assistant secretary of Interior, Eric Zausner, said an increasing shortage of residual oil will leave many power plants so short of fuel, especially on the Elast Coast, that consumption of electrical power must be reduced 10 to 20 per cent.</p>
        <p>Morton said such a reduction would be "a very difficult thing.</p>
        <p>But, he said, We may be in the brownout business if we dont do it.</p>
        <p>Morton told newsmen at a briefing that shortages of residual oil will begin hurting, particularly in power plants, by</p>
        <p>early December.</p>
        <p>Shortage of distillate oils  primarily home-heating oil and diesel and jet fuel  will hit late in January and gasoline shortages may begin showing up in early or mid-February, Morton said.Got 41 Pints</p>
        <p>The Bloodmobile collected 41 pints of blood Tuesday at</p>
        <p>D. H. Conley High School, according to Pitt Blood chairman Billy Ross.</p>
        <p>The chairman said that seven persons were rejected during the visit.</p>
        <p>Noting that Tuesdays visit was the first to a Pitt County school by the Bloodmobile. Ross said that. Im pleased, considering it was our first visit. I hope that we will do better, however, at the other schools.</p>
        <p>Ross offered his appreciation to the Student Government Association at Conley for sponsoring the visit and also to school officials for making the facilities available.</p>
        <p>He also thanked the women of the Greenville Service League who went out to Conley to help with the collection activities.</p>
        <p>HEART ATTACK</p>
        <p>BUENOS AIRES-(AP)-President Juan D. Peron suffered a mild heart attack early today but was resting at home in stable condition.Bill Of Dissent Tabled</p>
        <p>A proposed resolution by the Pitt County Development Commission to reaffirm its purpose as  county-wide</p>
        <p>development and to meet in towns other than Greenville at prescribed times was tabled at a meeting last night.</p>
        <p>The resolution, of which the whereases were taken from resolutions passed by the town councils of Ayden, Bethel, Farmville, and Fountain, called for acknowledgement that the Commission is funded and supported by county taxpayers and that benefits have not been distributed equitabley, according to the Commissions secretary, Jack Lewis of Farmville, who presented the resolution. It called for disclosure of all meetings, that four a year be held outside Greenville, and that more assistance be given small towns in the county to develop resources and sites attractive to industry.</p>
        <p>There was dissention among the members as to whether the whereas, benefits have not .been distributed equitably should be left in and an effort to have the number of times meeting outside Greenville reduced to three. No action was taken, Lewis said.</p>
        <p>Prior to discussion of the resolution, officers were elected. All the incumbents were reelected by acclamation. They are Corey Stokes of Ayden, president; Dr. Joe Pou of Greenville, vice president; Norman Wooten of Ballards Crossroads, secretary; and Jack Lewis, secretary.</p>
        <p>days after that, Israeli forces expanded their positions on the western bank of the canal, completed the cutoff of the Egyptian 3rd Army and entered the city of Suez.</p>
        <p>Although Egypt has submitted a map purporting to show Israeli positions on Oct. 22, the Israeli government has claimed that the Oct. 22 lines are impossible to determine. Instead, Israel has suggested that both sides return to their respective banks of the canal and allow for a sixnnile demilitarized zone on each side.</p>
        <p>The semiofficial Clairo newspaper A1 Ahram said the Egyptian government irrevocably rejected the Israeli proposal Monday, but said the Thursday session would be decisive.</p>
        <p>Israeli Premier Golda Meirs cabinet met for 4Mt hours Tuesday night in Jerusalem debating strategy in the negotiations. The government negotiator to the Israeli-Egyptian talks, Maj. Gen. Aharon Yariv, briefed the cabinet, but details were not disclosed.</p>
        <p>Observers said the positioning of the Israeli-Egyptian cease-fire line may determine</p>
        <p>'No Evicting' High School</p>
        <p>Israels future bargaining strength and could place her forces on the western side of the canal in jeopardy.</p>
        <p>If Israel unilaterally returned to what has been described by Egypt as the Oct. 22 line, it would free the encircled Egyptian 3rd Army and, according to some Israelis, make harder an eventual disengagement of forces on the Israeli-Egyptian front.</p>
        <p>The Israeli-Egyptian prisoner of war exchanges continued today as 36 more Israeli POWs retiumed home aboard a Red Cross plane. As has been the practice all along. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan met the POWs upon their arrival in Tel Aviv.</p>
        <p>Dayan was quoted on the Israeli state radio as saying he hoped all 247 Israelis captured by Egypt would be returned this week. Israel said more -than 7,000 of 8,221 Egyptian POWs have been sent to Cairo.</p>
        <p>consumer prices up 7.9 per cent above a year ago. It marked the largest jump in any 12-month period since the 8.7 per cent inflationary rate recorded in the June 1950-51 period at the start of the Korean War.</p>
        <p>In addition to sharply higher prices for gasoline and fuel oil, rising costs for clothing, mortgage interest rates and health insurance contributed significantly to the October rise in prices, the government said.</p>
        <p>A decline in meat and poultry prices was more than offset in the statistics by large increases in prices of restaurant meals and some food and some grocery store prices.</p>
        <p>Food prices rose one-tenth of a per cent following a drop of seven-tenths of a per cent in September and a record 6 per cent jump in August. The increase was larger on a seasonally adjusted basis, increasing five-tenths of a per cent compared with a drop of one-tenth of a per cent on that basis on September.</p>
        <p>Grocery prices actually declined three-tenths of a per cent but the drop was offset by a 1.8 per cent jump in food purchased away from home, including restaurant meals and snacks.</p>
        <p>Poultry, egg and pork prices fell sharply againas they did</p>
        <p>sold in grocery stores went up, the government said.</p>
        <p>Prices for nonfood commodities jumped nine-tenths of one per cent, sharpest this year and the biggest jump since a one per cent increase in October 1970. Seasonally adjusted, the increase was five-tenths of a per cent. Services, including rents, mortgage payments and medic^ fees rose l.l per cent, an increase not equaled since March 1970.</p>
        <p>The over-all rise in living costs last month followed a three-tenths of a per cent rise in September and the nearrecord jump of 1.8 per cent in August after the lifting of the governments price freeze.</p>
        <p>Although food price increases have moderated, the price spurt in ^onfood commodities and services appears to reflect an economy still gripped in inflation.</p>
        <p>The consumer price index in October moved up to 136.6, meaning that it cost consumers $13.66 to purchase a variety of goods that cost $10 in the 1967 base period.</p>
        <p>The Labor Department also reported that real spendable earnings of American workers, which is the take-home pay after taxes, fell six-tenths of a per cent in October and was 3.3 per cent below a year ago.</p>
        <p>ECTJ Chancellor Leo Jenkins said today the University has no intention of evicting Rose High from using Ficklen Stadium for its football games.</p>
        <p>We have no intention of evicting Rose High from Ficklen Stadium, Jenkins asserted. They can play there as long as they want. We made a pledge to the people who contributed to build Ficklen Stadium and we have no intention of breaking that pledge.</p>
        <p>Jenkins statement came after reports from the Greenville School Board meeting Monday night indicating the University is bringing pressure to prevent Rose High from using the stadium for its home football games.</p>
        <p>Jenkins said in the years Rose High has used Ficklen Stadium, they have always taken care of it, seen that it was cleaned after the games, and we hae been happy for them to use^ij.</p>
        <p>If the Greenville Schools do decide to build their own football facilities, such as has been done for county high schools, Jenkins said, We shall be very happy to cooperate with the city in getting a stadium for high school football. In the meantime we want them to feel free to use Ficklen and we will contimie the present policy.</p>
        <p>Plans for enlarging Ficklen, Jenkins said may have a bearing on the high schools desire for its own facilities more in keeping with the high schools needs than a much larger university stadium would be.</p>
        <p>Increased Leaf Acreage Sees Strong OppositionPower Outage Snarls Spokane</p>
        <p>SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - A 23-minute power outage during rush hour snarled traffic in the downtown area and blacked out many office buildings. ^</p>
        <p>Fire officials said the outage hit at 4:49 p.m. PST Tuesday when an electrical fuse malfunctioned, causing an explosion in a utility tunnel between the multistory Lincoln Building and J. C. Penney Store.</p>
        <p>Traffic signals didnt function during the outage, and traffic jams developed at intersections.</p>
        <p>Though office lights went out, forcmg homebound workers to leave their buildings by the light of matches and flaming rolls of newspaper.Tax Forms Said To Be 'Easier'</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Improved income tax forms to make filing easier and faster have been announced by Internal Revenue Commissioner Donald C. Alexander.</p>
        <p>And, Alexander urged employers Tuesday to distribute W2 withholding statements as early as possible to enable employes to file early.</p>
        <p>Taxpayers who file for refunds in January usually receive them within four to five weeks, while persons filing later may have to wait up to eight weeks because of the greater volume of returns being processed, Alexander said.</p>
        <p>He noted that at any rate W2 forms generally must be distributed by Jan. 31.</p>
        <p>BANK ROBBED</p>
        <p>HERTFORD, N.C.(AP)-The Peoples Bank of Hertford was robbed this morning and four suspects were apprehended a short time later, the Perquimans County Sheriffs Department said.</p>
        <p>FLORENCE, S.C. (AP)Any increase in 1974 flue cured tobacco acreage has drawn sharp opposition at a U. S. Hcmse Agriculture subcommittee hearing.</p>
        <p>E. D. Lewis, sales supervisor for the Mullins tobacco market, told the committee at a hearing Tuesday that Palmetto state growers this year produced 110 per cent of the 1972 crop for 102 per cent of the 1972 prices.</p>
        <p>Testimony was that tobacco companies had failed to provide an adequate market for sale of the increased crop.</p>
        <p>The acreage was increaaea lo per cent for the IVn season, when South Carolina leaf farms produced 134 million pounds of flue cured tobacco for the auction markets.</p>
        <p>Several farmers told the committee, which held a similar hearing Monday at Lumberton, N.C., that they had been unable to sell at their area markets because of a lack of sales time. They said they were forced to haul their leaf long distances, at substantial cost, in order to sell it.</p>
        <p>Rep. Walter Jones, D-N.C., chairman, said after the hear</p>
        <p>ing the commtUee was drafting a letter asking the Secretary of Agriculture opposing any increase in tobacco acreage, on the grounds it isnt needed and no strong matket for additional leaf exists.</p>
        <p>While no formal request for increased 1974 acreage from anyone was cited, the committee was told that inquires about an increase had been made to the Industrywide Flue-Cured Tobacco Marketing Committee.</p>
        <p>Reps. Ed Young, R-S.C., and Charles Rose, D-N.C., arranged the hearings.</p>
        <p>N.C. Industries Decide Priorities 'Acceptable'</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)Spokesmen for North Carolina industries agreed Tuesday they could cooperate with a priority system for natural gas supplies this winter but virtually all asked that they be given as much fuel as possible.</p>
        <p>Tlie industrial representatives wre among witnesses appearing before the State Utilities Ckimmiraion, which will decide in the near future what priorities will be established.</p>
        <p>Transcontinental Pipeline Co., major supplier for the states gas companies, has indicated it will cut back North Carolinas natural gas alloca</p>
        <p>tion by about 16 per cent.</p>
        <p>We're all going to suffer this winter, but lets suffer equitably, said Thomas Stoddar, an attorney for a Morganton manufacturing company.</p>
        <p>Charles R. Jonas of Lincoln-ton, a former congressman representing six western North Carolina textile mills, said the talk about priorities was not dealing with only profits. Were facing such a catastrop-ich crisis that we should thinking about humans.</p>
        <p>If these plants go down, who can pay the doctor; Who can, pay the bill to heat homes? Who can pay the grocery bill?</p>
        <p>he asked.</p>
        <p>This proceeding may well determine life or death for the brick industry ip this state, said Edward Grenier, representative of the Brick Association of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Grenier said people deserve to be warn in their homes, but they need brick to be in those homes.</p>
        <p>The industries urged the commission to come up with a plan that would consider over-all impact on a community and related industries if a plant closed because of a fuel shortage.Pitt Hospital Trustees Told Fuel Prospect Remains 'Precarious'</p>
        <p>By CAROL TYER Reflector SUff Writer The hospital is in a precarious position concerning fuel for its steam-powered opoations and for beating, called a by-product of the other operations, Pitt Memorial Hospital Trustees were told last night.</p>
        <p>Assistant Administrator fw Financial Affairs Buck Sit-tersmi said from 50 to 60 pounds of steam are needed fw autoclaves cooking and other uses throughout the hos{rital, riiile it would take only about eight pounds to heat the building. This years allocation of oil, they wo told, has to be based on 1972 purchases1972, a year with a mild winter when hardly any oil was used because gas</p>
        <p>service was seldom in-terrrupted.</p>
        <p>Several things are pending, he said: a court wder is now keeping the Transco Company frwn cutting off natural gass to interruptible custcnners, but the courts will decide whether this can be done. The hosfntal has asked the Department of Interior f(Mr an adjustmoit of its oil allocation but has had no rqily yet In a bearing in Ralei^ yesterday, the N.C. Hospital Association attorney asked that hospitals be made an exception by the gas suppliers, once their oil supplies are depleted, something that would only take a matter of days in Pitt</p>
        <p>Memorials case.</p>
        <p>Board Chairman Ed</p>
        <p>Wairen said the executive committee has decided to go on with plans to build the new hospital, despite bids coming in some $1,777,000 higher than was anticipated. It is hoped</p>
        <p>that n^otiations with the contractors, additional gifts, possible assistance from the state for the Rehabilitation Center and other avenues will 9 open the way. Also, certain</p>
        <p>systems and embellidiments may have to be cut to save money.</p>
        <p>Chairman Warren called attention to the long hours the hosfHtal administration spent</p>
        <p>on the new hospital project, especially in the face of the latest dilemma. He also spoke of the enthusiastic work oi the hospital gifts committee, headed by Harry</p>
        <p>Leslie, in lining up memorial and other gifts to benefit users of the new hospital.</p>
        <p>Administrator Richardson reported that the net charge per patient day for the</p>
        <p>hospital has gone up only $1.50 in the past year, a much smaller percentage than the cost of living. The average price per patient day is now $76.84, he said.</p>
        <p>Wintervllle $220,000 Bond Issue Given Approval</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE  The North Carolina Local Government Commission yesterday gave the Town of Winterville permission to issue $220,000 in bonds  subject to the ai^uroval residents in a referoHhim  fw construction (rf a 500,000 water storage tank and a</p>
        <p>1,000 gallon-per-minute deep weU.</p>
        <p>Mayor Walter Dail termed the half^iUion gallon water storage tank and deep well an urgent need.</p>
        <p>Dail said the new water facilities are a tmut fcM* us, and emphasized, *T h(^ t^ people will vote for the thing.</p>
        <p>According to the mayor we are [sroceeding with the</p>
        <p>paper work now, and the bond electicH) is expected to be held as soon after January 5 as possible. He e^^lained, we have a OO^lay hold from the clearing house in Raleigh. Our application went in November 5 and the hold will be up Jamiary 5.</p>
        <p>Dail said the proposed</p>
        <p>500.000 water Mmage tank</p>
        <p>and deep well will be in addition to the 75,000 gallon heading tank and three wells being used at the present time.</p>
        <p>The present 75,000 tank was cmistructed in the late 1930s accOTding to the mayor. That tank is supi^ied by a 250-per minure well. We ive two stand-by wells, a</p>
        <p>500-galIon per minute well and another 200-gallon per minute stand-by, he said. All were put into service the other night. Dail explained, referring to a Friday night fire which destroyed a large building supply firm in Winterville.</p>
        <p>Firemen were hampered in their attack on the blaze when the water supply in Win-</p>
        <p>V    F</p>
        <p>tervilles storage tank was depleted. The water gave out Dail expalined.</p>
        <p>According to Dail, well only sell bonds for what is needed...possibly $140,000 to $150,000. Grants wiU make up the difference, he explained, saying that grants are expected to be forthcoming soon from three w four sources.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0002" />
        <p>\</p>
        <p>TW D8y Refkctor, GreeaviUe. N.C.We&amp;lt;hiMday, November 21, 1973</p>
        <p>Warn OfJChaos' In N,C, Travel, Tourism Industry</p>
        <p>By RICK SCOTT Associated Press Writer A sevm gasoline rationing program ch* a critical shortage could send Nih Carolinas billion dollar travel and tourism industry into chaos, industry leaders say.</p>
        <p>The industry is preparing to fight for its life.</p>
        <p>Without adequate gasoline to opo'ate their cars, truchs, boats and recreational vehicles, millions of fredy-spending tourists would be unable to reach the states beach^, mountains, ski restorts, lakes, historical sites and cami^rounds.</p>
        <p>Tourism is North Carolinas third largest industry, ranking</p>
        <p>behind only textiles and tobacco, according to Jim Hastings, director of the state's Division of Travel and Promotion.</p>
        <p>Hastings, in an interview this week, noted that many proposed steps for conserving gasoline have citered on the elimination of so-called non-essential travel, such as Sun-</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>day driving, wedcend boating and camping trips and, possibly, vacation driving.</p>
        <p>No one would be able to travel much, for example, on 10 or 15 gallons of gasoline a week.</p>
        <p>We dont consider leisure travel to be non-essential, Hastings said. It is essential to economic, mental, physical</p>
        <p>and psychological well-being of our state and our lives.</p>
        <p>Before we eliminate this so-called leisure travel, Hastings said, we will have to look at the ramifications.</p>
        <p>The elimination, or strict curtailment of leisure travel. Would not just affect the short weekend trips. It would affect the entire economy of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Your going to be putting people out of work if regulations are imposed for non-es-sentiaT driving, Hastings said.</p>
        <p>Hastings could not estimate the number of North Carolinans directly or indirectly involved in the states tourism industry, which grossed about $927 million in 1972 and is expected to go over $1 billion this year.</p>
        <p>'Thousands in North Carolina are dependent on tourism for a livelihood, including th(e in amusements, motels and hotels, service stations and restaurants. These establishments in turn employ thousands of other workers  attendants, janitors, clerks and maids.</p>
        <p>Art Flynn, a Greensboro motel operator and president of the Travel Council of North Carolina, said, From what Ive read so far, it appears that the travel and tourism industry</p>
        <p>may be sacrificed to keep oth* industries going.</p>
        <p>Flynn noted reports that some other industries, such as textiles, may get priority mi available fuel supplies. This would keep textile workers on the job.</p>
        <p>Some of the things being talked about would be extremely drastic to our tourism industry, Flynn said.</p>
        <p>Flynn and Hastings believe some leisure travel is essential.</p>
        <p>There has to be some outlet for relaxation of the people, Flynn said. Otherwise, we would have a psychological effect that would be extremely damaging to the morale of the whole country.</p>
        <p>Hastings said a certain amount of travel and recreation is necessary to maintain the mental health of most people. You just cant tell people they cant go anywhere. You cant make them work all the time and tell them they cant relax at the mountains or beach occasionally.</p>
        <p>Speculation about gas rationing, is very frightening to operators of the states 1,300 motels and hotels, according to Mrs. Eleanor Upton, executive director of the North Carolina Innkeepers Association.</p>
        <p>, If theres no gasoline, we wont get tourists, she added. Nobody wiU.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Upton said several resort area motels and hotels have already reported cancellations of some gatherings, especially state govemmit meetings.</p>
        <p>North Carolinas Outer Banks area and beaches attract more than two million visitors annually. Aycock Brown, manager of the Dare County Tourist Bureau at Manteo, said a shortag^e of gasoline, or rationing, could s^erely hurt the areas tourism business.</p>
        <p>If we get down to rationing, he said, wed certainly be catering to people who live close by. I doubt Id drive from Charlotte to over here if I only got 10 or 15 gallons of gas a week.</p>
        <p>Dwight Crater of Beech Mountain, a mountain resort and ski development in western North Carolina, said he isnt worried as much about a gasoline shortage as he is about the rising price of gas and lower speed limits.</p>
        <p>Were trying to promote longer stays and package plans rather than day trips to ski, Crater said.v^e said Beech Mountain has already talked</p>
        <p>with several bus lines about charter service from major cities to the resort. He said the bus lines were confident they would have adequate fuel supplies to operate such charter services.</p>
        <p>Most of all, however, Crater is concerned that a severe fuel shortage might cause a general economic recession that would be bad for all businesses.</p>
        <p>Hastings said the Division of Travel and Promotion is prepared to lobby intensively against legislation that could cripple the tourism industry.</p>
        <p>We going to try to show people and the legislature that travel is not just a pleasure, that it provides jobs for thousands and is an essential part of North Carolinas economy, he said.</p>
        <p>A CHRISTMAS SEAL COFFEE. . .recenUy held in Raleigh was attended by 150 professional and volunteer workers for state and local lung associations. Dr. Joe Pou of Greenville (left). Chairman of the Eastern Lung AssociaUon 1973 Christmas Seal Campaign, is shown here with Miss Heather Walker, the current Miss North</p>
        <p>Carolina, First Lady Mrs. James Holshouser and Hugh Morton, State Campaign Chairman. Also attending from Greenville were Lorey White, Executive Director of the Greenville office, and Bob Pickett, a board member of the association.</p>
        <p>Republican To Run For Judge</p>
        <p>Skylab Crew Preparing For Space Walk Chores</p>
        <p>SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)  Skylab 3s astronauts are concentrating on medical tests and preparations for a Thanksgiving day space walk.</p>
        <p>With their orbiting home shipshape, Gerald P. Carr, William R. Pogue and EMward G. Gibson were able to settle down</p>
        <p>Shorter Forms In Accident Cases</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)The long blue forms which North Carolina motorists must fill out for more serious accidents will be replaced Jan. 1 by short white ones. New data processing equipment will make it easier to fill in the forms.</p>
        <p>They are required in acci-dits resulting in $200 or more total damage...or in injury or death.</p>
        <p>to research work that will occupy them the remainder of their record space journey.</p>
        <p>They were in the sixth day of the planned 84-day mission. They spent the first days setting up housekeeping in the lab and were able to start some medical checks Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Tests on earlier flights showed that zero gravity causes deconditioning of the muscles, including the heart. Without the constant tug of gravity, the heart adapts to a lighter work load as it pumps blood. Muscles in the leg lose several centimeters of tissue.</p>
        <p>Doctors said astronauts on the 59-day Skylab 2 mission showed a decline in the manufacture of red blood cells and changes in mineral balance and in the muscles of the back.</p>
        <p>A thorough understanding of these changes is necessary if man is to embark on long voyages to other planets.</p>
        <p>Pogue and Gibson are to step outside the orbiting station on Thanksgiving day to change film in a battery of solar telescopes, set up several scientific experiments and repair a stuck antenna on an earth resources package.</p>
        <p>The astronauts will begin scientific research Friday, when they are to take the first photographs of the comet Kohoutek as it moves toward the sun from outer space. At that time, the comet will be about 97 million miles from the sun and 142 million miles from earth.</p>
        <p>CANDY GOES TO WAR NEW YORK (UPI) - The candy bar didnt come into its own until World War I when manufacturing methods were revolutionized and candy bars were mass produced for military use.</p>
        <p>New Industries and Businesses Coming To Greenviiie</p>
        <p>Will Require</p>
        <p>Food Service Handlers</p>
        <p>Pftt Technical Institute, in cooperation with East Carolina University, offers for the</p>
        <p>Winter Quarter-Beginning Nov. 27,1973</p>
        <p>Food Service Management</p>
        <p>Be ready for employment in good paying jobs. Veterans Benefits Available</p>
        <p>For further information Contact:</p>
        <p>The Student Personnel Office Pitt Technical Institute P.O. Drawer 7007 Highway 11 South</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone 756*3130</p>
        <p>Hunt Father In Shootings</p>
        <p>LEXINGTON, N.C. (AP)-Gary Bodenheimer, 19, was reported in serious condition today while police hunted his father, who allegedly shot the youths girlfriend and his mother to death early Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem said the young man was in the intensive care section after surgery for gunshot wounds.</p>
        <p>Sheriff Fred Sink of Davidson County said the father, Grady A. Bodenheimer, 49, had been charged with two counts of murder in the slayings of his wife and the sons girlfriend. They were Mrs. Nonnie W. Bodenheimer, in her 40s, and Deborah Lynn Tuttle, 18, of Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p>The motive was not learned. The sheriffs office said a .22 caliber pistol was used.</p>
        <p>The sheriff said his information was that the three victims were watching television in the sons room at the Bodenheimer home in northern Davidson County when Bodenheimer came in and shot them.</p>
        <p>Bodenheimer is a part-time farmer. His home stands in the middle of the Motsinger Heights development which has built up around it.</p>
        <p>Thanksgiving Eve Service</p>
        <p>An interdenominational Thanksgiving Eve service will be held tonight at 7:30 at the new Memorial Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>The church is located at 1510 S. E. Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>The public is invited to attend.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)The first partisan election is shaping up for a seat on North Carolinas Court of Appeals. ^</p>
        <p>Democrat Edward B. (Hark of Elizabethtown, resident Superior Court judge of the 13th District, filed Tuesday for the appellate court seat formerly held by Judge Raymond B. Mallard.</p>
        <p>A Republican, Charlotte attorney James H. Carson has just assumed Mallards seat under a gubernatorial appointment. Carson has indicated he will seek election to the court next year.</p>
        <p>Flowers Has</p>
        <p>$15,000 Fine</p>
        <p>WILSON, N. C. (AP)-Percy Flowers, 70-year-old Johnston County merchant-farmer who was once described by a judge as one of the largest liquor manipulators in North Carolina, has been sentenced for federal income tax violations.</p>
        <p>U. S. District Court Judge John D. Larkins accepted a plea of no contest from Flowers and sentenced him Monday to three years probation and fined him $15,000 for wilfully and knowingly filing false and fraudulent income tax returns for 1965, 1966 and 1967.</p>
        <p>A special agent of the Internal Revenue Service testified that Flowers had understated his gross income during the three-year period by $96,314.</p>
        <p>Flowers also was directed to pay all taxes and penalties owed the government for the years involved.</p>
        <p>Flowers served 20 months in prison in the late 1950s for contempt of federal court and for state liquor law violations and assault.</p>
        <p>Superior Court W. H. S. Bur-gwyn described Flowers in 1958 as one of the largest liquor manipulators in North Carolina. At least that is his general reputation.</p>
        <p>If both run, it would be the first time a partisan contest has developed since the court was created in 1967,</p>
        <p>Superior Court Judge Robert M. Martin of High Point also filed Tuesday for a seat on the court.</p>
        <p>Martin, who has held a special judgeship since 1967 by governors appointments, filed as a Democrat for the seat to be vacated by Appeals Court Judge Hugh B, Campbell. Campbell said earlier this week he would retire when his term ends.</p>
        <p>All but two judges, Earl W. Vaughn and Robert A. Hedrick, expire next year, are holding terms that expire in 1974.</p>
        <p>Vaughn filed last Friday as a candidate for the Supreme Court seat to be vacated by Associate Justice Carlisle W. Higgins, who is retiring under a mandatory age requirement. Hedrick reportedly is considering a race for the Supreme Court.</p>
        <p>Walter E. Brock, chief judge of the appellate court, and Judges Naomi Morris and Frank M. Parker have indicated they will seek another term. Judge James M. Baley of Asheville, a Republican appointee, has indicated he will seek another term or will try for election to the Supreme Court.</p>
        <p>Shortage In Antifreeze</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The petroleum shortage that is limiting supplies of gasoline and oil also is reducing the availability of antifreeze as winter approaches.</p>
        <p>Antifreeze manufacturers say the situation isnt likely to reach the point where their product cant be found. But they say some motorists may have to shop around with the selection narrowed to a few big-name brands.</p>
        <p>Antifreeze is derived from ethylene glycol, a petroleum product also used in making synthetic fibers such as polyester. With demand for synthetic fibers growing and petroleum supplies shrinking, antifreeze manufacturers say they are finding it difficult to obtain enough ethylene glycol.</p>
        <p>The major manufacturers with their own branded merchandise have their own position to protect, so they are reducing supplies to private label manufacturers, said J. F. C!hase, a sales promotion manager for Dow (Chemical Co.</p>
        <p>So the consumer may have to buy brand merchandise this winteror maybe walk a little further to get his supply,</p>
        <p>Appointed To Policy Group</p>
        <p>Herman G, Moeller, Associate Professor, Department of Social Work and Correctional Services, School of Allied Health and Social Professions, East Carolina University, has been appointed Co-Chairman of the Committee on Policy Positions of the American Correctional Association.</p>
        <p>The committee has the responsbility for the preparation of statements of policy which will reflect the position of the Association on major issues in the area of prevention and control of crime. Statements prepared by the committee will be submitted to the Board of Directors for review and approval prior to their presentation to the 10,000 members of the Association. Upon adoption they will be given both nationwide and international distribution.</p>
        <p>Moeller, retired Deputy Director of the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, is the coordinator of Correctional Services in the Department of Social Work and Correctional Services. The program is designed to prepare students for professional work in the Criminal justice field.</p>
        <p>Fire kills some 12,600 persons in the United States and Canada each year and about a fourth of these victims are children.</p>
        <p>Revival Services BEST CHAPEL FWB CHURCH</p>
        <p>Located in the Hills Dale Comm.</p>
        <p>(Behind Pitt-Greenville Airport</p>
        <p>November 19-23</p>
        <p>Evangelist of the week</p>
        <p>Elder J.E. Vance</p>
        <p>Public Cordially invited Rev. Matthew Best, Jr.</p>
        <p>God is Real!</p>
        <p>OPEN ALL DAY THANKSGIVING</p>
        <p>Last Order Date, Thursday, Nov. 22nd for FREE IMPRINTING OF e j-nn</p>
        <p>BIBLES</p>
        <p>UP</p>
        <p>FREE IMPRINTING OF</p>
        <p>CHRISTMAS CARDS</p>
        <p>BETTER</p>
        <p>HURRY!</p>
        <p>Central News &amp;amp; Card Shop</p>
        <p>open Daily Including Sundays, Until 10 P.M.</p>
        <p>m Evans St. DOWNTOWN ONEENVILLE</p>
        <p>W*</p>
        <p> B</p>
        <p>VERNON PARK MALL KINSTON</p>
        <p>For America our homeland. Freedom, Family and friends! Our daily bread... the fruits of our labor.</p>
        <p>LeFs give thanks for all of this. .. and for the people who founded it: the stark courage of the Pilgrims built us this great nation.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>'if-.-</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0003" />
        <p>Sons A Wrong ^ . Vumber-^Mother Tells Him So</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>S 1f73 r CMcaw TrtkMM-N. Y. News SyML, Ik.</p>
        <p>Men Glitter In Jewelry</p>
        <p>SPARKLE-Mens jewelry runs the gamut from the large watch with black dial, silver rim and wide suede strap to the two-tone gold and silver earring, left. Sterling silver bracelets for men, right center, and women feature silver threads. The</p>
        <p>womans dainty oval looped bracelet is from Wells, Inc. A good luck symbol, right, in sterling silver on a silver chain is another fashion accessory. Mens jewelry is from Christian Dior by Destino.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: My 15-year-old son has built a bedroom in our garage. He asked me if he could install an extension phone out there as a friend of his had done. I toid him I thought it was illegal and he should not do it.</p>
        <p>I returned from a brief trip to find that he installed a phone in his room. [He bought the instrument from a radio shack store.] </p>
        <p>Also, he has two road signs mounted on his wall. He said one was given to him by a friend, and the other he picked out of a gutter after having seen it there for a year. [I believe him.]</p>
        <p>I thii* the phone should be removed from our sons room unless he is willing to have it installed by the phone company and pay monthly charges. I also believe the road signs ^uld be takwi down, since they were county property. Wbat do you think?  A MOTHER</p>
        <p>DEAR MOTHER: The same principle is involved in</p>
        <p>Secretaries Pulling Down Salaries Abroad</p>
        <p>both instances. By-passing the phone company is taking a free ride on their monthly service, even tho the instrument was purchased elsewhere. Kee^g road signs that belong to the county is also dishonest. Im with you, mother.</p>
        <p>Top</p>
        <p>EDITOR'S NOTE  It seems there are more bosses than secretaries in Europe these days, and as a result the decorative birds are pulling down top salaries plus a wide range of fringe benefits. One company attempting to lure a secretary into its firm promised her; "Gin before 11."</p>
        <p>By JULIE FLINT Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP) - Memo to the boss: Your secretary wants more than sweet-talk  and shes probably going to get it.</p>
        <p>Across most of Europe, even in Russia, secretaries and typists are in short supply. In some countries, there are as many as 20 employers chasing every secretary, promising fat pay checks and free meals.</p>
        <p>London ranks high on the list of most favored nations for aspiring assistants. Here you can expect an annual increment topping 10 per cent and fringe benefits ranging from free vacations and zippy autos to clothes allowances and even trading stamps. .</p>
        <p>Two free tickets for weekends abroad, lop rates and super parties, promised one firm. Another offered free red mini for lucky girl who joins our go-ahead young team, and a third suggested: Gin before 11?</p>
        <p>If the British fog gets you down, try Frankfurt or Amsterdam, then Switzerland or the Scandinavian countries.</p>
        <p>But steer clear of Rome, where secretaries are chased only after office hours.</p>
        <p>A survey published by a leading British employment agency revealed recently that there are 10 jobs for every London secretary. An inexprienced typist, the survey showed, can command a weekly wage of 27 pounds  $67.50  and her more experienced colleague upwards of 30 pounds  $75.00.</p>
        <p>These are considered good salaries in a country where the average male wage is 40 pounds  $100.00.</p>
        <p>In Amsterdam, school leavers can hope to take home $640.00 a month as secretaries. And in Frankfurt, where there are 1,-000 secretarial vacancies, beginners can earn 1,400 marks  $560.00 - monthly and experienced secretaries 2,500 marks  $1,000.</p>
        <p>Fringe benefits, however, are governed by law and the line is drawn at subsidized meals and</p>
        <p>free soft drinks.</p>
        <p>In Scandinavia the secretary shortage appears to be easing slightly, except in the middle bracket where monthly salaries hover around the $700.00 mark.</p>
        <p>There is a good selection of top or over-qualified secretaries demanding salaries too expensive for most firms, said the head of an Oslo firm.</p>
        <p>There are also lots of beginners. But they are hard to find in between.</p>
        <p>In Paris demand exceeds supply only at the very bottom of the ladder.</p>
        <p>A young girl fresh out of school who starts as a typist can get an average salary of between 237 francs  $59.00 </p>
        <p>,a'nd 262 francs  $65.00  a</p>
        <p>week, said employement GlVeS PrOOTaiTI agent Georges Albaret. Natu-  </p>
        <p>there are only seven in the country.</p>
        <p>We probably lose $10 to $20 billion a year in gross national product because of a simple thing like not having a secretary, a Soviet economist told a Western newsman recently.</p>
        <p>For example, a visiting American oil executive tried in vain for an entire day to get an appointment with a Soviet official he had come 7,000 miles to see.</p>
        <p>The reason was simple, he moaned. There was nobody to answer the phone.</p>
        <p>DEAR READERS: If you are not aecustomed to saying grace before each meal, but would like to offer a thanksgiving prayer at your table on this Thanksgiving Day, mine Is yours for the reading. And here it is:</p>
        <p>O, heavenly Father,</p>
        <p>We thank Thee for the food And remember the hungry.</p>
        <p>We thank Thee for health And remember the sick.</p>
        <p>We thank Thee for friends And remember the friendless We thank Thee for freedom And remember the enslaved.</p>
        <p>May these remembrances stir us to service That Thy gifts to us may be used for others.</p>
        <p>[Have a wonderful Thanksgiving, Love, Abby]</p>
        <p>Amen.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Spangler</p>
        <p>rally if she is pretty and can do a little more than type she will get more.</p>
        <p>Belgium, as a bilingual nation, has special problems, as Robert ^Gints of the National Employment Office explained: Gk)od companies are just plain crying for professional secretaries. Its very difficult to get a fully bilingual, fully competent secretary. Too many V them type too slowly or just lack the general efficiency good training can give them.</p>
        <p>For the skilled, however, the returns are good, Gints said, with 18,000 francs  $500.00  a month an easy target.</p>
        <p>Odd man out in Europe is Italy, where not even the prettiest signorina can call her own tune. Here there are 10 to 20 applicants for every secretarial vacancy, and even the lucky ones often earn less less than supermarket clerks.</p>
        <p>The butterfly of the business world, the temporary typist, or temp, has not yet reached the shores of Italy; but she is a common phenomenon in other European countries. She earns at least 10 per cent rriflre.4^an permanent secretaries. \ Feelings on the temp were summed up by an Oslo emply er: Good, but very expensive.</p>
        <p>There are no temps in the Soviet Union  and precious few secretaries either. In a lengthy article earlier this year, the Communist party daily Pravda said the shortage of secretaries was a matter of state importance.</p>
        <p>Pravda demanded that the nation increase the number of secretarial schools. At present</p>
        <p>Mrs. Evelyn Spangler presented the program at the meeting of the Sweet Gum Grove Extension Homemakers held Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Sam Alexander.</p>
        <p>Her program topic was en-tied Self-Protection.</p>
        <p>During the business session. Operation Santa Claus was discusses and members decided to remember patients at Cherry Hospital.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Alexander was selected as outstanding club member of the year. Mrs. Eric Whichard, clothing leader, reported on fashions. The devotional was given by Mrs. Mayo J. Rogers.</p>
        <p>Refreshments were served by Mrs. Alexander.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I work in a hospital, and I wish you would please devote a little space in your column to the way people should conduct themselves when visiting a patient in the hospital. Recently a patient was admitted with a serious heart conditicm.  ^</p>
        <p>The patients sister entered, hysterical and in tears. She threw herself upon the patient [who was wired and bottled on both sides] and screamed: Thank God youre alive. I thought youd be dead by the time I got back!"</p>
        <p>Then the patients husband said to his ailing wife: When I told So and So you were rushed to the hospital with a heart attack, she said: Shell never make it!  This kind of talk at the bedside ol a patieni la uca^aUed for, and detrimental to the welfare of the patient. Please ask people to think before they speak, even tho they are emotionally upset.  N. Y. POST READER</p>
        <p>DEAR READER: Your letter may serve a useful purpose, but common sense is such an uncommon commodity, some fools will continue to babble, regardless.</p>
        <p>CONFIDENTIAL TO SAME FIGHT THIS YEAR IN ATLANTIC, lA.: Settle it by going to your mothers for llianksgiving, and to his mothers for Christmas.</p>
        <p>Problems? Youll feel better if yon get tt off your ehest For a personal reply, write to ABBY: Box No. 6I7M, L. A., Calif. 90069. Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope, please.</p>
        <p>Hate to write letters? Send $1 to AUgall Van Bumi, U2 Lasky Dr., Beverly Hills, CaL 90212 for Abbys booklet. '*Bow to Write Utters for AU Occasloas."</p>
        <p>We Will Be</p>
        <p>CLOSED</p>
        <p>lliursday, November 22</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>Friday, November 23</p>
        <p>QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.</p>
        <p>P. O. BOX 4B5 ^ GF^EENVILLE, N. C. 27834 919-759-3454</p>
        <p>Rq&amp;gt;resentacive of</p>
        <p>Here comes Santa Claus . . . here comes Santa Claus ... To Belk-Tyler's</p>
        <p>FRIDAY (NOV. 23)6:30-8:30 P.AA.</p>
        <p>Kids-Dont Forget</p>
        <p>To</p>
        <p>Christmas</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>1^  The  Daily  Reflector,  Greenville,  N.t.ttednesday, Novemuer , i</p>
        <p>Back-To-Nature Cookbooks</p>
        <p>High On Holiday Gift List</p>
        <p>By JEANNE LESEM UPI Food Editor</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI)  Back- . torture bo&amp;lt;^ on cooking and related subjects are as numerous this holiday season as toys on a childs Christmas liirt, and just as varied in quality.</p>
        <p>Among the subjects covered with differing  degrees of</p>
        <p>success are cheesemaking, herb growing, meat buying and cutting, bread baking and food preservation.</p>
        <p>One of my favorite new books is Gertrude B. Fosters Herbs for Every Garden (Dutton), because it tells me everything I need to know about growing and drying herbs and using them in recipes.</p>
        <p>Another is Beard on Bread by James Beard (Knopt), an ideal primer for small, busy hous^olds. Many recipes make only one or two loaves and some of the quick breads take scarcely longer to prepare than packaged mixes. The techniques of breadbaking are clearly and fully explained.</p>
        <p>Bread by Joan Wiener and Diana Collier (Lippincott) is just as thorough in its directions and illustrations and</p>
        <p>Miss Waldrop Entertained</p>
        <p>Miss Bonnie Ann Waldrop, November bride-elect, was honored at a miscellaneous shower Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Harrell.  /</p>
        <p>Hostesses were Mrs. John Mullen and Mrs. William Hunnings.</p>
        <p>The refreshment table was decorated with yellow and orange fall colors.</p>
        <p>Guests included Miss Waldrops bridal attendants and mothers of the bridal couple.</p>
        <p>Wedding</p>
        <p>Invitation</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mr. (Jerald Grien Briley request the honor of your pres^ice at the marriage of their dau^ter, Deloree Bed-dard, to Michael Ray Lewis, on Friday, Nov, 23, at 6:30 p.m. in the Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Ciiurch, Ayden. No invitations were mailed.</p>
        <p>the recipes are mostly for natural foods enthusiasts. The authors make wide use of whole grains and include recipes for both homemade yeast and homemade baking powder.</p>
        <p>With ji&amp;gt; many good commercial ^t!ni^(es widely available, its haro to imagine why anyone would want Making Ywir Own Cheese &amp;amp; Yogurt by Max Alth (Funk &amp;amp; Wagnalls), and the absence of an index is a severe handicap. As for yogurt, dozens of useful recipe books now provide directions for making it.</p>
        <p>Do-it-yourself meat cutting unquestionably can save money, as Travers Moncure Evans and David Greene point out in The Met Book (Scribners). But it also requires expensive cutlery with razor-keen edges and willingness to handle raw products. While the book also contains a lot of useful information about buying, storing and cooking meat, its hardly essential for the average consumer who can find much of the same information in good basic cookbooks, U.S. Department of Agriculture Home and Garden bulletins and two paperback books that sell for about one dollar apiece.</p>
        <p>Paperbacks</p>
        <p>The paperbacks are How to Buy Food, edited and compiled by Valerie Moolman (Cornerstone Library) and How to Shop for Food by Jean Rainey (Barnes &amp;amp; Noble division of Harper &amp;amp; Row).</p>
        <p>A list and ordering information for the USDA bulletins can be obtained free from Consumer Information, Pueblo, Colo. 81009. Ask for the quarterly catalog.</p>
        <p>For a really comprehensive, well-written guide to grocery shopping, try The Supermarket Handbook by Nikki and David (Joldbeck (Harper &amp;amp; Row). TTie authors tell how to recognize quality in a wide variety of foods and food products. They  recommend</p>
        <p>some brands by name and tell what to look for on labels. Their recipes include some flavorsome, wholesome, home</p>
        <p>made substitutes for convenience products.</p>
        <p>Chi food preservation, Putting Food By (Stei^en Greene Press) and Putting Up Stuff For the Ckild Time (Workman) are good examples of too much and too little. The first book, by a trio that includes Ruth Hertzberg, a former extension home economist, contains far more information than most housdiolds need or want about drying, canning, curing, preserving, pickling, root cellaring and freezing, often with directions for homemade equipment. Its recipes are incidental. The second book, by Oescent Dragonwagon, is great fun to read and the recipes sound good, but directions often are as casually unhelpful as our grandmothers were.</p>
        <p>Commendable natural food cookbooks include The New York Times Natural Foods Cookbook by Jeann Voltz (Putnam), which emphasizes familiar fresh, raw ingredients rather than exotica like tamari-soy sauce and brewers yeast; The Deaf Smith Country Cookbook by Marjorie Winn Ford, Susan Hillyard and Mary Faulk Koock (Macmillan, cloth, and Collier, Paper), a mix of old-fashioned recipes such as Waldorf salad and new-fashioned ones made with whole grains, seeds, sprouts and other unprocessed ingredients.</p>
        <p>The Health Food Dictionary with Recipes by Anstice Carroll and Embree de Persis Vona (Prentice-Hall) is amusing to read and often informative. But take it with a grain of salt. Unrefined sea salt, naturally.</p>
        <p>Fresh Daily</p>
        <p>BREAD</p>
        <p>Dieners Bakery</p>
        <p>815 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>For all Things Unusual.</p>
        <p>. .Including Christmas Cards Caspar!, Elliott, Drawing Board, Fraser</p>
        <p>Visit The Mushroom's Christmas Shop</p>
        <p>Be Sure &amp;amp; See our "Petitotes"  The newest way to box your special gift.</p>
        <p>P.S. Happy Thanksgiving!</p>
        <p>Closed Thursday l&amp;gt;en Friday as usual\</p>
        <p>The Mushroom</p>
        <p>Georgetown Shoppes</p>
        <p>752-3815</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>:</p>
        <p>Large Selection of</p>
        <p>After-Five Party Dresses Now Arriving</p>
        <p>Plan Now for Those Holiday Parties &amp;amp; Festivities.</p>
        <p>Visit</p>
        <p>C- Joulm</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN OfiEENVlUt, N.C.</p>
        <p>tWMHf</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0004" />
        <p>*-Tkt Daily fUflectar. GfeeavDle, N.C.WedMftday, November 21, Itn</p>
        <p>Problem Is Coming To A Head</p>
        <p>A long tingering (*oblem appears to be coming to a head with the city board of education decision to investigate the possibility of building a football stadium for Rose Hi^.</p>
        <p>The local high school has been using Ficklen Stadium since it was built. There has been some dissatisfaction for years, however, because of the</p>
        <p>Institutional Care Opposed</p>
        <p>By BILL NOBLITT</p>
        <p>RALEIGHA shift '^away from institutional care of people with mental problems is called for in the strongest terms in a report by a team of consultants delivered to the Mental Health S^dy Commission.</p>
        <p>North Carolina is not in the dark ages of brooding, frightening asylumsbut neither are we far from it, the report tids to show as it documents dimly lighted hallways, wards crowded with beds and toilets lacking privacy or comfort.</p>
        <p>The institutions, in short, are in stKh sorry shape that they interfere with the treatment and rehabilitation of patients, the study shows. Further, programs across the state are being shortchanged because emphasis is toward the big institutions.</p>
        <p>The violations of legal as well as human rights involved in long term custodial care are documented repeatedly, a summary of the report stated. Throughout, the study reflects the shortcomings of the orientation toward institutionalized care inherent in an organization that devotes 80 percent of its budget to institutions. 1250,000 Study The report is the first phase of a $250,000 study of mental health delivery in the state. It represents an inventory of the existing situation, and necessarily is negative to a large degree.</p>
        <p>The second phase will outline program changes, building suggestions, legislative changes and budgets for a complete revamping of the states menial health care system.</p>
        <p>State Sen. Kenneth C. Royall Jr., of Durham, chairmam of the Mental Health Study Commission, said he hopes the consultants and members of the commission can come up with that document by mid-February for legislative action in the 1974 General Assembly,</p>
        <p>The nut of the inventory of conditions delivered recently is that while North Carolina has some goodeven imaginativemental health programs underway, the overall effort reflects a cwiglomeration of agencies, institutions and groups all addressing certain aspects of the problem. . .A major need is for coordination and specific assignments of responsibility.</p>
        <p>Further, current state efforts to coordinate services have been going on at the Raleigh level, the repMt said. To be effective, these efforts must impact ,at the community level. . .the new system must be structured from the bottom up rather than the top down.</p>
        <p>Basically, the coi^ultants see a need for the state to fund, support and direct the overall effort, but for local communities to embrace free-standing responsible</p>
        <p>agencies as a part of that system.</p>
        <p>The lengthy inventory of current situations provides detailed facts and figures on mental health care programs, physical facilities and administrative and organizational processes involved.</p>
        <p>Specialist Team</p>
        <p>Dr. Cecil Wittson, a psychiatrist at the University (rf Nebraska Medical Center, directed the study of mental health care programs, with specialists in each area: Dr. Paul ^ Pearson of the Unive^ity of Nebraska in mentdl retardation and developmental disabilities; Dr. William Anderson, director of the Durham Child Guidance Center in emotionally disturbed children; Dr. W. A. Hunt of Leyla University in mental disorders; Dr. J. Matarazzo, chairman of the department of medical psychology at the University of Oregon in alcoholism; and Dr. Eric Pfeiffer, professor of psychiatry at Duke University in geriatrics.</p>
        <p>Physical facilities at the 11 institutions were inventoried by architects and engineers from the consulting firm of Henningson, Durham and Richardson; and the administrative processes were studied by representatives of the Peat, Marwick, Mitchell consulting organization.</p>
        <p>Adding to the collection of information were questionnaires sent to 9,200 employees of the Mental Health Division and to some 1,600 recently discharged patients and to local community heal) centers.</p>
        <p>On balance, the inventory of present conditions found an awfully lot wrong with the variety of programs, but the central theme running through the criticism was a tendency of state programs to concentrate on holding the clients, not really treating or curing them. This was equally true of studies in alcoholism, the elderly, mental retardation units, emotionally disturbed children, and adult mental disorders.</p>
        <p>Some Guidelines While the first report was not meant to establish future directions, it does outline future steps for the commission which tend to point in that direction.</p>
        <p>It hints at avoiding large-scale investmeftt of funds in upgrading physical facilities which may not be needed in a new system; stresses community facilities and calls for new approaches to outreach and early detection for evention of mental illness; humanization and equalization of programs for all classes of problems; more research in curing instead of holding clients; and major reorganization of administration functions along the lines of establishing goals, priorities and objectives to be accomplished.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209 Cotanche Street. Greenville, .N. C. 27834 Established 1882 Published Monday Dirough Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICH ARD, Chairman of the 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 M&amp;lt;^r Route Moothly $2.25</p>
        <p>ByMaU. One Year Six Months Three Months</p>
        <p>I27.M</p>
        <p>13.50</p>
        <p>.75</p>
        <p>(Prtces Inctiide Tax By Mall except in PiU Ca. Add 1 percent)</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. AU rights of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
        <p>scheduling problems which were entailed.</p>
        <p>Rose High was unable to schedule games on the FYiday nights before university games and this year, it will be recalled, one game had to be played on Thursday night because of a conflict with the Pirates. This was most unsatisfactory for a high school. Friday night is a better gate night for high school football and certainly it is not the best situation when a football game scheduled on a school night.</p>
        <p>If it is decided that a stadium will be built for Rose High, Principal Robert Alligood has estimated it will cost $150,000. Of some help will be the fact that the university will give its old lighting system to the city schools when a new lighting system is installed at Ficklen.</p>
        <p>It is known that thought is being given to expanding Ficklen stadium to take care of the growing football program at the institution. This wiU likely create more problems for the program of joint university-high school use.</p>
        <p>We have to say it goes against the grain with us to see the expense of duplicating a facility that could be used jointly. It appears, however that the problems become greater every year and the city schools may as well go on and plan for an adequate football facility for Rose High School.</p>
        <p>Redoubled Efforts For United Fund Required</p>
        <p>The Pitt United Fund drive is moving slowly this year with only about 71 percent of the $174,692.84 goal collected or pledged here near the end of November.</p>
        <p>We hope efforts will be redoubled by officials of the drive and workers to put this drive over the top in the near future.</p>
        <p>Individuals and businesses which have not yet pledged should do so immediately. The funds are needed for the organizations United Fund supports and the quicker we do the job, the better.</p>
        <p>By ART BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>By CARL HARTMAN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>COPENHAGEN, Denmark  (AP)  President Nixons Year of Europe apparently will end with a declaration of Western Europes own identity  drawn up by the Europeans themselves with no participation by the President.</p>
        <p>The Nixon administration had hoped to publish a new Atlantic Charter this year, with contributions by itself and all the other members of the Atlantic community. But the administrations plans went astray as matters other than Europe took the White Houses attention and conflicts with the Europeans arose over the document itself.</p>
        <p>Instead, the foreign ministers of the nine Common Market countries meet today to look at their own proclamation, which officials say is already virtually complete. It is likely to be released at a European summit meeting next month.</p>
        <p>The European declaration' is intended as a basis for further progress toward a united Europe and as a definition of the Common market countries relationship with the rest of the world. Its contents have not been disclosed, but it is expected to concentrate on the countries desire to act together on world issues outside the economic matters the Common (Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>40 Years</p>
        <p>Self-Inflicted</p>
        <p>Wounds Spread It's Rose Mary's Baby Ago Today</p>
        <p>UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL</p>
        <p>Advertifing rales and deadlines avaflaMe upon request Member Audit Bureau of ClreidaUao.</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON -President Nixons shocking accusation to two groups of Republican Senators that his former Attorney General, Elliot Richardson, lied about the firing of Archibald Cox as special prosecutor goes to the heart of White House confusion which caused the Saturday night massacre and shook the Nixon presidency.</p>
        <p>All key officials in the special prosecutors office and at the Justice Department support Richardsons sworn testimony that he never agreed to prohibit Cox from issuing further subpoenas for presidential papers. Mr. Nixon had no personal dialogue about it with Richardson. So, the Presidents accusation is based on a single source: the version by Alexander Haig, White House chief of staff, of his conversations with Richardsona version lacking other first-person support.</p>
        <p>Consequently, Mr. Nixons assault on Richardson, besides reiterating the Presidents inclination to counter-attack sharply when cornered, reveals the fragility of decision-making at the White House. Considering Haigs well-established integrity, the most charitable explanation of what happened is inexcusable confusion in the upper reaches of the White House.</p>
        <p>There is no dispute that Richardson accepted the White House compromise calling for Sen. John Stennis to oversee editing of subpoenaed tape recordings and tried, unsuccessfully, to sell the plan to Cox. The dispute concerns Richardsons reaction to Coxs rejection. All evidence indicates Richardson opp&amp;lt;^ed either firing Cox or prohibiting his quest for new documoits after Cox rejected the Stennis compromise.</p>
        <p>Indeed, Richardsons position was clear enough on Monday, Oct. 15, beginning the fateful week so costly to the Nixon presidency. White House lawyers mentioned to Richardson the view of Yales Prof. Alexander Bickel, that Mr. Nixon could circumvent an adverse Supreme Court decision on the tapes by firing Cox and naming a more congenial special prosecutor. Richardson made clear he would have no part of this, and the Bickle option was dropped.</p>
        <p>But by Thursday evening after having failed to convince Cox to accept the Stennis compromise, Richardson feared the White House was about to fire Cox anyway. So, on Friday morning, he told Haig he wanted to see the President immediately. If he could not convince Mr. Nixon, Richardson was prepared to resign. Richardson was then informed Cox was not going to be fired but was denied a meeting with the President.</p>
        <p>The critically important prohibition against Cox came up later that day. At the Justice Department, there was no doubt that Richardson opposed any such prohibition. Haig insists that Richardson actually proposed the prohibition, though this is utterly inconsistent with his past positions.</p>
        <p>Haig, apparently, sincerely believed Richardson was in step with the White House, which would have hopelessly isolated Cox. That was what Haig informed presidential counselors Melvin R. Laird and Bryce Harlow Friday, Oct. 19, when they were belatedly informed of the Stennis compromise. Had they known Richardson opposed the key prohibition provision, these two political veterans might well have advised caution.</p>
        <p>After Richardson refused to fire Cox on Saturday. Oct.</p>
        <p>(Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON-One of the things the Nixon Administration was noted for before Watergate was its neatness. Its hard to believe, on the basis of recent</p>
        <p>revelations, that the President has run one of the sloppiest White Houses of anyone in our history. Records get lost. Tapes dont exist. Notes are misplaced.</p>
        <p>Public Forum</p>
        <p>To the Editor:</p>
        <p>Your editorial on Thursday referred to higher education desegregation plans required by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. A suggestion that the former black campuses should be one-third white does present a problem, but I disagree 'that assigning students to university campuses by race is the only solution. A better idea would be to eliminate some duplication of programs. Eliminating most of the college transfer programs at College of the Albemarle might encourage its white majority to attend predominately-black Elizabeth City State, which is barely the toss of an oyster shell from the C.O.A. campus. Merger of the two schools would permit the ex-tablishment of a new technical institute to concentrate on technical and vocational training in the region.</p>
        <p>The law school at North Carolina Central University is only 15 miles from UNC-Chapel Hill. Moving the Durham law program to another community, such as Charlotte or Winston-Salem, would eliminate segregated legal training in the Triangle area plus make the training available to other geograi^ic areas of the state. Segregated schools attempting to teach the same jH-ograms within one community would tend to remain. segregated.</p>
        <p>Within the city of Greensboro, UNGG and A&amp;amp;T State University could be merged. (I can already hear the society pages shudder as the alumni read this one.) Another possibility would be to scratch UNC-Charlottes engineering school and beef up the program at a formerly all-black school, A&amp;amp;T. A hidden advantage to the merger idea is that the Greaisboro coeds wouldnt have to drive to Ciiapel Hill for a football team,</p>
        <p>A final solution, and possibly the easiest to adopt, would be for the black institutions ^siring to increase their non-black ratio to offer attractive scholarships to deserving members of the minority race (in this case white) who have been deprived of the rich cultural heritage of our other students.</p>
        <p>Hal Smith Greenville</p>
        <p>Its not enough to impeach the President, but it certainly scares the heck out of you.</p>
        <p>I can just see the President buzzing his private secretary. Rose Mary Woods,</p>
        <p>Rose Mary, get met that tough note Brezhnev sent me during the Mideast crisis. Yessir, Mr. President.</p>
        <p>ART</p>
        <p>BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>Twenty minutes later. The note seems to be niissing, Mr. President. Theres nothing in the Brezhnev folder except a telegram congratulating Princess Anne on her wedding,</p>
        <p>Did you look in the Princess Anne folder?</p>
        <p>Yes, I did, and there is nothing in her folder except John Mitchells resignation as attorney general.</p>
        <p>Good grief, I have to get a copy of the Soviet note. Did you look in my folder? Yes, I did, Mr. President,., The only thing in your folder is your tough note to Brezhnev.</p>
        <p>Well, at least thats something. Let me see it. Here it is, Mr. President. This isnt the tough note I srait Brezhnev. Its a summary of Kissingers talks (Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>By SUSAN PRICE November 21,1933 Guy Lombardo, nationally known orchestra leader, was in Greenville last night to play for the Royal Court Ball, given in honor of Miss Edna Taylor of Washington, the North Carolina American Legion beauty queen.</p>
        <p>The Royal Court scene, which was scheduled to have been one of the outstanding features of the season, was pulled off in sort of a fashion, with police having to opai a lane for the dancers, who paraded from one end of the warehouse to another and left it at that.</p>
        <p>If the dance had gone according to plans, it would have been one of the most spectacular events held in the area, but most people said a lack of organization reduced it to a flop, despite the thousands of people present.</p>
        <p>H. H. Wren, who lives near Winterville, today exhibited an aluminum band from the leg of a goose he killed in Mattamuskeet Lake last Friday. The band carried the notation: 32: Write Jack Miner, Kingsville, Ontario, Canada.</p>
        <p>Minor, whose name appears on the band, is a well known sportsman, and known as one of the greatest lovers of birds and wild fowl.</p>
        <p>He is the author of several books and several magazine articles on birds and fiieir habits.</p>
        <p>Shortages Mean Loss Of Jobs</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>LOVE OUTLIVES MEMORY When Longfellow was buried, Ralph Waldo Emerson stood at his grave. The poet and the philospher had bem life-long frioids. Now the poet was dead, the philosopher, a tottering, somewhat senile old man leaning on his daughters arm looked questiimingly at the mound of earth and said, T cant recall his name, but he was one of the most glorious souls that ever lived.</p>
        <p>There are some things whidi outlast even memcay. The kindnesses and acts of love which are lifes sparkling jewels live on and</p>
        <p>give us joy after the power to enjoy other things has passed. All that the feeUe Emerson could remember about Longellow was that he was a gl(x*ious soul, one who was universally admired for his kindness of heart and depth of affection.</p>
        <p>What will we leave behind us v^ien we die? IfrobaMy a lot of us think largely in terms enough {Hx^&amp;gt;erty to mable our loved one to live in comfort. But there are things more important than that, such as the heritage of Lcmgfellow.</p>
        <p>By EUtha DMi|d*ss</p>
        <p>By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Interviews with leading economists suggest that the immediate impact of tl Mideast oil embargo will be to slow the economy more sharply than had been anticipated and perhaps pitch it into recession.</p>
        <p>But as many of the economists point out, the early effects might not be felt equally throughout the country. Shortages of gasoline and heating oil, and factory closings and layoffs, are expected to appear in pockets.</p>
        <p>In some areas these short-i^es already are evident. They will become more common in the neit few wedcs, especially as heating oil becomes scarce along the Eastern seaboard, which depends heavily on impcats.</p>
        <p>Factories and woikers are expected to be affected soon, especially in industries that rely heavily  on</p>
        <p>petrochemicals. For such industries the problem is expecte&amp;lt;A$c be not so mudi a but of raw</p>
        <p>mat&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Already a very severe shortage of petrochemicals is developing, said Alan Greenspan of Townsend-Greenspan, Inc., a consulting firm.</p>
        <p>To Greenspan this suggests a large number of plastics, synthetic fibers and other productsan almost unbelievable number of such itemswill be moving into slM)rt supply, with resulting job losses.</p>
        <p>Estimating the job loss in advance is difficult One cwi-sulting economist said ahnost all his clioits have had energy task forces for the pest year but that most are stiU asking rather than answering questions.</p>
        <p>The confiisic) is evidoit in the airline industry. While some executives feel that cancelling some flints might result in permanent economies, others are calling die disruption of schedules devastating.  ^</p>
        <p>Otto Eckstein, former Johnson administration adviser and now head at Data Resources, Inc., a company that operates an incre^bly complex econometric model, or mathnaatical matrix of the economy, foresees a</p>
        <p>sharp rise in joblessness.</p>
        <p>After feeding the latest energy data into the model late last week, Eckstein now estimates unemployment will rise from 4.6 per cit to about 5.5 per cent in the second quarter next year, when the impact of the shortage will be greatest.</p>
        <p>However, the jobless increase probably wont stc^ there. Eckstein projects a peak of 5.8 per cent in the second half of 1974, a delayed ^fect oi the damage done earlier by a lack of energy and raw materials.</p>
        <p>While these figures bear the imprint of computer efficioicy, some observers are cautiously watching the psychological mood, maintaining that the emod(mal impact on people can have destructive consequences also.</p>
        <p>What happens, for instance, when the main topic of conversation day after day becomes the cold hcnne, insufficient gasdine fw the car, the threat of a layoff? Will negative attitudes reinfwxe each dther?</p>
        <p>Another questionable area InvdveS de ability of industries to adjust Greenspan</p>
        <p>forecasts that utilities which switched to oil will seek to bring back coal within weeks, Ixit will fail in the effort</p>
        <p>They have severed ties with the coal producers, he explained. Moreover, there arent enough railroad hoppers and pulverizing equipment. All the peripheral machinery is dislocated.</p>
        <p>Consumers who might not be affected by either the lack of heat or jobs almost certainly will feel the consequences of rising prices.</p>
        <p>It is generally agreed that heating oil and gasoline prices will rise, the latter to as much as $l a gallon in the view of several economists, and probably never again will qualify as relatively inexpensive.</p>
        <p>But prices of a vast array of other products, including food, will also be pushed up because of their dependence *iq)oo energy in processing and transp&amp;lt;xtation.</p>
        <p>Eckstein, who had forecast 6.2 per cent inflation, has now raised his estimate to more than 7 pa- cent. The jump mi|d&amp;gt;t be as much as 8 or 9 per cent early in the year, he said, falling off in the second half.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0005" />
        <p>Evans-Novak . .</p>
        <p>(Coatfaiaed from page 4)</p>
        <p>20, Haig toW Deputy Attny. Gen. William Ruckelshaus that Richardson had approved the entire Stennis compromise. Rud(dshaus retorted that simply was not true and also reused to fire Cox. Thus, Haigs understanding oi Richardsons position was challenged during the hei^t of the Saturday night massacre.</p>
        <p>Since then. White House aides have attempted to blame the ensuing crisis on Richardson, charging that he misled the Presidoit and then misrepresented his own position publicly. That Mr. Nixon himself should pick up this theme a month later is</p>
        <p>Buchwald Col.</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) with Golda Meir.</p>
        <p>Oops. Sorry about that. It was written on a shopping bag, so it was hard to decipher.</p>
        <p>Perhaps we could get out the tapes of my conversations with Soviet Ambassador Dobrynin. I think he summed up the Brezhnev remarks. Ill call the Secret Service and have them sent up right away.</p>
        <p>A half-hour later. Mr. President, did you speak to Mr. Dobrynin on Oct. 24 or 25?</p>
        <p>Why do you ask? Because the tapes marked Conversation Wii Dobrynin Part r seem to be a telephone call you made to Bebe Rebozo.</p>
        <p>did you check the Bebe Rebozo tapes?</p>
        <p>yes, and they turned out to be a conversation you had with Emperor Haile Selassie when you were Vice President.</p>
        <p>Dammit, Rose Mary, we seem to be running ^ loose ship around here. Get me the tapes of my conversation with Mao Tse-tung.</p>
        <p>Bob Haldeman took them home with him last June. Well, didnt he bring them back?</p>
        <p>He cant remember. Okay, forget the tapes. Give me the notes I dictated after my meeting with the congressional leaders on the energy crisis.</p>
        <p>Here they are, Mr. President.</p>
        <p>Hold it. These arent my notes on the energy crisis. Theyre the plays I worked out for the Washington Redskins in last years Super Bowl game.</p>
        <p>Mr, President, if you dont like the way Im doing my work. Ill be very happy to resign.</p>
        <p>Now, Rose Mary, stop crying. I think youre doing a wonderful job. Its just that every once^in a while I cant seem to find something Im looking for.  </p>
        <p>You know this is not the easiest job in the world. Rose Mary, Rose Mary. Pat and I think the world of you. Now you just go back to your desk and forget all about the tough note Brezhnev sent me. It probably wasnt important anyway.</p>
        <p>Hartman Col...</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4)</p>
        <p>Market normally deals with.</p>
        <p>It also will be consistent with their goal of creating a European union  still undefined in ctetail  by 1980.</p>
        <p>The document is not expected to emphasize close relations with the United States, but certainly will not repudiate the 300,000 American troops and the 7,000 nuclear weapons now stationed in western Europe. Even France, whose government kicked NATO troops out of its territory and has pressed for the European declaration, does no^ want their numbers reduced.</p>
        <p>Last April, Henry A. Kissinger suggested the new Atlantic Charter to define relaticms between the United States and Europe. Under Kissingers plan, Nix(Hi would come to Eu-r(^ and promulgate this declaration at an Atlantic summit meeting.</p>
        <p>European leaders, however, reacted cooly. Fearful that the charter would imply economic concessitms on their part in return for U.S. iMromises &amp;lt;rf c&amp;lt;m-tinued military support, they insisted that there be not one but two documents  one &amp;lt;m trade matters and the other on. defense.</p>
        <p>Negotiations went slowly, and Nixon made it plain he would cmne to Euit^ &amp;lt;mly if there was sometiiing important for him to sign. He also said that if be were to come this year, it would have to be by Nov. 15. The tr^ now may come in Fd&amp;gt;-niiiy or April.</p>
        <p>exidicaUe only in the Cfmtext of counterattack dominating his sesskms with Republican Congremnen last wedr.</p>
        <p>The Rret [uesidential attack agalpst Richardson came during Tuesday nights session with Republican Senators when Mr. Nixon asserted that the former Att(MTiey General had agreed to the Stainis compromise in full. Sen. Edward Brooke of Massachusetts then informed the Presidrat that Richardson had told him he did not agree to the prohibition against Cox. He didnt tell you the truth, Mr. Nixon shot back. Senators present were stunned, with Brooke whispering, This is incredible.</p>
        <p>That exchange did not leak out. But in meeting the second group of Republican Senators Wednesday night, Mr. Nixon made it clear his accusation the previous evening was no accident. Asked about Coxs firing on the very last question, the President attacked</p>
        <p>Richardacm again; He did not tell the truth. Sen. Charla Mathais of Maryland noted Ridiardson testified under oath, but Mr. Nixon snapped back; Nobodys going to go after him for pa*jury.</p>
        <p>Mathias, outraged by the attack on Richardsons integrity, wants the Senate Judiciary Committee to find where the trutii lies. That inevitably would trigger an inquest into the Saturday ni^t massacre and a further split among Republicans, unneeded by Mr. Nixon now. But such self-inflicted wounds have inevitably resulted from tl counterattack strategy, doggedly followed by Mr. Nixon in confronting Watergate.</p>
        <p>COLOR IT FALL NEW YORK (UPI) - Autumn flowers and fall colors add a great decorative touch in the home around Thanksgiving.</p>
        <p>For something else nice; make a hom-o-plenty. Fill it with assorted candies and fruit.</p>
        <p>Preparing New Booklet On Community Services</p>
        <p>The DaUy Reflector. Greenvttie. N.C.W</p>
        <p>Novembr 1973~5</p>
        <p>The United Fund and the League of Women Voters of Greenville-Pitt County are working together to iniblish and distribute a revised e^tion of the Community Services Booklet.</p>
        <p>Originally published in 1972, the booklet is a directory of agencies and the services offered by these agencies in Pitt County. Only those agencies which have headquarters in Pitt County are included.</p>
        <p>The United Fund has provided $500 to cover the. cost of reprinting the bookiet. Free copies will be distributed to social service agencies, school guidance counselors, ministers, doctors, some law enforcement agencies, and others who need the information for referral purposes. The new edition will be bound in such a way that supplemental pages of new agencies and services may be</p>
        <p>added as nee&amp;lt;ted in the future. Distribution records will be kept in order to facilitate future supplements. The projected publication date is early 1974.</p>
        <p>The Human Resources Committee of the LWV, headed by Margaret Blanchard, is currently gathering information for the booklet. If an eligible agaicy which was not included in the 1972 edition has not been contacted by December 1, that agency should contact Margaret Blanchard, 758-0064, or Beth Brankin, 756-6620.</p>
        <p>In i:iaddition to being a distribution point for small orders, the United Fund office at the State Bank building will serve as a referral agency for inquiries about information contained in the booklet.</p>
        <p>The LWV is also going to finance publication of a limited number of additional copies of</p>
        <p>the txx^et for 'sale to the general public. No United Fund money will be used to finance publication copies of the booklets that will be placed on sale.</p>
        <p>Positions Open At Post Office</p>
        <p>GRIMESLANDAK&amp;gt;lication8 will be accepted through Dec. 3 by the U. S. Postal Service for clerk and carrier positions at the Grimesland Post Office.</p>
        <p>Applications and further in-formatimi may be obtained from the Grimesland Post Office.</p>
        <p> I</p>
        <p>The oldest yacht club is the Royal Cork established in Ireland in 1720.</p>
        <p> I</p>
        <p>ALMOST SWEET SIXTEEN  Caroline Kennedy, daughter of the late President John F. Kennedy, who will be 16 years cdd on Nov. 27, sits in a car outside Holy Trinity Church in Washington, D.C. after being a bridesmaid in the wedding of her cousin Kathleen Kennedy Saturday. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>^.CpeivTl^juS.</p>
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        <p>Santa will make Nichols big toy dept, his North Pole headquarters. Bring your children to NICHOLS this Thursday. Santa will personally meet and greet each child. Prizes and surprises for all! Camera bugs welcome.</p>
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        <p>Limit 2 Boxes</p>
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        <p>LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER NICHOLS REG. LOW PRICE 1.19</p>
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        <pb facs="00092080_0006" />
        <p>Tlie Daily Reflector, Greeoville, N.C.Wedneaday, November 21, 1173Mixon Tells GOP Governors He'll Dispell Clouds</p>
        <p>ByDONMcLEOD AP Polical Writer MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)-lYemdent Nixon has promised the nations Republican governors he will dispel the Watergate cloud sha&amp;lt;k&amp;gt;wing their political future and said he is sorry for the trouble it luis caused.</p>
        <p>The President also told the winter meeting of the Republican Governors Association he knows of no more scandals likely to pop out of his administration and add to their embarrassment.</p>
        <p>The President looked at us armind the room and said, I'm sorry if I have added to your burden, Twinessee Gov. Winfield Dunn said after the governors had listened for almost two hours to Nixons Watergate defense Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Iowa Gov. Robert D. Ray, whose job comes up for election next year, was asked whether Nixon and his Watergate problems would be a campaign albatross for other Republicans in 1974.</p>
        <p>I think a little more time will tell whether he will be an asset or a liability in a campaign. Ray replied, and he brought this up himself.</p>
        <p>He wants to help in every way he can. The thing that will help the most, of course, will be if he can clear up Watergate."</p>
        <p>Governors coming out of the closed meeting said Nixon made the strongest promises yet for full disclosure of all the facts be has about the myriad of scandals which began when Refxiblican burlgars and wire-taiiqjers ware captured at gunpoint inside Democratic party headquarters on June 17, 1972.</p>
        <p>He indicated a number of papers will be issued clearly respcHiding to the questions which have been raised, Dunn said, including the Presidents personal finances, the ITT affair and the milk case.</p>
        <p>Every question we asked was answered in full, Missouris Christopher Bond said. And he indicated an additional four or five point program to continue answering, in the courts, in open news ses-sions.through documents he expects to release and by fuller answers to the most asked questions.</p>
        <p>North Carolinas James E. Holahouser Jr. also revealed</p>
        <p>that  Nixon  had said  of  the</p>
        <p>White House tapes sought by Watergate investigators: The key tapes, the key dates, the tapes  are the, are  audible</p>
        <p>and wmild  be heard  by  the</p>
        <p>courts.</p>
        <p>The session, the President's third Southern stop in four days, was similar to a series he held at the White House last week  with  congressional  Re-</p>
        <p>fHiblicans explaining his side of the Watergate controversy and asking for support.</p>
        <p>Oregon Gov Tom McCall, one of those who has been calling openly for Nixon to save GOP candidates from disaster next year by clearing up Watergate before the elections, said the governors were encouraged by the meeting.</p>
        <p>I think they left with a sense of relief that the President was relaxed, in complete control of himself, McCall said. Ive never seen a more conversational meeting.</p>
        <p>It was a free-wheeling session of questions and answers, Californias Ronald Reagan said. The President couldn't have been more frank.</p>
        <p>A Ten-Week Course Set</p>
        <p>Clarifies Minimum</p>
        <p>s</p>
        <p>Wage Rate Change</p>
        <p>Jim Hannan, manager of the local North Carolina Employment Security Commission office, has stated the change in the hourly minimum wage rate and some phraseology has caused some confusion and misinterpretation.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina minimum wage rate changed from $1.60 per hour to $1.80 per hour on Sept. 2 for all covered employees.</p>
        <p>The phrase covered employment refers to employment of an individual by an organization, trade or business having one or more than one employee.</p>
        <p>There are exemptions from the minimum wage law. however, Hannan explained. The exemptions listed by a release received by the Employment Office list the principal exemptions as farm worker, domestic worker in* private homes, persons over 65, minors less than 16, and establishments having less than four employees. Federal, state and local government employees are not covered by the new minimum wage law.</p>
        <p>Employers of four or more employees in any one place of business are governed by maximum working hours of 10 hours per day, 56 hours per week, and 12 days in any period of 14 consecutive days.</p>
        <p>The hours apply equally to male and female employees. Also, businesses are no longer required to furnish seats for use of female employees, Hannan said. Further, businesses may no longer apply to the Commission of Lalwr for special permission to work employees 60 hours per week in emergency situations.</p>
        <p>Effective Oct. 1, minors (under 18) no longer need to obtain a new work permit each time they change jobs. Upon termination the employer must return the employment certificate to the minor. Also, it is the individuals responsibility to bbtain the work permitnot the employer.</p>
        <p>Minors may work in Grade A restaurants holding malt beverage, wine, liquor or other permits issued by the State ABC Board, but may not serve or dispense any such beverage.</p>
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        <p>One of the most welcomed as- there are no further unpleasant surances was Nixons ^lara- revelations likely to embarrass tion that, so far as he knows, those who stand by him.</p>
        <p>Says Nuclear Power Is Energy Solution</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE  (AP)The</p>
        <p>president of the American Nuclear Society says the solution to the energy crisis lies in greater use of electricity produced by nuclear power.</p>
        <p>John W. Simpson made the comment Tuesday as he toured the Duke Power Co.s McGuire Nuclear Station 17 miles from Charlotte on Lake Norman.</p>
        <p>Simpson labeled consumer advocate Ralph Nader and other nuclear power critics the doomsday lobby, and he added, Mr. Nader will not listen to any facts.</p>
        <p>He said the chances of an atomic disaster at a nuclear plant are one ^10 billion.</p>
        <p>In an address before the Carolinas Section of the ANS, an organization of nuclear engineers and scientists, Simpson said this nation can expect to become economically and socially depressed without the energy nuclear power can provide.</p>
        <p>Simpson, president of Power Systems, which is part of the Westinghouse Corp., said, Our national security, economnic growth, jobs, standard of living and the general welfare of the public depend directly upon the availability of energy, and he added that nuclear power is the answer to that need.</p>
        <p>Holshouser To Head Campaign</p>
        <p>He said if there are, he is not aware of them, Dunn said. If there is any information yet to be revealed, its information he does not have.</p>
        <p>Before meeting with the governor, Nixon spike briefly to a crowd estimated by police at about 5,0(X) across the street from the convention hotel on the Mississippi River bluffs.</p>
        <p>Nixon told the crowd how much better your future looks now than it did when I came into office, and cited disengagement from Vietnam, peace in the Middle East and relatively low unemployment as proof.</p>
        <p>We have got some problems, Nixon said. They are serious problems in terms of our energy, but that is a problem that exists all over the</p>
        <p>world.</p>
        <p>And all 1 can say, Nixon added, is the greatness about America is that when weve got problems, we just get out and solve them.</p>
        <p>The speech and governors meeting completed a campaign of public appearances which</p>
        <p>Academy Seeks Labels To Aid</p>
        <p>began in Orlando, Fla., Saturday night with a televised news conference before The Associated Press Managing Editors Association and included a stop Sunday in Macon, Ga., to dedicate a law school.</p>
        <p>Earlier Tuesday, Republican party chairman George Bush told the governors Nixons appearances and meetings with</p>
        <p>GOP office holdCTS and officials had turned the tide on Watw-gate.</p>
        <p>These havent been easy times, Bush said. The thing that is so greatly encouraged to see is the WatergaUr 'matter having turned around rather dramatically as a result of the Presidents actions in the last few days.</p>
        <p>In Equipment</p>
        <p>( Young ] \America/</p>
        <p>A 10-week college credit course, EDUC 479, Introduction to the Cbmmunity College and Adult Education, will be offered in Greenville beginning Monday, December 3, by the Division of continuing Education of East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>It will be taught in three-hour sessions in Room 241, Education-Psychology Building, ECU campus each Monday evening through February 25, 1974. Each session will meet from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Dr. Leonard D. Lilley will be the instructor for the course.</p>
        <p>Pre-registration for the course is requested. Students must register for this course through the Division of Continuing Education.</p>
        <p>EDUC 479 carries three quarter hours of college credit which may be used toward teacher certificate renewal or for degree credit if the course fits into the students degree program.</p>
        <p>MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)-Gov. Jim Holshouser of North Carolina has bei named campaign chairman of the Rejmbli-can Governors Association for the 1974 gubernatorial elections.</p>
        <p>Gov. Winfield Dunn of Tennessee named Holshouser as one of Dunns first official acts upon being installed as chairman of the association Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Asking People To Pool Cars .</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)-Officials of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County plan to ask people to form car pools, in an effort to cut down the number of cars which carry 110,000 people to work in CTiarlotte each day.</p>
        <p>Officials say that if voluntary car-pooling doesnt work, they may have to enforce some sort of controls.</p>
        <p>Greenville Kristian Academy is conducting a special collection drive aimed at obtaining needed audiovisual equipment.</p>
        <p>The program, Labels for Education, is sponsored by Campbell Soup Company and offered to elementary schools, both private and public.</p>
        <p>Between now and Dec. 10, we hope to collect encHigh Campbells Soup labels to earn audio visual equipment, said Joshua Potter, Principal. Our students are saving their labels, and they would appreciate it if friends of the school would do the same. Any Campbells Soup can label counts in the drive. More than 70 audio-visual equipment items are being offered. A participating school sends in the assigned number of labels for the particular items selected.</p>
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        <p>or  Credited to my PNB Checking Account number _</p>
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        <pb facs="00092080_0007" />
        <p>I  ...................</p>
        <p>IHIIII</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, November 21, ItTJ7</p>
        <p>lUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllB</p>
        <p>District Court</p>
        <p>Judge J.W.H. Roberts disposed of the foUowing cases at the November 13*16 term of ^strict Court in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>Robert T. Bostroni, Raleigh, liquor law violation, pay cost.</p>
        <p>John A. Ramirez, 1300 Charles St., worthless check 90 days jail suspended pay cost and check.</p>
        <p>Peggy Elaine Oakley, Rt. 6, Greenville, fail see safe move, prayer for judgment continued on payment of cost.</p>
        <p>Elbert West Owens, Jr., Kinston, No operators license, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Clifton Earl Langley, Rt. 6, Greenville, expired operators license, pay $10 and cost, t</p>
        <p>James Thomas Jones, Rt. 1, Greenville, improper equipment, pay cost.</p>
        <p>Rosie Ervin Gilbert, 210 Perkins St., no inspection, nol pros</p>
        <p>Coburn Bennie Hardison, Rt. 1, Williamston, no operators license, not guilty.</p>
        <p>George Lenard Williams, 110 Manhattan Ave. public drunk, 20 days jail suspended pay cost.</p>
        <p>Martha Helen Dail, Rt. 1, Win-terville, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of cost.</p>
        <p>Hosea Coley, Ayden, Worthless check, 60 days jail suspended pay cost and check.</p>
        <p>William Durwood Cannon, Jr., Box 107, Greenville, speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Henry Warren Clark, 1014 3rd St., improper tires, nol pros.</p>
        <p>James Albert Cherry, Sr.,^ Greenville, speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Henry W. Clark, 1014 3rd St., worthless check, 60 days jail suspended pay cost and check.</p>
        <p>Sinny Tyson Barrett, 316 Paige Dr., speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Rufus Bellamy, Rt. 1, Stokes, worthless check, 60 days jail suspended pay cost ahd check.</p>
        <p>Blannie Pinner, Wildwood Dr., Ayden, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of cost.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Joe Stephenson, 1409 W. 6th St., worthless checks (3 counts) 30 days jail suspended pay each cost and each check.</p>
        <p>Alfred Lewis Tucker, Jr., Monroe, no inspection, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Ronnie Jerome Staton, Rt. 2, Greenville, improper passing, pay cost.</p>
        <p>Marvin Smith, 905 Colonial Ave. no inspection, pay test.</p>
        <p>Eugene GarretfSSasperine, 404 E. 2nd St., no inspectite, pay cost.</p>
        <p>Richard L. Spivey, Jr., 205 Hillcrest, no inspection, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Edmund Loyd Smith, Rt, 1, Win-terville, no inspection, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Bessie Smith Thomas, Rt. 6, Greenville, no inspection, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Raymond A. Caddell, 2609 10th St., no operators license, not guilty; no inspection, nol pros.</p>
        <p>William Barnes Ellington, Jr., 300 Oak St., larceny, guilty of forcible trespass, 90 days jail suspended pay cost, surrender drivers license 6 months.</p>
        <p>Donald Allen Jones, Rt. 7, Greenville larceny, guilty of forcible trespass, 90 days jail suspended pay cost, surrender drivers license 6 months.</p>
        <p>Gregory L. Coward, 404 Abel St., larceny, guilty of forcible trespass, 90 days jail suspended pay cost and surrender drivers license 6 months.</p>
        <p>David Wayne Leggett, Rt. 7, Greenville, larceny, guilty of forcible trespass, 90 days jail suspended, pay cost, surrrendeer drivers license 6 months.</p>
        <p>John Franklin Shackleford, 103 W. 13th St., driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended pay $100 and cost, surrender drivers license 12 months.</p>
        <p>Jay Cea Adams, Jr., Box 9, Greenville, driving under the in fluence, 6 months jail suspended pay $100 and cost, surrender drivers license 12 months.</p>
        <p>Alton Ray Bradley., Rt. 4, Greenville, shoplifting, 6 'nionths jail suspended pay $50 and cost, surrender drivers license 12 months, probation 3/a years.</p>
        <p>Melvin James Hines, Rt. 1, Chocowinity, speeding, 60 days jail suspended pay $40 and cost.</p>
        <p>Robert Gerald Stocks, 201 14th St., speeding, 60 d^s jail suspended pay</p>
        <p>Linwood Harold Smith, Rt. 1, .Greenville, assault on female, prosecution adjudged malicious and frivolous, prosecutir&amp;gt;g witness pay cost.</p>
        <p>Zeb Burney, Rt. 1, Grimesland, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended pay cost, and check.</p>
        <p>James Frank Ellison, Rt. 1, Ayden, no inspection, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Stanley Waters Corbitt, 2815 Jackson Dr., reckless driving, pay cost.</p>
        <p>Willie Smith, 910 Douglas Ave., assault, nol pros. ^</p>
        <p>Helen Trogdell Reed, 16 Const., trespass, larceny, nol</p>
        <p>tentnea</p>
        <p>pros.</p>
        <p>Helen</p>
        <p>tentnea</p>
        <p>$40 and cost.</p>
        <p>James Henry Williams, Box 271, Simpson, driving while license revoked, 6 months jail suspended pay $200 and cost, probation 5 years, reimburse State for counsel fees allowed.</p>
        <p>Clifton Adams, Rt. 2, Chocowinity, assault, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Earnest Lee Jones, Box 1065, Greenville, reckless driving, pay cost.</p>
        <p>Janice Highsmith, 211 14th St., contributing to delinquency of a minor, not guilty.</p>
        <p>John B. Timmon, 219 Churchill Dr., fail see safe move, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Jean B. Adams, Rt. 2, Chocowinity, shoplifting, 60 days jail suspended pay $50 and cost.</p>
        <p>Douglas Ray Killingsworth, Rt. 1, Bethel, no inspection, nol pros.</p>
        <p>David Lee Bell, Rt. 6, Greenville, Assault, prosecution adjudged malicious and frivolous, prosecuting witness pay cost.</p>
        <p>Roosevelt Tripp, 1509 Allen St., assault, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Edward Grant, 204 New St., assault, not guilty.</p>
        <p>Willie Melvin Brown, 1809 Brown Rd., Ayden, shoplifting, 6 months jail suspended pay $50 and cost, probation 3Vj years.</p>
        <p>Melvin Hales, Rt. 1, Stokes, larceny, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Clinton Edward McGowan, Rt. 8, Greenville, reckless driving, dismissed.</p>
        <p>Gary Keith Coffey, 413 4th St., fail stop for red lighf, dismissed.</p>
        <p>Robert G. Hamilton, 210 Lakewood, fail see safe move, dismissed.</p>
        <p>Ronald W. Randolph, 902 Colonial Ave., disorderly conduct, not guilty.</p>
        <p>James Robert Kimsey, Murphy, N.C. driving under the intluence, 6 months jail suspended pay $100 and cost, surrender drivers license 12 months.</p>
        <p>Johnny Ray Moore, Grimesland, fail stop for stop sign, pay cost.</p>
        <p>Ruby Tyson, Goldsboro, neglect of child, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Fannie Alston Jackson, 110 Moore St., fail see safe move, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Jessie Thomas Bradshaw, 208 Pine St., fail reduce speed, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Johnny Ray Moore, Box 111, Grimesland, assault, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Frances Jane Harper, 22 Glendale Court, reckless driving, pay cost.</p>
        <p>James Edward Byrd, 409 Elizabeth St., speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of cost.</p>
        <p>William Phillip Moore, Jr., 1305 Overlook Speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of cost.</p>
        <p>Robert Lee Crandall, 200 Ridgeway St., assault with deadly weapon, 6 months jail suspended pay $100 and cost.</p>
        <p>Trogdell Reed, 16 Const., larceny (2 counts), 6 months jail suspended pay cost in each case, probation 4 years, make restitution in each case.</p>
        <p>James Woodrow Williams, 207 Library St., driving under the influence, guilty of careless and reckless driving, 30 days jail suspended pay $25 and cost.</p>
        <p>James Gray Hite, Cary, fail stop for red light, pay cost.</p>
        <p>William Earl Jones, 612 Howell St., speeding, fail stop for stop sign, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Gerald L. White, 1744 Beaumont Rd., no inspection, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Russell Dunn Bryant, Rt. 1, Farm-ville, driving while license revoked, nol pros; driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended pay $100 and cost,_ surrender operators license, probation 3'/^ years, reimburse State for counsel fees allowed.</p>
        <p>Sheila Angela Turner, Rt. 1, Farmville, speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Wesley Kenneth Braxton, Rt. 6, Greenville, no operators license, follow too close, 30 days jail suspended pay $25 and cost.</p>
        <p>Thomas Harold Tripp, Rt. 1, Farmville, fail stop for red light, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Wallace Barrett, 610 Walnut St., trespass, dismissed.</p>
        <p>Norwood Fussell, Rt. 1, Farmville, assault on female, prosecution adjudged malicious and frivolous, prosecuting witness pay cost.</p>
        <p>Carolyn Fussell, Rt. 1, Farmville, assault with deadly weapon, prosecution adjudged malicious, prosecuting witness pay cost.</p>
        <p>Guy Warren, 401 George St., Farmville, larceny, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Boboie Lee Harris, Rt. 2, Farmville, allow unlicensed person to drive, 30 days fail suspended pay $25 and cost.</p>
        <p>Jessie Lee Tyson, Rt. 2, Farmville, no inspection, pay cost,</p>
        <p>William Lawrence Beddard, Rt. 1, Ayden, fail stop for stop sign, pay cost.</p>
        <p>Martin Stalling, Eason Trailer Park, Assault on Female, prosecution adjudged malicious and frivolous, prosecuting witness pay cost.</p>
        <p>Willie Edward Tyson, Rt. 4, Greenville, reckless driving, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>George Henry Burnette, Fountain, speeding, pay $15 and cost.</p>
        <p>James Stepps, Snow Hill, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended pay cost and check.</p>
        <p>William D. Spellman, 1507 W. 14th St., public drunk, 20 days jail.</p>
        <p>Preston Allen Payton, Grifton, public drunk, 20 days jail.</p>
        <p>Chesterfield Payton, Atlantic, public drunk, 20 days jail.</p>
        <p>Elmer Ray Blount, Rt. 1, Win-terville, public drunk, 20 days jail.</p>
        <p>Louis Parker, 106 W. 2nd St., public drunk, 20 days jail.</p>
        <p>Raymond W. MacKenzie, Box 338, Winterville, no helmet, pay cost.</p>
        <p>Johnnie Lee Dixon, 612 Pitt St., public drunk, nol pros.</p>
        <p>Franklin Lee Stevens, Kinston, speeding, no operators license, nol with leave, orvelle Pearson, Goldsboro,</p>
        <p>fceeding safe speed, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Jeffrey S. Mogland, Mt. Holly, New Jersey, speeding, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Edward Lee Mosley, Windsor, speeding, i^l. pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Jim Gaston Jones, Smithfield, fait see safe move, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Jerry R. Harris, LaGrange, no inspection, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Woodrow Hardy, Jersey City, N. J. speeding, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Colin Earl Fields, Norfolk, Va., fail drive on right half of roadway, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Stanley Daniels, 608 Ford St., breaking and entering, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Michael H. Conlin, Alexandria, Va., transport liquor with seal broken, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Sterling O. Newton, Fountain, fail drive on right half of roadway, nol pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Haywook Wilson Strickland, 408 Pitt St., public drunk, 20 days jail.</p>
        <p>Stephen Ray Grimes, Box 298, Winterville. speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Marvin Earl Moore, Hookerton, speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Danny C. Smith, Winterville, speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Troy Allen Dennis, Rt. 2, Ayden, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of cost.</p>
        <p>Lonnie Smith, Jr., Box 297, Winterville, speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Tommy Grimes Briley, Rt. 1, Stokes, assault on female, prosecution adjudged malicious and frivolous, prosecuting witness pay cost.</p>
        <p>Willie Gray Smith, no address given, larceny, prosecution adjudged to be malicious and frivolous, prosecuting witness pay cost.</p>
        <p>Thomas Edward Day, Morehead City, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended pay $100 and cost, surrender drivers license.</p>
        <p>Howard Courtney Bailey, Jr., Lanham, Md., fail see safe move, speeding, noi pros with leave.</p>
        <p>Tastes Differ</p>
        <p>As To Region</p>
        <p>Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?</p>
        <p>First Coll Your Indopondont Corrlor. If You Aro Unobio To Roach Him Coil Tho Dolly Rofloctor/752-6166 Botwoon 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Wookdoyi And 8 Til 9 AM.</p>
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        <p>Pisplo-Bismol</p>
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        <p>FOR</p>
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        <p>STOMACH</p>
        <p>Regular Retail</p>
        <p>12 oz. Size</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>1.09</p>
        <p>One-A-Day</p>
        <p>Vitamins</p>
        <p>100's Regular Retail $3.09</p>
        <p>$196</p>
        <p>SALE P.RICE</p>
        <p>100's With IRON Regular Retail $3.49</p>
        <p>SALE  $2^9</p>
        <p>Listerine</p>
        <p>Mouthwash</p>
        <p>14 oz. Size Regular Retail $1.39</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
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        <p>92^</p>
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        <p>I The Dry Look</p>
        <p>By Gillette 9 ozs. (2 ozs. Free) Regular Retail $1.59</p>
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        <p>Bon Roll-On</p>
        <p>Deodorant</p>
        <p>1.5 oz.</p>
        <p>Polidenf^ Tablets 40$ New Effervescent Formula 120 Off Regular Price</p>
        <p>Polldent</p>
        <p>Denture Cleanser</p>
        <p>Regular Retail $1.09</p>
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        <p>SALE</p>
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        <p>79i</p>
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        <p>37</p>
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        <p>'TM</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI) - In the North Woods they like hot toddies and down south its mint juieps. Like drinks, candy preferoices also vary from region to region, deprading on climate and culture.</p>
        <p>The National Confectioners Association says easterners prefer dark and semi-sweet chocolates and miniature candies. Westerners choose milk chocolates, mainly in jumbo sizes. And Midwesterners go for a mixture of lights and darks.</p>
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        <p>Great Body</p>
        <p>Shampoo</p>
        <p>24S Regular Retail</p>
        <p>Re,ul.r $2 95</p>
        <p>Retail</p>
        <p>Regular 3.5 Oz.</p>
        <p>Regular OQc Retail W</p>
        <p>Pristeen Feminine</p>
        <p>Hygiene Spray</p>
        <p>Regular ^1^0</p>
        <p>Retail</p>
        <p>SALE CQ PRICE ^ ^</p>
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        <p>57</p>
        <p>61^ Discotint</p>
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        <p>99</p>
        <p>HEALTH &amp;amp; BEAUTY AIDS</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE DISCOUNT DRUGS 2800 E. 10th ST., GREENVILLE BIG VALUE DISCOUNT 429 EVANS ST. DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE DISCOUNT MAIN STREET, FARMVILLE</p>
        <p>Mia</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0008" />
        <p>t-&amp;gt;Hw Diily ReflectM', GrecavUle. N.C.Wednesday. Neyemter21. If73</p>
        <p>Woody's</p>
        <p>Ramblin's</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEflE</p>
        <p>I learned last week (rf the impending repcrt to the City School Board about Rose High Sdiools use of Ficklen Stadium in the future.</p>
        <p>Both Clarence Stasavich, ECU Athletic Directw, and Glenn Cox. City School Superintendent, stressed then that if there was to be a parting of the ways between the two football teams, it wmild be a friendly one.</p>
        <p>Somehow, the tone of the stwy in yesterdays Daily Reflector did not quite mieet with that mood.</p>
        <p>Perhaps the desire of East Carolina to move Rose from the stadium without a full get out, is rightly termed a squeeze. But the college has problems that cannot be overlooked.</p>
        <p>It has been 11 years since the first football game was played in the stadium. When it was built, many Greenville people did indeed give money cm the promise that Rose could use the stadium.</p>
        <p>But any program can change East Carolinas certainly has. Cox admits that it is much more sophisticated now, calling for things that didnt enter in 11 years ago.</p>
        <p>Visiting teams piany times must take up one of the dressing rooms in the stacum, and Rose customarily uses one of these for its halftime meetings and rests. When a college team has it stacked with valuable equipment, they may be reluctant to have outsiders given access to it, regardless of their honesty.</p>
        <p>Visiting teams also like to work out on Friday night before lirfaying a Saturday night game. This becomes impossible on nights when Rose is at home.</p>
        <p>During those 11 years of use. Rose has paid only the actual day-to-day costs involved in the stadium usage. East Carolina has made no profit from it, but Rose has not contributed to the maintenance of the stadium, despite using it half the time.</p>
        <p>From my point erf view, the changes that have occurred can dramatically be seen just in the press box alone. Ten years ago cr even five years ago, the press box was more than adequate for East Carolina. But this is no longer true. The program has grown to the point where that small structure is no longer big enough.</p>
        <p>The overall program reflects this. Rose therefore has been asked to try and schedule around the Pirates.</p>
        <p>But this is virtually impossible on a year-to-year basis without causing complete havoc in scheduling.</p>
        <p>The two schools have reached a compromise for the next two years. But by then. East Carolina hopes to have enlarged the stadium by nearly doubling it.</p>
        <p>And that would make the investment put up 11 years ago seem quite small in the overall structure.</p>
        <p>No one has thought of one important question. At least it wasnt asked Monday night at the school board meeting: What do the Rose coaches think of the situation?</p>
        <p>Well, theyve told me they would like to see Rose have its own facility, for more than one reason. No other high school in the state depends on a college for its playing field. They either have their own or rent a city-owned one, contributing to the maintenance of the field.</p>
        <p>The people who put their investment into Ficklen have more than realized it in the past 11 years. Now it is time for Rose to stop being a second-class high achool, dependant on the college or the city for all of its facilities except a gym.</p>
        <p>A 4-A High School should have a field of its ownand it is time for the school board and the county commissioners to act.</p>
        <p>Oak City Nips Belhaven, 81-80</p>
        <p>RobersonvHle To Meet Tabor City</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>FRANKIE SPRUILL</p>
        <p>RICKY PURVIS</p>
        <p>Conley Rolls To Big Victory</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD-D.H. Conleys Vikings opened their season last night with a 75-51 basketball rout of Tarboro.</p>
        <p>Conley had little trouble in disposing of the Tarboro tribe of ,Vikings gaining control early to romp. No girls game was played. In a preliminary, the Conley junior varsity trimmed Tarboro, 52-34.</p>
        <p>The Conley Vikings pushed through 18 points in the first period, easing out-by four points into the lead when the frame ended. Then, in the second quarter, Conley continued to pull away, outscoring Tarboro, 15-8. That ran their lead out to 33-22.</p>
        <p>From there on, it was just a question of time. Tarboro fought to stay close in the third period, but Conley still outhit them, 22-</p>
        <p>Tarboro</p>
        <p>Droogh</p>
        <p>Phillips</p>
        <p>Joyner</p>
        <p>Modlin</p>
        <p>Jones</p>
        <p>Whichard</p>
        <p>Vines</p>
        <p>Glass</p>
        <p>Dancey</p>
        <p>Johnson</p>
        <p>J. Jones</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>Tarboro</p>
        <p>Conley</p>
        <p>VARSITY GAME g I t Conley</p>
        <p>2 20 Daniels</p>
        <p>0 0 0 Sutton</p>
        <p>5 0 10 Streeter</p>
        <p>1 0 2 Tucker</p>
        <p>1 0 2 Phillips</p>
        <p>2 15 R . Mobley</p>
        <p>3 0 6 Hankins</p>
        <p>2 2 6 G . Mobley 000 Harper 0 0 0 Gould 0 0 0 Totals 23 5 SI</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>3 1 1 1 1 2 0 3 0 1 2 0 0</p>
        <p>32 11 7S</p>
        <p>14 I 1 10SI 18 IS 22 207S</p>
        <p>Champions Top All-Conference</p>
        <p>OAK CITY - Oak City and Belhaven split a pair of games last night as the Trojans opened the 1973-74 basketball season. The Trojanettes lost their game, 41-21, while the Oak City boys took theirs, 81-80.</p>
        <p>In the girls game, Belhaven held Oak City scoreless in the opening period, scoring eight pmints of their own They followed that up with 11 more points in the second frame, while Oak City finally found the mark for seven. That made it 19-7 at halftime.</p>
        <p>In the third quarter, Belhaven kept up the pressure outscoring Oak City by 10, 16-6. That upped their lead to 35-13. Oak City managed an 8-6 edge in the last period.</p>
        <p>Rosita Fonville led the Belhaven scoring with 16 points, while Robbie Borden had 11. No one hit double figures for Oak City</p>
        <p>The boys game was a horserace all the way. Oak City jumped into the lead in the first period, building up a 20-14 lead Tye kept control through the second quarter with a 23-20 edge, upping the score to 43-34.</p>
        <p>Belhaven b^an to come back in the third quarter, however, ripping the nets for 26. while Oak City got 19. That trimmed the Trojan lead to 62-60. Belhaven kept it tight the rest of the way, but with 28 seconds left, Donnie Carr hit two free throws to give the Trojans an 81-78 lead Belhaven scored with three seconds left to cut it back to 81-80, but they coul(hit get the ball back.</p>
        <p>Billy Ross led the Oak City scoring with 30, idle Paul Jones had 17, and Carr and Ronald Duggins each had 12. Michael Credle led Belhaven with 30, with Nathan Ebron adding 15, Perry Ebron hitting 13 and Van</p>
        <p>WIBC IS 57</p>
        <p>GREENDALE, Wis. (AP) -ITie Womens Internaticmal Bowling Congress obsa*ved its S7th anniversary in November. The memboship service organ-izati(Mi was founded in St. Louis in November 1916.</p>
        <p>Topping getting 12.</p>
        <p>Oak City plays host to Bear Grass tonight.</p>
        <p>GIRL'S GAME</p>
        <p>BelhavenFonville 16, Smith, Farrow 8, Borden 11, Whitfield 4, Nelson 2, Davis, Dudley, Taylor, Bell, P. Davis, Spencer, T. Taylor, Jeanette, Spence.</p>
        <p>Oak CityDuggins 4, Reed, Ebron, Martin 4, B. Martin 4, White 4, Dileno 4, White, Leggett, Taylor 3</p>
        <p>Belhaven Oak City</p>
        <p>Belhaven</p>
        <p>Credle</p>
        <p>P. Ebron</p>
        <p>Topping</p>
        <p>B Ebron</p>
        <p>N Ebron</p>
        <p>Cotton</p>
        <p>Spencer</p>
        <p>Hawthrone</p>
        <p>Leary</p>
        <p>Ward</p>
        <p>Burrus</p>
        <p>Moore</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>Belhaven</p>
        <p>Oak City</p>
        <p>BOY'S GAME g f t Oak City 12 6 30 Whitaker 4 5 13 Jones 2 12 Carr</p>
        <p>0 0 Duggins</p>
        <p>1 15 Ross 0 0 Harrison</p>
        <p>6 Cherry 0 Hoober 0 Dolberry 4 Smith 0 Totals 0</p>
        <p>I 11 14 441 0 7 4 21</p>
        <p>g f t</p>
        <p>3 2 8 8 1 17</p>
        <p>5 2 12</p>
        <p>6 0 12 13 4 30</p>
        <p>1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 34 9 II</p>
        <p>33 14 80</p>
        <p>14 20 24 2080 2C 23 It It81</p>
        <p>Co-champions Ayden-Grifton and Southern Wayne dominated the Eastern Carolina All-Conference team announced today.</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton and Southern, who shared the league title with 8-1 records, each placed five men on the select group oT 23 players. Farmville Central, the third-place finisher, had three, while Greene Gentral, Southern Nash, and D. H. Conley each landed two. North Lenoir, North Pitt, Elastem Wayne and C. B. Aycock each had one man named.</p>
        <p>Named from Ayden-Grifton were Milton Brown, Ronnie Dixon, Jesse Brown, Tom Craft and Greg Nelson. Making the list from Southern Wayne were Vala Olliver, Nelson Smith, Ken Mac, Paul Robinson and Jeff Tillman.</p>
        <p>Farmville Centrals honorees included Barry Johnson, Chester Ellis and Lee Johnson. Selected from Southern Nash were J. D. Welms and Richie Morgan. From Conley came Willie Hawkins and Keith Gould. Greene Centrals All-Stars in</p>
        <p>cluded Lafan Forbes and Miles Briggs.</p>
        <p>Rounding out the team were Clarence Mooring of North Pitt, Mike Tumage of North Lenoir, Ashley Cox of Eastern Wayne and Carl Maples of C, B. Aycock,</p>
        <p>Area players making honorable mention included Jerome Shappard, Tim Butts and Harper Shackelford of Greene Central; Tony Koonce, Mike Rose and Ernest Dixon of Ayden-Grifton; Wave Oglesby, Bobby Wooten and Wardell Blow of Farmville Central; Jim Glisson, Craig McLawhom and Johnny Vines of North Pitt, and Calvin Hawkins, Stancil Hines and Lionel Streeter of D. H. Conley.</p>
        <p>CONSISTENTLY SCORING FAYE'TTEVILLE, Ark. (AP)  The Arkansas Razorbacks football teams have not been held scoreless in 72 games. Baylor defeated Arkansas the last time the Razorbacks failed to score, 7-0 in 1966.</p>
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        <p>ROBERSONVILLE-The Robersonville Golden Eagles advance into the second nwnd of State Playoffs Friday night against a tmigh Tabor C^ty team.</p>
        <p>'That game will be played in Tabor (Tity at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>"They are a big, [rfiysica! football team," Coach Noland Respess said of Tabor City. They run from a full-house T backfield and iey just try to power over you.</p>
        <p>Respess said that the top backfield man is one of their halfbacks, Rogers, while the key lineman is a tackle who goes both ways, Wright.</p>
        <p>They just try to run the ball</p>
        <p>right at you and dare you to try to stop iem, he said.</p>
        <p>Tabor City comes into the game with a 10-0-1 record, marred only by a tie with Hallsboro, a team in their conference. Robersonville is now 9-2, losing only to a pair of 3-A schools.</p>
        <p>Defensively, Tabor City is still big and strong, with many people going both ways. Tliey come at you in a 6-2 alignment and do a lot of manhunting," Respess said.</p>
        <p>Because of the size of the Tabor City team, the Eagles will probably take to the air to try to move the ball. They did this with</p>
        <p>a great deal of success last week when they edged out Fuquay-Varina in the first round of yardage. The two tied at 28-28.</p>
        <p>We fumbled about five times in the game, and we cant figure out why," Respss said. We havit fumbl^ 10 times the rest of the season put together. Probably it was just nervousness.</p>
        <p>Hie coach added that the passing game looked the best it has all year against Fuquay-Varina. (Matt) Wilson had a</p>
        <p>Jamesville In Win In Opener</p>
        <p>19, landing their lead to 55-41. Then, in the last period, the Vikings outhit their visitors, 20-10 to wrap up the victory.</p>
        <p>Mike Sutton led the Conley scoring with 22 points, while Cennel Streeter had 17 and Larry Daniels added 10. Wilbur Draugh had 20 and Kenny Joyner had 10 for Tarboro.</p>
        <p>Conley gets into the Eastern Carolina Conference play tonight as it travels to Greene Central for a league meeting.</p>
        <p>JVTarboro 34, Conley 52</p>
        <p>g f t</p>
        <p>5 0 10 8 6 22</p>
        <p>1 17 0 6 3</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>4 6 4 0</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE-Jamesyille High School split a pair of games with Chowan last night. The Bullets won the boys game, 58-52, while the girls bowed, 47-22.</p>
        <p>In the girls contest, Oiowan jumped into the lead in the first period, 10-6. They never trailed again. They outhit Jamesville, 9-6, in the second frame to take a 19-12 lead by half-time.</p>
        <p>In the third quarter, they continued to pull away, outhitting the Bullets, 12-4. That left (jhowan in a comfortable 31-16 lead with one period left. They outhit Jamesville, 16-6, in that to wind up the win.</p>
        <p>Rosa Cofield led Chowan with 22 points, while Belinda Byrum had 13. Donna Williams led Jamesville with eight ' points.</p>
        <p>Chowan and Jamesville fought-* it out all through the boys game. Chowan inched into a 14-12 lead in the first period, but the Bullets came back to outhit them in the second quarter, 17-13. That left the Jamesville five take a 29-27 lead at halftime.</p>
        <p>Jamesville built up its winning six point margin in the third period, outscoring Chowan, 16-12, to up the lead to 45-39. Then, as the game went to the wire, the Bullets matched points with Chowan, 13-13, to hold off any rally.</p>
        <p>Horace Hall led the Bullets with 22 points, while Steven James had 15 and Gurkin Martin had 10. For Chowan, Miles Roundtree had 15 and Melvin Roberts and Jerry Morris each had 10.</p>
        <p>Jamesville plays host to Chocowinity on Tuesday,</p>
        <p>GIRL'S GAME</p>
        <p>ChowanCofield 22, Ward, Byrum 13, Harrell 8, Bass, Sawyer 2, Baines, Morris, P Bass 2</p>
        <p>JamesvilleD. Williams 8, P. Hardison 4, Perry, Leggeft 6, Tetterton, Ellis 2, De. Williams, Barber, Martin 2</p>
        <p>fabulous football game," he said. Both throwing and running, Wilson and Frankie Spruill each picked up over 100 yards rushing, and Ricky Purvis caught a couple of key passes. Our offensive line also had one of its better games.</p>
        <p>Respess wasnt happy with the defense, however. They didnt do well. We made a lot of mistakes that we hadnt made all year. Weve been working hard to correct these this week. The coach feels that Tabor City will try to control the ball on the Eagles. Well try to counteract their size and strength with quickness and speed. We feel we can move the ball on them, but we have to avoid making mistakes.</p>
        <p>The winner of the game will again take to the road next week, facing the Northestem area winner for the Eastern te.</p>
        <p>Chowan</p>
        <p>Jamesville</p>
        <p>Chowan</p>
        <p>Roundtree</p>
        <p>Roberts</p>
        <p>Melvin</p>
        <p>Morris</p>
        <p>Elliott</p>
        <p>Wilson</p>
        <p>Cofield</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>Chowan</p>
        <p>Jamesville</p>
        <p>10 * 12 1447 4 4 4 422</p>
        <p>BOY'S GAME g f t Jamesville</p>
        <p>1 15 James 0 10 Hall</p>
        <p>2 6 Grimes 0 10 Martiii</p>
        <p>0 0 Davis</p>
        <p>1 9 Dickerson 0 2 Keys</p>
        <p>4 52 Totals</p>
        <p>g</p>
        <p>6 11 1 5 3 1 0 27</p>
        <p>14 13 12 1352 12 17 14 1358</p>
        <p>I t</p>
        <p>3  15 0 22 0 2 0 10 1 7 0 2 0 0</p>
        <p>4  58</p>
        <p>MATT WILSON</p>
        <p>Golfing</p>
        <p>Winners</p>
        <p>Guy Waldrop took first place in a Ladies Individual Calloway Handicap Tournament held recently at the Greenville Golf and Country (Hub.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Waldrop fired a 36 to take the tournament, played on the back nine holes of the club. Second place ended up in a three-way tie between Dardie Longino, Ann Whitehurst an^ Betty Kittrell, each of whom had a 37.</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>SAMMY GRAY</p>
        <p>A</p>
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        <p>Polyester cord body plus fiberglass cord belts.</p>
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        <p> Double Belted For Strength.</p>
        <p>FOR PICK UPS, PANELS VANS AND CAMPERS</p>
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        <p>Plus Fed. E T* from $2 40 to $3.35 per tire depending on size and old tire trade-in</p>
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        <pb facs="00092080_0009" />
        <p>Pete Rose Named As NL's Most Valuable</p>
        <p>Greene Central Takes Opener</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, November 21, lt7S^</p>
        <p>By KEN RAPPOPORT AsWiated Press Sports Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Pete Rose, the Cincinnati Reds irrepressible left fielder, was named the National Leagues Most Valuable Player for 1973 today by the Baseball Writers Association of America.</p>
        <p>Nicknamed Charley Hustle for his aU-out, aggressive baseball style, the Reds dynamic player won the MVP prize in a close battle with Pittsburgh Pirates slugger Willie Stargell,</p>
        <p>Rose, who hit .3^ this year in leading the National League in batting for the third time in his career, received 12 votes for first place and a total of 274 points.</p>
        <p>Stargell, the league leader in home runs with 44 and runs</p>
        <p>batted in with 119, collected 10 first-place votes and 250 points.</p>
        <p>It was the ghtest MVP NL race since 1960, when Willie McCovey of the San Francisco Giants edged Tom Seaver of the New York Mets by 22 points.</p>
        <p>Rose and Stargell were the only players named on all 24 ballots cast by the BBWAA committee, which consisted of two writers from each league city.</p>
        <p>Two other players who each received one first-place vote finished third and fourth in the balloting  San Francisco outfielder Bobby Bonds and Cincinnati second baseman Joe Morgan. Bonds collected 174 points, and Morgan, one of four</p>
        <p>Elon Climbs To Sixth Spot</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>Tennessee State remained the nations No. 1 college division football team today in the Associated Press poll.</p>
        <p>While others around them were changing places, the Tigers held onto the top ranking with 814 points, many of them on 31 first-place ballots.</p>
        <p>A nationwide panel of, broadcasters and sports writers kept Tennnessee State in first place after the Tigers impressive 35-7 victory over Alabama State last Saturday.</p>
        <p>The rest of the Top Ten was not as unshakeable. Hawaii plunged from second to a sixth-place tie, and Cal Poly-SLO from fourth to ninth after losses.</p>
        <p>Hawaii, beaten by Pacific 283, was tied with Elon for six^ with 374 points. Elon received two votes for No. 1. Cal PolySLO, beaten by Boise State 42-10, polled 247 points for ninth.</p>
        <p>The victory moved Boise State, which received one first-place vote, from Kkh to eighth in the rankings.</p>
        <p>The new No. 2 team is Western Kentucky, which received three votes for No, 1 and 693 points. Western Kentucky beat Murray State 32-27 for its 10th straight victory this year.</p>
        <p>Louisiana Tech, No. 5 last week, replaced Western Kentucky |s the No. 3 team, gaining one first-place ballot and 579 points after beating Northeast Louisiana 40-0 for No. 10 in a row.</p>
        <p>Wittenberg, with two votes for No. 1 and 465 points, moved up two spots to No. 4 after beating Marietta 35-7. Grambl-ing jumped two places to fifth with 384 points after trimming Southern U. 19-14.</p>
        <p>Rounding out the Top Ten were Boise State, No. 8 with 369 points, and Abilene Christian, No. 10 with one first-place vote and 212 points.</p>
        <p>Langston, a new member of</p>
        <p>Bowling</p>
        <p>Skirts &amp;amp; Shirts</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Peppis Pizza Den</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Jolly Four</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Clark Realtors</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>To &amp;amp; Bottoms</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>The Raiders</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>Four Jackasses</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Golden Dragons</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>Lickety Splits</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>The Lucky Five</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>Four Challengers</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>Mens high game, Jack Leggett, 222; mens high series. Mack Prichard, 570; womens high game, Synthia Manning, 215; womens hij^ series, Ruth Hardee, 514.</p>
        <p>Strikettes</p>
        <p>Harris Market</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>Thorpe Music</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>Good Timers</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>Carolina Sales</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Big Value Drugs</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>Team Ten</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>Moore-King-Sullivan</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>Ebonettes</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>Morgan Printers</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>Grei. Utilities</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>High game and series, Peggy</p>
        <p>Sawyer, 227, 522.</p>
        <p>SOME HGHT RACES SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Between 1966 and 1966 three National League pennant races were decided the last day of the regular season. Two otho* p^inants were decided after playoffs.</p>
        <p>The Dodgers of 1956 and 1966 won tte final day as did the 1964 St. Louis Cardinals. In 1959 the Dodgmv beat the Braves in a thiee-game playi^ aiul in 1962 the Giants beat the Dodgers two games to one.</p>
        <p>the ranked teams this week at No. 14, received the other ballot for first place.</p>
        <p>The Top 15, with first-place votes in parentheses, season records and total points. Points tabulated on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1:</p>
        <p>1. Tenn. St. (31)  9-0-0  814</p>
        <p>2. W. Ky. (3)  10-0-0  693</p>
        <p>3. La. Tech (1)  lO-l-O  579</p>
        <p>4. Wittenberg (2)  10-0-0  465</p>
        <p>5. Grambling  9-2-0  384</p>
        <p>6. Hawaii  8-1-0  374</p>
        <p>(tie) Elon (2)  11-0-0  374</p>
        <p>8. Boise State (1)  8-2-0  369</p>
        <p>9. Cal Poly^LO  8-1-0  247</p>
        <p>10. Ablne Chstn (1) 9-1-0  212</p>
        <p>11. South Dakota  8-2-0  198</p>
        <p>(tie) Delaware  8-3-0  198</p>
        <p>13. N. Dakota St.  8-2-0  170</p>
        <p>14. Langston (1)  0-0-0  111</p>
        <p>15. Jacksnvle St.  7-2-0  82</p>
        <p>Footsball</p>
        <p>Tourney</p>
        <p>Two East Carolina University students have won the largest footsball tournament ever held in this area.</p>
        <p>John Doggett' and Mark Chewing downed Brian Taylor and Larry Lieberman to take the tournament, held at Friar Tucks Footsball Hall in Greenville,</p>
        <p>Over 30 teams from Eastern North Carolina entered the double elimination tournament held last week. Lieberman and Taylor won the opening round of competition Tuesday night.-Doggett and Chewing won the second round playoffs and swept to victory in the finals winning eight out of nine games.</p>
        <p>Footsball is a soccer-style table game that can be found in arcades and amusement centers throughout the South. Its popularity among young people is similar to that enjoyed by pool in the late thirties.</p>
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        <p>See or caff;</p>
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        <p>Reds in the top 10, collected 102 points.</p>
        <p>Montreal relief ace Mike Marshall, who finished second to Seaver in&amp;gt; this years Cy Young Award voting, completed the top five with 93 points.</p>
        <p>Others in the top 10 were Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals, with 65 points; Cincinnatis Tony Peroi, 59; Seaver. 57; Ken Singlettii of the Montreal Expos, 52&amp;gt; a,nd Cincinnatis Johnny Bench, 41, last years MVP.</p>
        <p>For Rose, the glossy MVP award is the culmination of a long-time ambition.</p>
        <p>Its great to be No. 1, Rose said. Its the biggest honor yet. Im thrilled and happy.</p>
        <p>Rose wasnt completely surprised, though.</p>
        <p>I thought I had a shot at it, although I wouldnt have felt bad if Stargell had won it. Homers always talk, said Rose. But I had a great year. Its the most consistent year Ive had. And Im very appreciative to my teammates for it.</p>
        <p>For Stargell, it marked the third straight year of frustration, In 1971 he was runner-up to Joe Torre of St. Louis, and last year, finished third behind Bench and Billy Williams of the CSiicago Cubs.</p>
        <p>It doesnt come as a shock, said Stargell. That all happened in 71. There are no hard feelings between Pete and me because we had no control over it.  1</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL - Greene Central High School rolled to a 55-31 victory over South Lenoir High School in its opening game last night. </p>
        <p>The Ewes of Greene Ontral were not quite as lucky, falling to their guests, 44-34.</p>
        <p>In the girls contest, South Lenoir roared away to an 11-2 lead in the first period of play. They continued to dominate the second period, 164, to run up a 27-6 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>Greene Central eased back in the third quarter, 12-6, and cut the lead to 33-18. The Ewes again outhit South Lenoir, 16-11, in the final period, but were too far back for the rally to take effect.</p>
        <p>Sue Markham led South Lenoir with 19 points, while Judy Tripp had 12 and Delilah Pridgen had 10 for Greene Central.</p>
        <p>Hie boys contest saw the Rams shoot out to a 12-6 lead in the first quarter of the game. They continued to pull away by hitting 19 points in the second frame while South Lenoir got only 12. That left Greene Central ahead, 31-18.</p>
        <p>The scoring slowed in the third quarter, as the Rams got only seven but held their foe to only four as the score climbed to 38-22. The Rams then hit 17 in the final frame to nine for South Lenoir, wrapping it up.</p>
        <p>Moses Barron led the Ram scoring with 19 points while Lonnie Artis had 10. No one broke double digures for South Lenoir.</p>
        <p>The Rams play host to Conley</p>
        <p>tonight in their first conference game.  v</p>
        <p>otraN)k._</p>
        <p>Loss Of' Tall Cager Was Big For Keydets</p>
        <p>JVSouth Loiwir J5, Oroou Contra GIRL'S GAME South LenoirMarkham 1, Byrd 9, Taylor 7.</p>
        <p>Greene CentralTripp U, Prtdgen 10. South Lenoir  11  1  4  1144</p>
        <p>Greene Central  J  4  11  1414</p>
        <p>BOY'S GAME S. Lenoir  -  Central</p>
        <p>Mitchell  9  Barron  19</p>
        <p>Taylor  6  Artis  10</p>
        <p>Heath  6  Sheppard  7</p>
        <p>Smith  4  </p>
        <p>Hooker  4  Batts  4</p>
        <p>Witherspoon  2  Carraway  4</p>
        <p>Totals  11  A. Barron  2</p>
        <p>Moore  2</p>
        <p>Totals  SS</p>
        <p>South Lenoir Greene Central</p>
        <p>4 12 4  931</p>
        <p>12 19 7 1755</p>
        <p>Must Buy Tickets</p>
        <p>Bo(ter Club, season tickets, and complementary tickets wUl not be honored for the Rose High School-Wilmington Hoggard 4-A State Playoff game to be held here Friday night.</p>
        <p> Athletic Director Bud Phillips said that student tickets wodd be on sale today at Rose High for $1.50, and that all tickets at the gate would be $2. Those people holding season or Booster Club tickets will not be able to use them for this game, Phillips said, because this is not a regular season game.</p>
        <p>The two teams will be battling for a spot in the State 4-A Semifinals.</p>
        <p>The American League had 12 pitchers who won 20 or more games in 1973.</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE ReflecMr Sports Editor</p>
        <p>Recruiting for a military school such as Virginia Military Institute has not been easy in recent years. But this fall, VMI Coach Bill Blair felt that he had accomplished quite a bit.</p>
        <p>One of the things he had done during the past year was to recruit the biggest man ever to come to VMI, 6-10 Ray Petty.</p>
        <p>But just a few weeks ago. Petty left Lexington, Va., and headed home. He told the press that the hazing tactics of the upper-classmen at VMI was too much. Similar complaints had been leveled by the members of the football team in the preceeding weeks.</p>
        <p>A lot of hopes that Blair had for the coming four years went with Petty when he packed his bags. The system at VMI had claimed another victim in a growing list.</p>
        <p>Losing him certainly is going to hurt us, Blair admitted. But he also added that there a number of other fine freshmen on hand who will help build the program.</p>
        <p>One of the top frosh is John Krovic, a 6-3 guard who averaged 18.1 per game last year. We beat out some mighty good people to get him, Blair said. Hes a fine shooter, and a big guard for us. He also helps to give us plenty of depth.</p>
        <p>Joining him in the backcourt are three veterans, David Lester, 5-10, Gordie Rawlyk, 6-0;</p>
        <p>and Curt Reppart, 6-0.</p>
        <p>Blair is also pleased that he has most of the front court men back too. They include Charlie Tyler, 64; Steve Wold, 6-5; and Steve Chapin, 6-7, who has shown a great deal of improvement, according to the coach.</p>
        <p>We have a lot of experience, but we are probably going to be weak in rebounding, . Blair said. Petty would have helped in this area.</p>
        <p>This will probabl;^ be the best shooting team Ie&amp;gt;liad since Ive been here, he added. Again, two freshmen will play important scoring roles, Blair believes. They are 6-6/i (Jeorge Borojevich and 6-6 Will Bynum.</p>
        <p>Bynum is a fine big man, Blair said. Borojevich is big and strong, but has a lot to learn. He can shoot.</p>
        <p>One other freshmen, Dave Slomski, probably wont see much action this year.</p>
        <p>Another problem Blair has is his schedule. Its a little more realistic this year, and we play in a fine tournament. Getting more early wins will help us</p>
        <p>Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds led the National League in hitting during 1973 with a .338 mark, 18 points ahead of Cesar Cedeno of Houston. It was Roses third batting title.</p>
        <p>when we get into the conference.</p>
        <p>Blair had hoped that Petty would help the Keydets to their first winning season in years. I still think we can have a fine year, but its going to be harder to achieve, he said. Our freshmen are going to help us a lot. They are definitely the best weve brought in.</p>
        <p>We were rated by The Basketball Weekly as the l^h most improved team in the nation last year, and I expect even more improvement. Im not saying were going to be fighting for the championship, but I do think that were going to fool some people before this year is up.</p>
        <p>Purple-Gold Set</p>
        <p>The annual Purple-Gold basketball game at East Carolina University will be held Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Minges Coliseum.</p>
        <p>The public will get its first view of Coach Tom Quinns young team, which features three returning lettermen and six incoming recruits.</p>
        <p>'The Bucs will be led by their co-captains for the year, Tom Marsh and Roger Atkinson.</p>
        <p>Their first home game of the year, following the exhibition, will be on Friday, November 30. as they entertain the University of North Carolina at Wilmington.</p>
        <p>THE TEST RESULTS ARE IN...</p>
        <p>^The Firestone Steel Radial500 can give you up to 30 extra mles*fx)m every tankful of gas you buy.</p>
        <p>*Based'on a car with a fuel capacity of 20gallons and currently averaging 15 miles per gallon. Naturally, your savings will depend on how much stop and start driving you do.</p>
        <p>Youve probably read that radial tires^roll more easily than - other types of tires, and since the Firestone Steel Radial 500 tires are now available across the country and are original equipment on many new cars, we thought youd like to know how much more gas mileage they might give you now that fuel is in short supply.</p>
        <p>For months the Firestone Engineering and Development Division has been conducting tests, both in the laboratory and on the test track, so we could tell you what to expect from these tires. And now, the results are in.</p>
        <p>Laboratory Rdling Resistance lest:</p>
        <p>In laboratory tests conducted in the Firestone Indoor Test Center, our engineers studied the differences in rolling resistance thats the amount of energy and power needed to move one tire between our original equipment Steel Radial 500 and our original equipment belted bias tire. When their tests showed an amazing 27 percent difference thats 27 percent less energy needed to move the Steel Radial 500 than the belted bias tirethey immediately set up a series of tests at our outdoor proving ground at Ft. Stockton, Texas, to determine what kind of fuel savings our Steel Radial 500 might give you in actual on-the-road conditions at different speeds.</p>
        <p>Test No. 2 ^</p>
        <p>30MPH</p>
        <p>50MPH</p>
        <p>70MPH</p>
        <p>Firestone Belted Bias Tire</p>
        <p>19.07 mpg</p>
        <p>19.23 mpg</p>
        <p>14.86 mpg</p>
        <p>Firestone Steel Radial 500</p>
        <p>20.72 mpg</p>
        <p>20.60 mpg</p>
        <p>15.86 mpg</p>
        <p>Percent improvement in Fuel Economy of Steel Radial 500</p>
        <p>9%</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>1%</p>
        <p>Fiid Economy lest:</p>
        <p>These tests were run on a standard four-door 1973 U.S.A. sedan. All fuel, speeds, and mileage were scientifically measured in a series of twenty-four carefully controlled and measured runs. Two complete tests were made, with two runs in each test.</p>
        <p>'All figures are an average of two runs each, at speeds of 30, 50, and 70 miles per hour.</p>
        <p>What all this means to you:</p>
        <p>You may have been considering radial tires to get their better steering, road holding, and a 40,000 mile guarantee. Now the Firestone Steel Radial 500 gives you a still stronger reason, for as gas becomes both harder to get and more expensive, the more miles per gallon we can give you will mean both dollars saved and extra gasoline you can use for little errands or long trips.</p>
        <p>And think about this: even if radial tires only gave people fuel savings of 2% instead of 7% to 10%, the effect of putting all the nations hundred million cars on radial tires would result in a tremendous savings of fuel each year, a significant factor with our current fuel shortage.</p>
        <p>So think hard about radial tires. And ask your Firestone Dealer or Store for a free copy of the fuel savings test data on the tire you now know can put some extra trips into every tankful you buy...</p>
        <p>The 40,000 mile Steel Radial 500 another people tire from</p>
        <p>Test No. 1 ^</p>
        <p>30MPH</p>
        <p>50MPH</p>
        <p>70MPH</p>
        <p>Firestone Belted Bias Tire</p>
        <p>18.12 mpg</p>
        <p>18.62 mpg</p>
        <p>14.90 mpg</p>
        <p>Firestone Steel Radial 500</p>
        <p>19.87 mpg</p>
        <p>20.46 mpg</p>
        <p>16.15 mpg</p>
        <p>Percent improvement in Fuel Economy of Steel Radial 500</p>
        <p>10%</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>10%</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>OUR 40.000 MILE GUARANTEE The Stel Radial .500 by Firestone is guaranU-ed to give you 40.000 mili-^i o tri-adwfar in normal passenger use on the same car. If it doesnt, take your guaranU&amp;gt;e to any Firestone Store or participating Dealer. He'll replace the tire with a new one and give you credit (or the mileage not received based on the then current adjustment price (approximate national average staling price) plus Federal Excise Tax. A small service charge may be added.</p>
        <p>' All figures are an average of two runs each, at speed* of 30, 50, and 70 miles per hour.</p>
        <p>OR USE YOUR SHELL CREDIT CARD</p>
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        <p>t &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Is Best In U.S.</p>
        <p>BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -ENrery week it seems like someone has asked me about Alabama," says Coach Charles McClendon of seventh-ranked Louisiana State.</p>
        <p>"Well, this week I can answer them, he added.</p>
        <p>And, McClendons answer on the eve of a Thank^iving night showdown with the No. 2 Crimson Tide for the Southeastern Conference football crown is, "I think they are the best team in America."</p>
        <p>The two undefeated Southern powers, among a handful of teams retaining a shot at the mythical national championship. will square off with depthladen squads at 6;35 p.m., EST Thursday in a nationally televised (ABC) game that is expected to lure a capacity crowd of 67.510 into Tiger Stadium.</p>
        <p>An Alabama victory  and (he Tide is favored by two touchdowns  would be the .S(XXh triumph in the schools history, making it only the eighth college team ever to attain that milestone. The others include a quartet of Ivy Lague teams that were playing before Alabama started the game  Yale. Princeton, Harvard and Pennsylvania  plus Michigan, Notre Dame and Texas.</p>
        <p>"Weve made news this year by playing a lot of people, drawls Paul "Bear Bryant, the crusty Tide coach who has a glittering 229-69-16 in 29 years.</p>
        <p>The Tide is gunning for an unprecedented third straight outright SEC championship, although Alabama and Tennessee</p>
        <p>each put together a trio of con-ference titles, one of which was shared with another team.</p>
        <p>Alabama has won 11 confer-ice titles, LSU five. The Tide claimed national crowns under Bryant in 1961, 1964 and 1965.</p>
        <p>LSU ranks No. 1 in the SEC in rushing defense, yielding 129 yards per game, and Alabama is second with 131. Linebacker Warren Capone and tackle Steve Cassidy spearh^ded the Bengal defense and linebacker Woodrow Lowe, called by Bryant another LeeRoy Jordan, and tackle Mike Raines spark the Tide defenders.</p>
        <p>In other Thanksgiving day games. Air Force is at Notre Dame, Texas meets Texas A&amp;amp;M, Ohio University travels to Marshall and Utah State is at Southern Mississippi.</p>
        <p>Notre Dame, fifth ranked in the Associated Press poll and bound for the Sugar Bowl against Alabama, is heavily favored to run its season record to 9-0. But the Irish first will have to shake out the cobwebs of 12 days of idleness since their 31-10 victory over Pittsburgh.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, the surprising Falcons, who won their past five games, come into the contest with only four days rest after beating Arizona 27-26.</p>
        <p>The llth-ranked Texas Longhorns go into their contest with the Aggies as two-touchdown favorites. The Longhorns, 7-2, already have clinched at least a tie for the Southwest Conference title and a host berth in the Cotton Bowl opposite Nebraska.</p>
        <p>Driving To Sports Took A Lot Of Gas</p>
        <p>SCOTT-FREE LAYUP  Charlie Scott (33) of the Phoenix Suns, goes in for a layup after knocking Buffalos Jim McMillan out of the way in second-period action Tuesday night in their</p>
        <p>National Basketball Association encounter. Bob McAdoo (11) of the Braves watches for a rebound. Buffalo WMi, 127-100. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>state Seeks To Cougs Claim Victory;</p>
        <p>Get Perfect Year Hot Winter Out West</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>The bowl-bound North Carolina State Wolfpack bids for its first all-winning Atlantic Coast (Conference season in the home game against Wake Forest Saturday.</p>
        <p>A victory over weak Wake Forest, which has a 1-8-1 record, also would give N.C. State the ACC title on 6-6 in the league and 6-3 in all games.</p>
        <p>The Wolfpack, ranked 16th nationally, will play Kansas in the Liberty Bowl in Memphis on Dec. 17. Kansas is 6-3-1 and is tied with Pittsburgh for 20th ranking.</p>
        <p>Maryland. 7-3, which got points but did not break into the top 20, will be home to 17th-ranked Tulane Saturday before playing in the Peach Bowl.</p>
        <p>TTie Tulane Green Wave was impressive in beating Vanderbilt 24-3 last Saturday for its ninth victory in 10 games. Tulane moved the ball for 439 yards, 315 rushing and 124 passing. Tulane will play Houston in the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston on Dec. 29.</p>
        <p>Maryland will play in the Peach Bowl in Atlanta on Dec. 28.</p>
        <p>Two other games between arch rivals will wind up the ACC regular season Saturday. Clemson will be at South Carolina and North Carolina at Duke.</p>
        <p>(Coach Paul Deitzel of South Carolina told his weekly news conference Tuesday, "A lot of people are talking about this being a high-scoring, wide-open football game between two teams with explosive offenses. Well, Im not so sure about that. Ive seen very few high-scoring games between arch rivals. These Clemson-South (Carolina games dont always follow form. I think emotion plays a big part in a game such as this, and it will be a tight contest.</p>
        <p>(Coach Bill Etooley of North (Carolina has made similar remarks. "Records dont mean</p>
        <p>anything in a great rivalry like this, he said of the game with Duke. "A win Saturday would ease some of the disappointment of the season for both teams.</p>
        <p>North Carolina is 4-6 in all games and 1-4 in the league after winning winning a conference game, 42-0 over Wake Forest last week. Duke is 1-8-1 in all games and 0-44 In the league. It played a 7-7 tie with Wake Forest two weeks ago.</p>
        <p>Dooley told his news luncheon Tuesday that tailback James Betterson, who broke his hand in the Wake Forest game, would not play against Duke. That will leave Sammy Johnson and Mike Voight to play the position.</p>
        <p>By FRED ROTHENBERG Associated Press Sports Writer Although the season has only reached the one-quarter point, predictions in the Western (Conference in the National Basketball Association are pointing to a torrid winter out west.</p>
        <p>Anyone who says that the Los Angeles Lakers are a shoo-in, doesnt know whats going on in the NBA, said Chicago Coach Dick Motta after his Bulls outlasted the 'Trail Blazers Tuesday night 106-101.</p>
        <p>This was a big game because this is the start of a make or break road trip for us, said Jeff Mullins, whose feed to Nate Thurmond helped Golden State squeeze by Milwaukee 108-105.</p>
        <p>Philosophies Clash In Game</p>
        <p>By HARRY ATTCINS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>DETROIT (AP) - Thursdays nationally televised National Football League battle between the Washington Redskins and the Detroit Lions pits two coaches whose philosophies are as different as, well, turkey and cranberries.</p>
        <p>Washingtons (Jeorge Allen has been described by some as the Norman VincMt Peale of professional football. He will sacrifice anything to win.</p>
        <p>Detroits Don McCafferty, on the other hand, has a relaxed way about him that has evolved into an easy rider image.</p>
        <p>Yet both men have taken teams to the Super Bowl and both liked it enough to want to do it again.</p>
        <p>Both teams were winners Sunday as the Lions defeated (Chicago, 30-7, while the Stins took Baltimore, 22-14.</p>
        <p>The Lions defense came up with big plays at (Chicago with rookie Dick Jauron making the biggest one with his firet NFL</p>
        <p>reception.</p>
        <p>TTie former Yale star raced 95 yards to score, breaking a 7-7 tie and swung the games momentum to Detroit. He later picked off two more for a total return yardage of 167.</p>
        <p>Offensively, the Lions Altie Taylor picked up 105 yards against a Butkus-less Bears defense. TTie former Illinois menace was sidelined with painfully arthritic khees and didnt even dress.</p>
        <p>Billy Kilmer likely will quarterback the Skins. He will carry a 54.8 completion percentage into the game based on 91 completions of 166 attempts. Eight went for touchdowns.</p>
        <p>This is a reconstruction period for us, said Los Angeles Coach Bill Sharman after the Lakers were whipped by the Knicks 105-89.</p>
        <p>In the rest of the NBA, Buffalo trounced Phoenix 127-100 and Philadelphia downed Kansas Ci(y-Omaha 109-103.</p>
        <p>In the American Basketball Association, Indiana edged Utah 102-98 and Carolina tripped Denver 113-107.</p>
        <p>Bulls 106, Trail Blazers 101 Portland held CTiet Walker scoreless for nine minutes of the final period, but the veteran Chicago forward then poured in 10 points in the last three minutes, finishing the game with 30 points and leading Bulls'* to a 106-101 victory over the Trail-Blazers.</p>
        <p>Warriors 108, Bucks 105 Thurmond blocked a shot by Oscar Robertson then sank a layup after a feed from Mullins, giving Golden State a 108-105 victory over Milwaukee.</p>
        <p>Knicks 105, Lakers 89 Bill Bradley, Willis Reed and Walt Frazier combined for 25 points in the third period, leading New York on a 26-8 tear and the Knicks breezed to a 105-89 victory over the Lakers.</p>
        <p>76ers 109, Kings 103 Larry Jones and Tom Van-Arsdale each chipped in 10 points during a third-period surge, lifting Philadelphia to a 109-103 victory over Kansas City-Omaha.</p>
        <p>Braves 127, Suns 100 Bob McAdoo fired in 26 points and grabbed 18 rebounds while Elmie DiGregorio had 18 points, eight assists and ran his consecutive free throw streak to 34, helping Buffalo romp over</p>
        <p>Phoenix 127-100.</p>
        <p>Pacers 102, Stars 98 Kenin Joyces three-point basket tied the game at 80-80, climaxing an Indiana rally from 11 points down, and Bob Netolickys seven points in the final two minutes carried the Pacers past Utah 102-98. Cougars 113, Rockets 100 Billy (Xmninghams 25 points and a Carolina defense that forced 27 Denver turnovers paced the Cougars to a 113-107 victory over Denver.</p>
        <p>By BLOYS BRITT AP Auto Racing Writer</p>
        <p>DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)  The average husband rushes home from work Friday, packs his wife'and kids into the family wagon and heads for a weekend at the beach.</p>
        <p>He fits squarely into a leas-ure-time pattern that has boomed so rapidly in recent years that, in 1972, vacationers were responsible for the consumption of 5,416,140,827 gallons of gasoline.</p>
        <p>Then, there is the stay-at-homer. He doesnt go for the clogged freeways, the beaches or the mountains. He mows the lawn Friday afternoons, takes off for the golf course Saturdays and goes to a basketball game or an auto race Sundays.</p>
        <p>He, and untold millions like him, helped put away 11,496,-925,880 gallons of fuel last year simply by going to and from major sports events.</p>
        <p>The figures are from a comprehensive study of energy consumption released Tuesday by the National Motorsports Committee, a group from the auto racing industry that says its aim is for a square deal, when and if r^ulations are imposed on sports during the energy crisis.</p>
        <p>The in-depth survey, covering a period of two years and compiled by Motors Sports Marketing, Inc., also includes figures on heating, lightning and air-conditioning of arenas; the use of truck-campers, autos and motorhomes in vacation travel, and fuel used in sportsH*elated chartered jets and buses.</p>
        <p>Not included were figures for such minor spectator attractions as dog racing, jai-alai, tennis, roller skating, power boating, motorcycling, hunting, skiing, fishing, semi-pro baseball and softball, and the intercollegiate sports of soccer, lacrosse, baseball, track and field, wrestling and swimming.</p>
        <p>In the specific area of mass-entertainment major sports, footballprofessional, college and high schoolaccounted for 564,043,166 gallons of gasoline and fuel, the report showed.</p>
        <p>Basketball, again including the pros as well as colleges and high schools, ranked second with 238,394,571 gallons annually, while horse racing was third with 97,522,973 gallons.</p>
        <p>Auto racing, including the fuel consumed in the racing machines, was figured at 93,-639,696 gallons last year. The actual on-tr^ck consumption, including 32,000 events on 1,600 local and regional tracks, amounted to only 8,963,776 gallons.</p>
        <p>Thus, say the car racing buffs, motorsports accounted for only one4enth of one per cent of the total fuel consumption attributed to all leas-ure time activities.</p>
        <p>John Ck)oper, executive secretary of the newly formed National Motorsports Committee, admitted that Uie auto racing fraternity was disturbed about sporadic charges that the sport is a big consumer of fuel.</p>
        <p>Auto racing has a high visibility, is a comparatively new and booming sport, and some think it might expendable if things get really critical, Cooper said.</p>
        <p>We do bum fuel, but as the study dramatically shows, it is significant^ompared to the total consumption, he added.</p>
        <p>Cooper said the energy consumption study commissioned by his group indicates that fuel consumption by all mass-enter-tainment sports represents only a drop in the bucket when compared to leisure4ime useage in general.</p>
        <p>Horse racing, the leading spectator draw, had the biggest attendance in sports last year, 74,015,3%. Auto racing was next at 46,201,566, ,yet the amount of fuel burned in getting to and from horse and aUto racing events amounted to far less than the 299,520,000 gallons used by 936 million people who visited movie theaters last year, the report showed.</p>
        <p>TTie study, citing figures from the U.S. travel Data Center, indicated that people using autos</p>
        <p>and trucks without camping equipmmt used 4,663,495,900 gallons of fuel in leisure-time activities last year. Figuring 10 miles per gallon for the veicle, thats 46,634,959,000 miles.</p>
        <p>People using autos and trucks, with camping equipment, were credited with another 7,626,449,275 miles and consumption of TO2,644,927 gallons, of gasoline.  *</p>
        <p>The international fuel short-' age has directed a lot ol attention to sports in general,.' Cooper said. actuaUy, specta- tor sports figure extremely low* in the consumption of energy; when considered as a part of</p>
        <p>the whole.  L</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>It may be that there will be regulations specifically directed, at sports if the crisis continues., All we in auto racing want is, an even break with the others.-</p>
        <p>Pearson</p>
        <p>Honored</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-Stock car^ racer David Pearson of Sparr* tanburg, S.C., received thei Martini &amp;amp; Rossi Trophy Tues- day as the Driver of the YearC for 1973.</p>
        <p>Pearson was selected by  panel of motor sports writers^ and broadcasters.</p>
        <p>Coach Joe Paterno of Penrt;^ State often tells his football teams, Do the little things, right and the big things will^ take care of themselves.</p>
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        <p>Take a good friend home for the holidays.</p>
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        <p>Overton's and</p>
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        <p>rOR SALE AT PUBLIC AUCTION FOR CASH</p>
        <p>10:30 AM November 30, 1973</p>
        <p>AT THE W.E. LANG HARDWARE STORE, WALSTONBURG, NC THE FOLLOWING LISTED PERSONAL PROPERTY:</p>
        <p>1 Leatherette sofa and matching chair</p>
        <p>2 office desks</p>
        <p>1 Remington Manual typewriter 1 Checkwriter</p>
        <p>1 Burroughs posting machine</p>
        <p>1 Electric desk calculator</p>
        <p>2 Office Safes Miscellaneous office supplies, furniture, check and</p>
        <p>record files, flourescent lamps, and other office equipment. Various lots, bolts, nuts, sundried hardware items, paint, varnish, shellac, nails, et cetera.</p>
        <p>1 Small drill press Miscellaneous new and used hand tools, wrenches, wood and metal working tools 1 Railroad jack</p>
        <p>1 Tidewater No. 24*%cast iron stove (excellent condition)</p>
        <p>Various work and display counters, several with adjustable shelving, one bolt and nail turnstyle teveral sets of merchants scales  *</p>
        <p>1 l5 GMC truck  ^</p>
        <p>The property will be available for the Inspection of the public at 9:00 AM date of sale ''We retain the right to reject any or all bids on the above ftroperty."</p>
        <p>[WACHOVIA BANK &amp;amp; TRUST COMPANY, NA P. O. Box 1767 Greenville, NC 27834 Executor of the Estate of W. E. Lang, Jr.</p>
        <p>By: J. C. Respess Trust Officer</p>
        <p>Theres no friend, likeagood</p>
        <p>S520</p>
        <p>FIFTH</p>
        <p>niend.</p>
        <p>OID CHARTER</p>
        <p>The smoothest Kentucky Bourbon you'll ever know.</p>
        <p>, STRAISMT BOMMN WttSKEy - 86 PROOF- W13 OlOCMiUER OUT CO. LOtttSVtUl, 0</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0011" />
        <p>CROSSWORD</p>
        <p>PUZZLE</p>
        <p>ACROSS 26. Bound 1. Determination 29. Aztec |od of</p>
        <p>5. Casting 8. Signal</p>
        <p>11. Impression</p>
        <p>12. Malt brew</p>
        <p>13. Simple sugar</p>
        <p>14. Vocalize</p>
        <p>15. Compunction</p>
        <p>17. Caldron</p>
        <p>18. Grow</p>
        <p>19. Terror</p>
        <p>20. Heavy</p>
        <p>22. Meadow barley</p>
        <p>23. Seths son 25. Precious</p>
        <p>metal</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>sowing</p>
        <p>31. Palm leaf</p>
        <p>32. Coypu 36. Flog</p>
        <p>38. Urge</p>
        <p>39. Forage plant</p>
        <p>40. Word for word</p>
        <p>42. Dillseed</p>
        <p>43. Being</p>
        <p>44. Salutation</p>
        <p>45. Hereditary factor</p>
        <p>46. Espouse</p>
        <p>47. Converged</p>
        <p>48. Pitcher IT</p>
        <p>iiEa^ aaQ[ia!:!Si^ aosQQ aaas!</p>
        <p>SQQiiSaB QBO QGQB BQSBQBD BQQ3B \mS</p>
        <p>naaaa aanaiaaaB Baa</p>
        <p>{Cl SBQS QgJS</p>
        <p>HQQ aasa aau</p>
        <p>SOlUTiON OF YcSTERDAY S PUZZIE DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Small bunches</p>
        <p>2. Imbecile</p>
        <p>3. Slow; music</p>
        <p>4. Dally</p>
        <p>Par rime 20 min.</p>
        <p>AP ifewsfeatures</p>
        <p>5. Seeming contradiction</p>
        <p>6. Holly</p>
        <p>7. Treasure</p>
        <p>8. Bullfighter on foot</p>
        <p>9. Assault 10. Looked 16. From 18. Conciliate 21. Preceded</p>
        <p>24. Man's undershirt</p>
        <p>25. Acquire</p>
        <p>26. Concave</p>
        <p>27. Tennyson heroine</p>
        <p>28. Continued 30. Breed-of dog ,33. Replenish 34. Peace goddess ;35. Garden flower |37. That man 38. Roof edge 41. Hydraulic</p>
        <p>  pump</p>
        <p>n-21 42. Mature</p>
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        <p>LATE SHOW FRI. &amp;amp; SAT. 11:00 P.M. ALL SEATS 1.50</p>
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        <p>e mansion.</p>
        <p>I The madness.</p>
        <p>The maniac.</p>
        <p>H No escape.</p>
        <p>SLGNT NiohT bLooCjy NiohT</p>
        <p>^ A CANNON RELEASE</p>
        <p>NEXT BIG HIT!</p>
        <p>JOHNNY CASH IN '^HE OOSPEL ROAD" (G)</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1973</p>
        <p>CARROLL RICHTER'S</p>
        <p>HOROSCOPE</p>
        <p>from th Carroll Rightar Institute</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;fV GENERAL TENDENCIES: Much poor ^ ^ judgment is possible for most of us now but there is an excellent chance to overcome this by being very quiet and hstenmg to hunches.</p>
        <p>ARIES (Mar, 21 to Apr. 19) You are ambitious to get things done now. but dont rely too much on friends who are busy with own' affairs Keep promises; renegmg could have dire results</p>
        <p>TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) You want to blast off at an associate, but this could sever relationship unwisely. Forget your prejudices and see the matter in its proper light. Cooperate</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Stick to work instead of gomg off on some tangent that could be expensive Take treatment to calm nerves. Have poise, good sense.</p>
        <p>MCX)N CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Dont force friends to do what you like m your anxiety and desire for a good time. Reach a happy mutual understanding Go Dutch treat</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Bemg demandmg at home could create big arguments best avoided, so get out early. Make hay while the sun shines Use care in motion,</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Get busy at routines but dont suddenly feel you have to use unorthodox methods. Bemg overly cntical of others couid get you mto a peck of trouble.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct 22) Money problems can disturb, but clarify thinkmg and you can improve things Join persons whose assistance you need. Be happy with mate in p m.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct, 23 to Nov, 21) Dont force others to your way of thinkmg, but see their side as well Become more successful this way. Handle situation at home mtelligently.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec, 21) Secret plannmg can make the future brighter. Talk matters over wisely with expert and seek advice of a good pal also,</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan 20) Relymg on a clever friend is wise now so you gain your personal desires. Dont take anything fox granted. Show respect for the law.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan 21 to Feb, 19) Change your point of view to improve vocaonal and credit affaus Dont permit some disturbed person to waste your time Take a more positive approach toward others,</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar, 20) Fmd a new and more fascinating way of keepmg promises made for better results. Hunches are good now, but use sound judgment as weU, Relax tonight.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY he or she wl like to jump mto anythmg and everything without much planning, so teach early to deliberate first, then act with caution, sureness, and the fine promise in this chart is realized. Give good education to prepare to meet the changes that come up in this lifetime and turn adversity into success There could be an artist in this chart.</p>
        <p>GOREN ON BRIDGE</p>
        <p>Todays hand could prove awkward for those who are compelled tc open one dia-moi^ and then have to search for a rebid over partners two club response. They might reach a five club contract that can be defeated with good defense. Natural methods, however, ended in the excellent four heart contract that needed xmly a modicum of care to be brought home. Note that South had no qualms about contracting for game even tho he knew that his partner was unlikely to hold more than three hearts for his delayed jump raise.</p>
        <p>The first two tricks were won by the king and jack of spades, and West continued with the ace of spades. De*^ clarers natural instinct was to ruff, but he realized that this might not be ,the winning play. To ruff would mean shortening his trump holding to three cards. Since the combined heart suit in declarers hand and dummy was only seven cards, that meant that the defenders had a total of six trumps. Six missing cards are likely to divide 4-2 most of the time, so if declarer ruffed the third spade, the defenders would then have control of the hand because one of them held a long trump.</p>
        <p>However, there was no need for declarer to panic, for he had a simple ploy to counter the defenders forcing game. Instead of ruffing the third spade, declarer discarded a diamond.</p>
        <p>This left  defenders without resource. If West continued spades, declarer would ruff high in dummy while discarding from his hand. A shift would also be to no avail, for declarer would win, draw all the outstanding trumps and come to 10 tricks via four trump tricks, the ace of diamonds and five clubs.</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GK)REN</p>
        <p>e&amp;gt; im, TIM ChlCMO TrlbuM</p>
        <p>Both vulnerable. South deals.</p>
        <p>NORTH 4 832</p>
        <p>0 83</p>
        <p>4 A K Q J 7</p>
        <p>WEST 4 AKQ J4 ^ 9852 0 K62 48</p>
        <p>EAST 4 10 9 5 ^43 0 J975 4 10 6 4 3</p>
        <p>SOUTH</p>
        <p>4 76</p>
        <p>A K 10 7</p>
        <p>0 A Q 10 4</p>
        <p>4952</p>
        <p>The bidding;</p>
        <p>South</p>
        <p>West North</p>
        <p>East</p>
        <p>1 ;?</p>
        <p>14 2 4</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>2 0</p>
        <p>Pass 3 ^</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>4 ^</p>
        <p>Pass Pass</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead; King of 4 Proponents of five-card major suit openings stress the bidding comfort they obtain knowing that opener has five cards whenever he opens a major suit. They seldom mention that a 4-3 fit can be more than edequate, though the play might need some care.</p>
        <p>264 PLAYHOUSE THEATRE</p>
        <p>FarmvMIe Hwry. Phone 7S-0a48.  Miles West of Oroonvitio on 3M.</p>
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        <p>The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>We Get Fruits Of Our Labors</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, GreMiville. N.C.-^Wednesday, November 21, 197311 thr&amp;lt;^y, not indiscriminate food uie bloody issue.</p>
        <p>Roger wonders why Thanksgiving Day is a North American evcmt. The Pilgrims focussed on personal freedoms while in South America the goal was Gold vs. God. Gov. Bradford also says communism didnt produce the crops that capitalism quickly demonstrated!</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph.D.. M.D.</p>
        <p>CASE Y-575: Roger B., aged 17, is a high school senior.</p>
        <p>Dr. CYane, he began, next week I am to debate a classmate (m why North America has surpassed South America.</p>
        <p>Since both countries are rich in natural resources and were settles by Europeans, why has North America been the world leader while South America is looked on as a backward con-tinest?</p>
        <p>God Vs. Gold</p>
        <p>Blimtly, theres an ell of a difference, as between God vs. Gold.</p>
        <p>North America was colonized at Plymouth Rock by sturdy artisans and farmers who came, seeking freedom to worship God.</p>
        <p>But Gold was the goal of those who explored South America.</p>
        <p>Our Thanksgiving Day vividly depicts this ideological difference.</p>
        <p>For it was established by^v. Bradford as a religious event evolved by the working class, not the nobility!</p>
        <p>In South America, religion was dictated by the kings and</p>
        <p>ruler^lvho tortured the natives unml^cifully just to find any hiddmi hoard of gold.</p>
        <p>Remember, the bKynower was not filled with soldiers or military proteges of European monarchs, greedy for plunder!</p>
        <p>North Americas freedom of religion was also matched by its other desires for those liberties later codified in our famous U.S. Ckmstitution.</p>
        <p>All men are endowed by their Creator . was the voluntary salute to Deity by th(^ who signed our Declaration of Independence.</p>
        <p>. . . with certain inalienable rights, the sentence continues; among these are life, liberty and the PURSUIT of happiness.</p>
        <p>Please note that I have capitalized the word PUR* SUIT. Why?</p>
        <p>Because the PURSUIT of happiness differs greatly from happiness itself!</p>
        <p>Unless we deligently try to pursue happiness, as by hard work, honesty, thrift and elbow grease, we are not entitled to happiness.</p>
        <p>Yet a false notion has spread widely throughout America in recent years, to the effect that everybody is automatically deserving of happiness, regardless.</p>
        <p>This erroneous idea has even permeated much of the Health, Education and Welfare Department of our government!</p>
        <p>Yet Jesus also vetoed such a concept, for Christ definitely advocated selective philan-</p>
        <p>stamps or socialized medicine.</p>
        <p>Thats why Jesus gave the hungry folks one free picnic, enjoyed by 5,000, but he made no effort thereafter to prevent the starvation of the  many</p>
        <p>thousands of shiftless or disbelieving poor who were within a stoMr's^thro^ .of hw itinerant mjidstry!</p>
        <p>^ MPIfeorrr, Christ  tried</p>
        <p>socialized medicine by curing the 10 lepers, plus several blind, deaf, crippled and feverish patients.</p>
        <p>But he allowed probably 25,000 sick and crippled to die, without even attempting to heal them! Why?</p>
        <p>Because they were the shiftless poor who lacked faith and enough ambition to come to Christ and even touch the hem of His robe, as did the woman with</p>
        <p>LoveAnd Money Put Together</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI) - Under some circumstances nothing can express love like a check and American Bank Stationery division of American Standard Co. is underlining the point. It has just introduced a series of blank checks for banks illustrated with photos of young lovers in charming pastoral landscapes.</p>
        <p>CANDY CANES NEW YORK (UPI) - Peppermint candy canes, traditional decorative touches in the house at holiday time, also can perk up festive desserts with their crunch and flavor.</p>
        <p>And Jesus defended this idea of selective charity in His criticism of His Nazareth nei^-bors (Lul(fi.4:23-27).</p>
        <p>Gen^i^dford found, too, that compfunism failed, for it was te^ by the Pilgrims and found Jfiiferior to our capitalistic system, where people own their land and enjoy the fruits of their own labors.</p>
        <p>So send for my booklet How to Save Our Republic, enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 25 cents.</p>
        <p>(Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 25 cents to cover typing and printing costs</p>
        <p>when you send boxAlets.)</p>
        <p>for one of his</p>
        <p>MEADWBROOK</p>
        <p>WED.-THUR.-FRI.</p>
        <p>DRIVE-IN</p>
        <p>THEATRE</p>
        <p>WED.-THUR.-FRI.-SAT.</p>
        <p>CUIIT *</p>
        <p>E&amp;amp;STWOOO</p>
        <p>BMRJUDIS</p>
        <p>ORIFTER</p>
        <p>ALSO</p>
        <p>WINNER 1972 CANNES FILM' FESTIVAL JURY PRIU AWARD</p>
        <p>SLAUGHTERHOUSE-</p>
        <p>piVE</p>
        <p>A Univertil Pfclufc TECHNICOLOR IS</p>
        <p>PE ANUIS</p>
        <p>ARE Yot/ writing To an ACTOR OR A FIREPLACE ?</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0012" />
        <p>Hh* Dafly Refttctor. Grecaville, N.C.Wedaetday, Navember 21, lf73</p>
        <p>Plants Told Of Price To Save Energy</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE. N. C. (AP)-Textile executives have been toW they will have to commit money and manpower, management and employes, to an in-teiuve and Icmg-range program of conservation of energy</p>
        <p>Allan Polansky, deputy director of the Bureau of Resources and Trade Assistance in Washington. told Tuesdays meeting of some 200 executives that the current energy crisis began making itself felt early last winter. He said it has steadily increased.</p>
        <p>Polansky said demand has simply outstripped supply. He added that the crisis would have developed even without the war in the Middle East and Arab cuts of petroleum shipments.</p>
        <p>An official of the North Carolina Textile Manufacturers Association told the group a complete cutoff of propane and natural gas supplies could put approximately 84.000 of the states 285,000 textile workers out of a job.</p>
        <p>Thomas N. Ingram of Charlotte, the association's executive vice president, said an incomplete survey of North Carolina textile mills was the basis of the job-loss estimate.</p>
        <p>He said an annual payroll of nearly $1 billion would be lost to the states economy.</p>
        <p>A member of the American Textile Manufacturers Institutes energy policy committee said a 100 per cent cutoff of natural gas and propane could cost an estimated 685,000 jobs in the textile industry nationally. St. Clair Tweedie added that an additional 940,000 jobs in the apparel industry would be lost. He said the combined total represents 67 per cent of all jobs in the textile-apparei complex.</p>
        <p>,^LL WRAPPED UP  Mrs. Alfred Pauly stands next to hM* plastic-clad house near Belle Plaine, Minn. Pauly wrapped the concrete block house, which is poorly insulated, at a cost of $5.60 in</p>
        <p>Set Seminar ChMlly U.S. Winter Is</p>
        <p>For Nurses q.</p>
        <p>KINSTON - A Cancer Seminar for Nurses has been scheduled for Dec. 4, at Kings Restaurant, Highway 70 East in Kinston.</p>
        <p>The seminar is sponsored by the Lenoir County Unit and North Carolina Division, Inc., American Cancer Society] and the Lenoir Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>By FORD BURKHART Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)  The Saudi Arabian ambassador to the United Nations says hes not worried about chilly bedrooms resulting from the Arab oil squeeze.</p>
        <p>Its good if it brings the</p>
        <p>200 Pounds Of Dynamite Found</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)-Police have confiscated 300 pounds of dynamite found Tuesday in an abandoned shack beside the Catawba River in southwest Mecklenburg County.</p>
        <p>The 600 sticks, each about a foot long, are of a brand believed not available in North Carolina. Police believe them to have been stolen.</p>
        <p>The dynamite, in six cardboard boxes, will be destroyed by burning.</p>
        <p>All physicians, registered wives and husbands together, nurses, licensed practical said Jamil Baroody. They will nurses, nursing students, and keep each other warm at allied health personnel are in- night and maybe halt the vited to attend.  break-up  of the American fami-</p>
        <p>The meeting will begin with ly. registration at 8:30 a.m., and the Saudi Arabia is the largest of program gets underway the Arab oil-producing nations promptly at 9 a.m. A no-host that have cut off oil shipments luncheon will be served. At the to the United States in an effort conclusion of the seminar, about to force changes in U.S. policy 3:15 p.m., a planned tour of the toward Israel.</p>
        <p>time is on the Arabs side.</p>
        <p>Our policy was formulated after about a quarter century of occupation. We are not waiting to see from one minute to the next if the policy changes, he said. Such changes take time.</p>
        <p>The oil embargo was forced by the United States and others, he said.</p>
        <p>We tried to reason with them. This was their choice, not our choice, he said.</p>
        <p>You call this blackmail. You call this extortion. But didnt</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>new Lenoir Memorial Hospital will be offered.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ann Carter, R.N., is Chairman of the Cancer Seminar Planning Committee.</p>
        <p>Baroody, 68, is famous at U.N. headquarters for long-winded, emotional defenses of the Palestinian cause in speeches to the General Assem-</p>
        <p>Requests for reservations should bly and the Security Council, be directed to Seminar-Lenoir Wearing his usual suspenders County Unit, American Cancer and spectacles, Baroody said in</p>
        <p>Society, c-o Mrs. Kelly Tingle, P.O. Box 261, Kinston, N.C., 28501. Pre-registration is necessary. When requesting</p>
        <p>an interview that the Arab oil embargo on the United States, Western Europe and Japan would continue until they</p>
        <p>seminar reservations, please adopted a new policy toward Is-attach check for $5.00 per person rael.</p>
        <p>which includes lunch and He said it was too early to registration fee, and mail -no judge whether the oil diploma-later than November 27, Mrs. cy had produced the effects de-Carter said.  sired  by  the  Arabs.  But  he  said</p>
        <p>THE BIG BOURBON</p>
        <p>$10.00</p>
        <p>HALF GALLON WITH BUILT-IN POURER</p>
        <p>HERE IN NORTH CAROUNA THIS ONE HAS BEEN AMONG THE TOP THREE FAVORITES FOR THE PAST FIVE YEARS.</p>
        <p>KCMTUCKT straight BOURBON WHISKEV 86 PROOP. BOTTLED BT CANADA DRY DISTILLERS CO. NiCHOtASViaE. KV.</p>
        <p>DEEDS</p>
        <p>E. K. Best, al to Donald A. Heath, al 10.00 Dal Cox, al to Jimmy C. Smith, al 10.00</p>
        <p>Billy R. Haddock, al to Charles R. Parker, al 10.00 Home Builders Supply Co. to Vernon H. Kopping, al 10.00 John McKerr, al to George W. Harrington 10.00 R. A. McLawhom Sr., al to Douglas Alton Johnston 10.00 Patsy M. W. Mills, al to Gerald T. StaUings, al 10.00 Oakdale Development Corp. to Glenn S. Gulledge, al 10.00 Pitt Co. Bd. of Education to Fernand V. Pilosi, al 16,050.00 Lomer H. Whitehurst, Jr., al to John Nelson Reynolds, al 10.00 Herbert Carlton Williams, al to Bobby Gene McRoy, al 10.00 Nobles Ray Craft to Billie T. Craft, al 10.00 Arthur Harold House to Cassie Adams House 10.00 Lynndale Development Co. to Virginia Herrin 10.00 Oliver V. McGee to Betty Sue Pope, al 10.00 Viola Cox Tyson to Pearlie Cox Williams 10.00 W. Arthur Tripp, al to Alexander Jasper Speight 10.00 Weyerhaeuser Co. to A.B. Whitley Jr. 10.00 Walter E. Lewis, al to Kenneth L. Biitler, al 10.00 Oakdale Development Corp. to Thomas H. Knox, al 10.00 Edward Allen Buck, al to Wm. McKinley Teel, al 10.00 Garris-Evans Lumber Co. to Charlie R. Boyd, al 10.00 Woodrow W. Palmer, al to James R. Davis, al 10.00 Pineridge Inc. to Noah L. Edwards, al 10.00 J. W. Tripp, al to George A. Weimes, al 100.00 J. Edgar Warren, al to ITiomas Ray Allen, al 10.00 W. C. Warren to Harry S. Warren, al 1.00</p>
        <p>Says Crash Due To A Collision</p>
        <p>KINSTON, N.C. (AP) - An investigator says a plane in which two men died Monday collided with another it was trying to help.</p>
        <p>Luke Gatling of the National Transportation Safety Board says the impact severed the vertical stabilizer of the North Carolina Forest Service plane being flown by Marshall J. Newman, chief pilot for the service. Newman, 39, of Clin-Um, and Larry Moody, 30, of Kinston, an aircraft mechanic, were killed in a crash n^u- Kinston. They were trying to help another Forest Service plane which rqxnted landing gear trouble, but whidi landed safely.</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>Citizen:</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE QUESTION OF THE ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE RE-ZONING TERRITORY LOCATED WITHIN THE ONE-MILE EXTRA-TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE NORTH CAROLINA Pursuant to Chapter 160A, Section 381 et. seq. of the General Statutes of North Carolina, Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Greenville, North Carolina, will hold a public hearing at the Municipal Building in the City of Greenville, North Carolina, on Thursday, December 6, 1973, at 8:00 p.m. on the question of the adoption of an ordinance re-zoning the following described territory located within the one mile extra territorial jurisdiction of the City of Greenville, as follows; from "RA20" to "Highway Com mercial" (CH) and from "RA-20" to "R 6"</p>
        <p>TRACT NO. 1:  Property  To  Be</p>
        <p>Rezoned From "RA-20" To "Highway Commercial" (CH) BEGINNING at a point, said point being located in the northern right-of-way line of U.S. 264 at the common corner between the Frank Wooten property and the Highsmith property and running thence with the Wooten property line N. 30 degrees 07' E., 310 feet to a point; running thence N. 46 degrees 12' W., 1120 feet, more or less to the western boundary of tract 6 of a Leon T. Hardee, Sr. heirs property; running thence S. 29 degrees 19' W., 280 feet, more or less, to the northern right-of way line of Highway 264; running thence with said northern right of-way line in an easterly direction 1130 feet, more or less to the point of beginning, excluding the Hardee homeplace which bears the following description: BEGINNING atan iron stake in the northern right ot-way line of U.S. Highway 264, sa id stake being the southwest corner of the Hardee property and running thence N. 43 degrees 48' E., 283.67 feet to a corner; Thence, S. 46 degrees 12' E., 290 feet to a corner; Thence, S. 43 degrees48'W., 300.42 feet toa point in the northern right-of way line of U.S. Highway 264, Thence, northwesterly along the northern right-of way line of U.S. Highway 264 approximately 290 feet to the point of beginning. TRACT NO. 2:  Property  To  Be</p>
        <p>Rezoned From "RA-20" To "R-4" BEGINNING at a point; said point being located No. 30 degrees 07' E., 310 feet from a common corner of the Frank M. Wooten property and the Highsmith property and running thenc N. 46 degrees 12' W 1120 feet, more or less to the western line of the Leon T. Hardee, Sr. division; running thence No. 29 degrees 19' E., 2550 feet more or less to the run of a stream; thence following the meanderings of said stream in an easterly direction 1300 feet more or less to the Frank M. Wooten property line; running thence with the Frank M. Wooten property line S. 30 degrees 07' W., 3502.51 feet to the point of beginning.</p>
        <p>All persons interested are requested to be present at the hearing at the time and place aforesaid when they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL.</p>
        <p>W.N. MOORE CITY CLERK David E. Reid, Jr.</p>
        <p>City Attorney Nov. 21, 28, 1973</p>
        <p>Preseited As A Piblic Service</p>
        <p>the eastern property line of lot 1 of the Greenfield Terrace Subdivision and continuing a distance of 320 feet to a fence.</p>
        <p>Thence, S. 65 degrees 54' E. along said fence to a concrete monument;</p>
        <p>Thence, S. 65. degrees 29' E., 16.18 feet to a point in the western right of-way line of Memorial Boulevard;</p>
        <p>Thence, S. 26 degrees 11' W. along the western right ot-way line of Memorial Boulevard, 280 feet to ttfe point of beginning.</p>
        <p>Containing approximately .80 acres.</p>
        <p>All persons interested are requested to be present at the hearing at the time and place aforesaid when they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL</p>
        <p>W.M. MOORE CITY CLERK Oavid E. Reid, Jr.</p>
        <p>City Attorney Nov. 21 and 28, 1973</p>
        <p>Preseited As A Piblic taforaitioi Sirvici</p>
        <p>Ci53fl</p>
        <p>Classified</p>
        <p>the City of Greenville, North Carolina, on Thursday, December 6, 1973, at 8;00 p.m. on the question of the adoption of an ordinance amending Section 32 141 of the Code of the City of Greenville by deleting the word "seven" and substituting in lieu thereof the word "fifteen" so that thesection will read as follows: "Any application for an amendment to this Chapter shall be filed with the office of the City Planner of City Engineer at least fifteen days prior to the date on which it is to be introduced to the Planning and Zoning Commission."</p>
        <p>All persons interested are requested to be present at the hearing at the time and place aforesaid when they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL.</p>
        <p>W. N. MOORE CITY CLERK</p>
        <p>David E. Reid, Jr. City Attorney Nov. 21,28,1973</p>
        <p>Presented As Information</p>
        <p>A Public Service</p>
        <p>Autot For Solo</p>
        <p>an attempt to save fuel. Mrs. Pauly said she ran the thermostat at 80 degrees last winter, but now keeps It at 70 since the wrapping was completed. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>the United States put embargoes on goods to Japan and (Jermany in times of war? he asked.</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>Citizen;</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE QUESTION OF THE ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE RE ZONING TERRITORY LOCATED WITHIN THE ONE-MILE EXTRA-TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA Pursuant to Chapter 160A, Section 381 etiseq. of the General Statutes of North Carolina, Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Greenville, North Carolina, will hold a public hearing at the Municipal Building in the City of Greenville, North Carolina, on Thursday, December 6, 1973, at 8:00 P.M. on the question of the adoption of an ordinance re zoning the following described territory located within the one mile extra territorial jurisdiction of the City of Greenville, as follows:  from "RA 20" to</p>
        <p>"Medical Arts" (MA)</p>
        <p>BEGINNING at an iron stake in the southern right-of way of N.C. High way 43; said iron stake located 50 feet from the center line of said highway, measured at right angles to the highway; said iron stake being the northeastern corner of the property of the James Barnes heirs;</p>
        <p>Thence from said point of beginning and with the southern right-of-way of said highway S. 68 degrees 19' E., 569.31 feet to a point;</p>
        <p>Thence continuing with said right-of-way S. 68 degrees 55' E. 53.87 feet to a point;</p>
        <p>Thence leaving the southern right-of-way of N.C. Highway 43, S. 30 degrees 44' E., 106.30 feet to a point in the western right-ot way line of N. C. S. R. 1267, said point being 30 feet from the center line of said road measured at right angles to the road;</p>
        <p>Thence with the western right-of-way line of N. C. S. R. 1267, S. 07 degrees 24' W., 1366.28 feet to a point; . Thence continuing with said right-of-way S. 06 degrees 10' W., 101.00 feet; S. 03 degrees 34' W., 101.28 feet; S. 01 degrees 16' W., 101.26 feet; S. 01 degrees 15' E., 101.02 feet;</p>
        <p>Thence S. 02 degrees 35' E., 680.30 feet to a point;</p>
        <p>Thence leaving said right-of-way S. 42 degrees 25' W., 127.31 feet to a point in the northern right-of way line of N. C. S. R. 1200; said point located 30 feet from the center line of N. C. S. R. 1200, measured at right angles to the road;</p>
        <p>Thence with the northern right-of-way line of said S. R. 1200, S. 87 degrees 26' W., 2316.08 feet to an iron stake, a corner in the eastern line of the property of the J. G. Moye heirs; Thence with the J. G. Moye eastern line and others N. 32 degrees 00' E., 1800.07 feet to an iron stake;</p>
        <p>Thence N. 32 degrees 54' E., 604.74 feet to an iron stake;</p>
        <p>Thence N. 34 degrees 39' E., 340.54 feeT to an iron stake;'</p>
        <p>Thence N. 35 degrees 07' E., 785.48 feet to the point of beginning. Containing 97.25 acres.</p>
        <p>All persons interested are requested to be present at the hearing at the time and place aforesaid when they will be afforded an opportunity to be</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL.</p>
        <p>W.N. MOORE CITYCLERK</p>
        <p>David E. Reid, Jr.</p>
        <p>City Attorney November 21, 28  '</p>
        <p>rresented As A Public</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Eddie Wilbert Brown, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor within six (6) months from date of the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 2nd day of October, 1973.</p>
        <p>204 N. Blount Street Ayden, N. C.</p>
        <p>Executor of the Estate of Eddie Wilbert Brown, Deceased Nov. 14, 21, 28; Dec. 5, 1973</p>
        <p>NOTICE North Carolina Pitt County</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having qualified as Co-executors of the estate of Doris G. Trevathan, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 14th day of May, 1974 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This thq 9th day of November, 1973. s- Troy L. Dail, Jr.</p>
        <p>CO EXECUTOR s- Ted L. Dail CO EXECUTOR Nov. 14, 21, 18, Dec. 5, 1973</p>
        <p>OLOSMOBILE 88, 1965, power steering and power brakes. Good tires, good running condition. $300 or best otter. 756 2476.</p>
        <p>TR4 1971. Mint condition, will sacrifice. 28,000 miles. Call 758-4068 after 5 o.m</p>
        <p>FORD GALAXIE 1964, 8 track, new interior, good condition, clean. Call 758-1419.</p>
        <p>Having Engine Trouble? See</p>
        <p>''The Engine People"</p>
        <p>Auto Specialty Co.</p>
        <p>7W.5thSt.</p>
        <p>758-1131</p>
        <p>MACH I 1973. Less than 7,000 miles, AM radio with 8 track tape deck. Must sell. Call day 758 5144, night 752-1622.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET 1967,2 ton truck $1300. Call 758 3948 or 758-0370.</p>
        <p>1953 FORD PICK-UP. Good condition rebuilt engine, repainted. 746 4235.</p>
        <p>Boats &amp;amp; Equipment</p>
        <p>1971 COBIA 21' deep V fishing boat</p>
        <p>1972 125 Johnson with power lift-depth finder in excellent condition. 752 6932._</p>
        <p>Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>1970 YAMAHA 250,MX. Fair con dition. $250. Phone 756 2507.</p>
        <p>1972 SUZUKI SOO, excellent S695. Call 758 3276 day, 746 4577 night.</p>
        <p>YES, WE HAVE 1974 XR75and XL70 Hondas IN STOCK. Very limited supply. Jtan's Sport Center, Inc. 3205 E. 10th Street. Call 758 3613.</p>
        <p>NOTHING TOO BIG or too small to sell with a ClassifiedAd. Dial 752-6166 Now for quick results.</p>
        <p>Dogs &amp;amp; Pets</p>
        <p>FOR SALE:</p>
        <p>752-3311.</p>
        <p>purebred collie pups.</p>
        <p>AKC TOY POODLE at stud. 752 0441.</p>
        <p>NOTICE North Carolina Pitt County</p>
        <p>The undersigned having this day qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of James Robert Gray, deceased, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned or her attorneys, Williamsons. Shoffner, within six (6) months from the date of the first publication of this Notice, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the 2nd day of November, 1973.</p>
        <p>Lillian G. Gray, Administratrix of the Estate of James Robert Gray, Deceased Route 2, Box 216-B Greenville, NC 27834 Williamson &amp;amp; Shottner Attorneys at Law P. O. Box 552 Greenville, N.C. 27834 November 7. 14, 21, 28, 1973</p>
        <p>GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies. Not registered. Call 746-3971.</p>
        <p>RACKING HORSE AND 6 month old colt. Call 756 7720 day, 746-6490 after 6.</p>
        <p>QUALITY AKC POPPIES Poodles, Boston Terriers, Pomeranians. Irish Setters on special. The Pet Kingdom, West End Shopping Center.</p>
        <p>4 GROWN BEAGLES, 2 Female &amp;amp; 2 male for rabbit hunting. 4 Bird dogs, 2 Pointers, 8. 2 Setters, 1 male &amp;amp; 3 females. All guaranteed to be broke. 752 3759. Moses Teel, Rt. 4, Old River Rd.</p>
        <p>PERSIAN</p>
        <p>blonde. 4 4181.</p>
        <p>KITTEN $20. months old.</p>
        <p>Gray and Call 746-</p>
        <p>CHAMPION SIRED POINTER,,</p>
        <p>female 6 months old ready to start. Price very reasonable. Call 758 5086.</p>
        <p>COLLIE PUPPIES FOR sale. 746-6920.</p>
        <p>3 only</p>
        <p>KITTENS NEED GOOD homes. 6015. After working hours.</p>
        <p>756-</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>STOCKROOM AND SUPPLY, ex</p>
        <p>perience small parts, necessary. 4 day work week total of 40 hrs. Apply Merrimack Marine.</p>
        <p>InformaliOR Service</p>
        <p>insmi</p>
        <p>EXECUTOR'S NOTICE</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having qualified as Executor of the Last Will and Testament of the late Stella Sugg, deceased, of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said deceased to exhibit the same, duly itemized and verified, to the said Executor at Route 2, Box 75, Ayden, North Carolina, on or before the 20th day of May, 1974, or Ihis notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make payment to the Executor.</p>
        <p>This the 8th day of November, 1973.</p>
        <p>Laurie E. Sugg Executor</p>
        <p>R. B. Lee, Attorney P. O. Box 124 Greenville, N. C."</p>
        <p>Nov. 14, 21, 28; Dec. 5, 1973</p>
        <p>The first MarcU Gras took place in New Orleans in 1838.</p>
        <p>Greenville Citizen:</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE QUESTION OF THE ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE REZONING TERRITORY LOCATED WITHIN THE CITY OF GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA Pursuant to Chapter 160A, Section 381 et. seq., of the General Statutes of North Carolina, rvotice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Greenville, North Carolina, will hold a public hearing at the Municipal Building in the City of Greenville, North Carolina, on Thursday, December 6, 1973, at 8:00 p.m. on the question of the adoption of an ordifvance rezoning the following described territory within the City of Greenville as follows: from "Commercial Highway" (CH) to "Medical Arts" (MA)</p>
        <p>BEGINNING at a point where the northern right-of way line of Greenfield Boulevard intersects the western right-of way line of Memorial Boulevard and</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>Citizen:</p>
        <p>NOTICEOF PUBLIC HEARING BYTHECITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, ON THE PLACEMENTOF A MOBILE HOME Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be conducted by the City Council of the City of Greenville on a request by County of Pitt for the placement of a mobile home behind the Pitt County Mental Health Clinic. The mobile home will be used as a temporary office.</p>
        <p>The time, date and place of the public hearing will be Thursday, December 6, 1973, at 8:00 P.M. in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.</p>
        <p>All persons interested are requested to be present at the hearing at the time and place aforesaid when they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>David E. Reid, Jr. City Attorney November 21.</p>
        <p>Preseited As liferealioi</p>
        <p>W. N. MOORE City Clerk</p>
        <p>A Public Service</p>
        <p>BUICK WILDCAT 1967, hard top, full power, air, AM FM stereo radio, light green color, new tires, one owner. Must See. Cali 752 1835._</p>
        <p>CHEVELLE, 1971, 28,000 miles, AM-FM stereo cassette player $1900. Call 758-0059 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>CUTLASS 4 DOOR 1967, clean air,. Price $895. Reason - leaving town. Call 752 3771 or can be seen at 305 W. 14th St.-eet, Greenville.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET CAPRICE 1967, new motor, new tires, new transmission $700. Call 746 3485.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE COUPE, 4 speed, mint condition. $2200 firm. Call 746-4749.</p>
        <p>EL CAMINO 1972, fully equipped, white, black top. $2995. Pitt Motor Sales, 756 2546, across street from Parkers Barbecue.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE COUPE 1969, air, four speed, leather interior. Excellent condition $3395. Call 758-2349,</p>
        <p>CONTINENTAL 1971. Excellent condition, fully equipped. 752-6529 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE 1969, extra clean, low mileage, new fires, call 946-6131.</p>
        <p>DODGE POLARA 1972, power steering, power brakes, air. $1800. Must see to appreciate. Call 758-3362 after 4:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>SOLDI WE HEAR it every day. People call us to cancel their Want Ad liecause it did the job fast. To sell good ihings you don't need to cash buyers.</p>
        <p>MOTEL HANDY MAN. Mature only need apply. Apply between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. 2710 Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>DRYWALL HANGERS AND</p>
        <p>finishers. Experience preferred but not necessary it willing to learn. 756-0053.</p>
        <p>SHONEY'S IS NOW interviewing applicants for morning waitresses.</p>
        <p>CHOICE OF JOBS GUARANTEED</p>
        <p>one of the benefits you get in the U.S. Air Force. Others include good pay</p>
        <p>30 days paid vacation every year</p>
        <p> tree education and training in a skill you can use everywhere</p>
        <p> travel to exotic places tree medical care</p>
        <p>For interview and free aptitude test, call</p>
        <p>Master Sergeant Hunt 323 Evans Street Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>752-4290</p>
        <p>WANTED: EXPERIENCED floor sanding machine operator. Goc salary. Call day 756-2747 night 75t 4866.</p>
        <p>AVON MAKES CHRISTMAS MERRIER. It's possible to have money tor all the gifts you want to give; you'll sell guaranteed products from AVON.</p>
        <p>Be an AVON representative. It's tun, it's convenient, it's profitable Call now 758 2444</p>
        <p>running</p>
        <p>thence from said point N. M degrees 15' W. along the northern right-of way line of Grq^teld Boulevard 15.63 feet to an iron stake;</p>
        <p>Thence, N. 13 degrees. 56' E. along</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>Citizeo;</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE QUESTION OF THE ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE ZONING ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE NORTH CAROLINA RELATING TO THE TIME OF FILING APFLICATiONS FOR RE-ZONING Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Greenville, North Carolina, will hold a public hearing at the Municipal Building in</p>
        <p>FALCON 1961, 6 cylinder, straight shift. Call 758-5238.</p>
        <p>GRAN TORINO SPORT 1972. Automatic air and tape. Call 756-4035 or 756 4286.</p>
        <p>GRAND PRIX-1972. Loaded. Call 746 3691 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD has daily rentals at reasonable prices. Call 758-0114.</p>
        <p>OLOSMOBILE F-8S 1964 station wagon Call 758-5847 or 752 1557.</p>
        <p>TWO Oldsmobiles 1971. Cutlass S Coupe. Local 1 owner car. Extra dean Take your pick for only S5SL Holt Oldsmobile, 101 Hooker R^756^ 3115.</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH FURY II, 1968, Power brakes, air, radio and tape player. Must see to appreciate. $700. Call 758-3362 after 4;30 p.m.</p>
        <p>TOYOTA CORONA 1972, 22,000 miles, excellent condition. Call 756-0070.</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>Brown &amp;amp; Wood Inc.</p>
        <p>K</p>
        <p>15 your plan for</p>
        <p>GOODWILL</p>
        <p>Used Car Values</p>
        <p>Pontiac Cadillac Fiat</p>
        <p>MAN FOR TERMITE and pest control work in Greenville, Washington, Kinston area. Good pay with many company paid benefits. Permanent job with excellent opportunity tor advancement. Experience preferred but will train right man. Apply Terminix Co. 3013 Memorial Drive, Greenville, NC. 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.</p>
        <p>NEEDED; CASHIER' 4 hours through lunch and 4 hours through supper. Meals furnished, no Sunday work. Apply in person Balentines Buffet, Pitt Plaza Shopping Center.</p>
        <p>X-RAY TECHNICIAN needed at Pitt County Community Health Department. Must be registered, experience preferred. Hours, salary and fringe benefits most favorable. Working situation stimulating, and agency personnel absolutely charming Please call STAT 752 4141.</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPER MUST BE experience in payroll and tax returns. Typing and telephone answering required. For interview call 752-5175.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY WITH GENERAL</p>
        <p>Office experience for assistant to bookkeeper must have past ex perience and reference. Apply Honeycutt Beauty Supply. 752-6178.</p>
        <p>SHIPPING AND RECEIVING clerk. Experience helpful but not man datory. Apply at 1511 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>NIGHT AUDITOR NEEDED.</p>
        <p>Veterans preferred. Holiday Inn, call 758 3401.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED FEMALE bartender, 21-35, attractive, for part time work. Apply in person only. Lemon Tree Inn, Chocowlnitv, N, C.</p>
        <p>SALESGIRL WANTED, Must be 18 iwors and older. Apply at Country Vogue, corner of Sfh and Cotanche</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0013" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, November 21, If7213Feast Your Eyes on the Terrific Values in Toddy^s Classified AdsDial 752-6166</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>MAN OR WOMAN over 25 io sell and collect insurance. Free hospitalization and life insurance. Retirement, $100 per week starting. Will train. Box 652, Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>PROVIDENT FINANCE Company needs a clerk typist. Position offers excellent fringe benefits and good starting salary. Apply 511 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville NC.</p>
        <p>LIVE IN HOUSEKEEPER, care of children, light house work. Free room and board plus salary and reference. 758 4746.</p>
        <p>SANTA'S HELPERHelp Santa fill the stockings in your home. Show beautiful gifts by Watkins in your neighborhood. Write Personal Shopper Department, Box 10, Watkins Products, Inc., Winona, Minnesota 55987.</p>
        <p>MANAGER TRAINEE Provident Finance Company is looking for a young man who wants to get ahead in life. We offer an excellent training program and rapid advancement for a man who is willing to work hard. We also have many fringe benefits and good starting salary. Apply 5ii Dickinson Avenue, Greenville</p>
        <p>NIGHT AUDITOR IMwedaTE</p>
        <p>opening for aggressive young man interested in motel field. Apply in person Lemon Tree Inn, Chocowinity.</p>
        <p>MATURE SALESMAN FOR hard ware department. Must be industrious and alert. Experience helpful, but not necessary. Per manent help only. Pay according to ability. Write P. 0. Box 794 Green ville, giving information and salary expected.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION MASONS AND HELPERS</p>
        <p>Join one of the largest masonry contractors in the Carolinas. New job starting AAonday, November 12, 1973 in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Call 758-1625or see Jack Jost at Job Site, Empire Brushes,</p>
        <p>Hwy. 11&amp;amp;13 North</p>
        <p>PART-TIME, week days. In ventorying and shopping for maior national corporations. Permanent local work, no investment. In-venchek. Box 28956, Atlanta, Georgia 31328.  ^</p>
        <p>LEGAL SECRETARY, experienced. Typing and shorthand. Bookkeeping helpful. Write "Legal Secretary" P. O. Box 1967 Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>NEEDED A CANDIDATE for</p>
        <p>management training center $200 salary per week plus personal living expenses guaranteed, plus car, while in our management training center if you qualify. Opportunity to earn $1500 to $2000 1st year after graduation. For a confidential interview call 756-0038.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPING</p>
        <p>machine operator with old Pitt county firm. Excellent salary and working conditions. Fringe benefits. Apply in writing, giving references, "Bookkeeping" P. O. Box 1967 Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>BAHNSON SERVICE COMPANY</p>
        <p>needs sheet metal workers and helpers. Contact Lee Roy Weeks. Bahnson Superintendent at Burroughs Wellcome, Greenville, NC. Equal Opportunity employers.</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE in to</p>
        <p>work in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Open salary $75.00 io $110.00 per week. For more information call 746 3253.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO KEEP CHILDREN in my home Monday through FridaV- 756 1284.</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>1 MASSEY FERGUSON 35 with all equipment. $2000,4000 Ford Diesel all equipment. Allis Chalmers B tractor and equipment very clean, excellent condition, $700, 2 Massey Harris. One and two row, $300 each, 1 H-Farmall, very good condition. New paint job. $300. Call 758 3948 or 758-0370.</p>
        <p>  FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>LITTLE'S NURSERY - collards cabbage, plants, bulbs, and all kinds of shrubbery and trees ready to be planted. Also blooming camelias. 756-3626, west of Greenville 264.</p>
        <p>firewood by the cord. All hard wood cut to any length. Quick ser vic^, call David Patterson, 753-4245 after 6.</p>
        <p>FIREPLACE WOOD any length. ton truck load $30. 758 4674.</p>
        <p>PORTABLE PANASONIC, black &amp;amp; white TV used. UFH 8. VHF, $35.00. 510 A Tyson after 5 p.m._</p>
        <p>2 UPRIGHT DAIRY boxes. Hussman 6 months old. $525 each. Like new, 1 10 foot frozen food Kelvinator box. 6 months old, $650, 1 Victor commercial cash register, $400, l 10 foot drink box, $400, open top frozen food box, $400 , 4 gondolas and a check out counter, $300, these items must be moved quickly. Call 758-3948 or 758 0370.</p>
        <p>1 MOBILE HOME office. $2100.</p>
        <p>Call 758 3948 or 758 0370  _</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Real</p>
        <p>Estate</p>
        <p>Corner</p>
        <p>WONDERFUL</p>
        <p>ithin walking distance to schools Id churches, convenient to lopping, warm friendly neigh-H-s and safe for the childrea Hese are lost a few reasons why lis location is excellent. The 3 idroom, 2 bath brick home is a mus buy for only 533^509.</p>
        <p>Call us tcNlay.</p>
        <p>Fleming and Associates 756- 6234</p>
        <p>MIKE ALDRIDGE  752-3743</p>
        <p>Louise Hodge  756-5005</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous for Sale</p>
        <p>WE UPHOLSTER ANYTHING.</p>
        <p>Thousand of yards of fabric and foam cushioning. Jackson's Cleaning &amp;amp; Upholstery. Dickinson Ave., 758-3276 day or 758 1 505 night.</p>
        <p>LAMP PARTS AND LAMP repairs Glass shades, chimneys and lamp oil Johnsen's Antiques, 1320 Evans Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>USED COLOR TV and used upright freezer, excellent condition. Contact Fisher Appliance, Dickinson Avenue 752 3609.</p>
        <p>POULAN CHAIN SAWS, automatic oiling, 12" bar, parts and service. $99.88. R.F. McLawhon and Sons. 752-3286.</p>
        <p>ANNUAL 15 PERCENT sale now in progress at the Linen Closet, 3008 E. 10th Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>HOME FURNITURE STORE. Your Headquarters for World Famous Hoover Sweepers. 752-2879.</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW KELVINATOR 8</p>
        <p>freezer. Walnut finish. 758-0890.</p>
        <p>2 VERY GOOD vented Durotherm oil heaters. 1 with reversible good blower. Call 756 4382.</p>
        <p>RENT A STEAMEX carpet cleaner. Deep clean your carpet with steam. Larry's Carpetland, 310 E. 10th St., Greenville.</p>
        <p>USED COLOR T.V.'s, Zeniths, and other models. New picture tubes, on warranty. Cannon's T.V. 756-2555 8:30-10 p.m.</p>
        <p>RENTED! WE HEAR it every day. People call us to cancel their Want Ad because it did the job fast. To fill your rental vacancies in a hurry, just dial 752 6166.  ^</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Fill dirt, top soil and sand. Large or small loads. Call 746-3461._</p>
        <p>BALDWIN PIANOS AND Organs. Sales, rentals, and service. Direct Factory Financing. Maus Piano Company, 155 S. E. Main Street, Rocky Mount. Oak Park Shopping Center, High^vay 70 West, Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Cut Your Own Firewood</p>
        <p>See McCulloch Chain Saws prices starting at $99.95</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; COMPANY</p>
        <p>across frorh Parkers Barbecue</p>
        <p>756-2557</p>
        <p>FOR SALE; Raw peanuts shelled or unshelled at Keel Peanut Company, Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>WESTINGHOUSE BUILT-IN</p>
        <p>Electric oven, simplest to cook in, easiest to clean, highest in quality, regular $163.95, special sale price $100. Companion Westinghouse range platform, regular $99.95, special sale price $50. Smith Electric Company, 415 Evans Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>GUARANTEED Engine transmission, body parts. Free parts locating service.</p>
        <p>CRISP AUTO SALVAGE</p>
        <p>Phone 752-2572 N. Greene St. (Back of Riverside Restaurant)</p>
        <p>KINGSTON VACUUM cleaner like new. Must sacrifice. Call 756-1555 at night or call 756 4145 day.</p>
        <p>KRAFT SERIES 71 2 Channel brick. Will sell or trade for H.O. Scale train equipment. 758 4356.</p>
        <p>FIREPLACE WOOD FOR sale. All hardwood. $25 per pick up load. Call Farmville. 753 5714.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: 1 dinette table and 6 matching chairs. Call 758-2301 after 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>ZIG ZAG SEWING machine, 3 years old, good condition. $50 Call 756 0658.</p>
        <p>Jennettes Home Improvement</p>
        <p>Complete Remodeling Service</p>
        <p>Coll: 758-3454</p>
        <p>CHEST TYPE FREEZER, 4 months old. Call 758 1311.</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>WATCH FOR THE opening for rabbit and quail season, November 17. See H. L. Hodges Hardware for all your hunting needs, or call 752-4156.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>12 X 60 TRAILER. Large private lot. Call 756-2332 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>1973 HOMES, 2 bedroom models. Call Tom Coward 752-7227 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR RENT 1971 Champion 12x60 furnished air, washer, water bed. Available immediately. 752-0952.</p>
        <p>TWO AND THREE bedroom mobile home, air condition. Call 752-3286, night 825-5391.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM MOBILE home Shady Knoll Trailer Park. Call 758-5813.</p>
        <p>1971 LIKE NEW 12x50, 2 bedroom Connor Newport Mobile Home $3495 or $600 down and assume payments of $71 per month. Call 756 1527.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED TRAILER for rent. Air conditioned. 758-3276, nights 758-1505.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Membership</p>
        <p>Chairman</p>
        <p>(Not insurance)</p>
        <p>Salary plus Commission No travel Work and train in your home town.</p>
        <p>BENEFITS ARE NOT</p>
        <p>FRINGE IF YOU MAKING $300 A WEEK AND UP CALL COLLECT</p>
        <p>CLYDE WILDER</p>
        <p>919/876-7764</p>
        <p>Or Write Box 12689 Oklahoma City, Okla. 73112</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>FOR SALE or rent 2 bedrooms furnished 12x50 Ritzcraft. Washer, dryer, air. Also 10x45 with air. 756 4974.</p>
        <p>10' AND 12' WIDE mobile homes for rent. Also spacn. Call 758-3^.</p>
        <p>12x60, 3 bedroom, IVj baths, washer, air. Couple only. 756-7449 after 6.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM TRAILER, $100 per month at Shady Knoll. Call 756-7065 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM NEW 12x60, carpet, air, completely furnished, nice, location in Greenville. 746-3876 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>ASSUME PAYMENT on 1973 Stylecraft. Payment $89 a month. See J.M. Brown at Bob's Mobile Homes, 756 0544.</p>
        <p>1968 KNOX TRAILER 12x45, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, living roomj electric range, refrigerator. 24,000 BTU Air, $2,000. Call 758 4971, 756 2957. Blount and Ball Realty 119 W. 3rd Street Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME FOR sale. 10x50 2 bedroom, 1965 Parkwood model. Central kitchen. With air, central heat, washer. Reasonably priced. Call Charles Gaskins 752 5374 day or 752 7474 night.</p>
        <p>TRAILER AND LOT for sale or rent. Also household furniture. M. L. Knox. 1st trailer on left beyond Roberson Store on Old Creek Rd. 752 2615.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>JEANNETTE COX  AGENCY,</p>
        <p>Realtor, Exclusive agents of Beautiful Cherry Oaks. Call 752-7807.</p>
        <p>Ed Tipton Agency 756-0911</p>
        <p>Land</p>
        <p>Real Estate  Insurance</p>
        <p>264 By Pass Tipton Annex Greenville's Only Professional Real Estate Broker</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS in real estate, see or call E. H, Williford, Realtor, 313 Cotanche Street, 758 3911. List your property with us.</p>
        <p>Farms Wanted</p>
        <p>Acreage, farms and woodsland. Any Size.</p>
        <p>APPRAISALS NEEDED?</p>
        <p>Carl Darden Bowen Realty</p>
        <p>752-7194, or 758-1983 eves.</p>
        <p>RENTERS CHECK Classified first when they have a move in mind. Be sure your vacancy is listed. Dial 752-6166 Now!</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>$6500 AND ASSUME 6 and ^ percent loan. Total rnonthly payment $181. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, carpet, kitchen, with built-in stove, laundry room, fenced-in yard, central air, $27,500. Bill Williams Real Estate 752-2615._</p>
        <p>BY OWNER, BROOK VALLEY</p>
        <p>quality built, well insulated 3 bedroom home on golf course. Living room, dining room and family room with fireplace. 2 baths air. $48,000. Call 756 0060 after 5.</p>
        <p>CALL THE ED Tipton Agency for all your real estate needs. We are dedicated to community growth. 756-0911.</p>
        <p>BEGINNER'S BARGAIN. Three bedroom brick home with dining room, fenced back yard, and storage building. Ill N. Summit Street. $12,500. Estate Realty Company, 752-5058, Jarvis or Dorlls Mills 752-3647.</p>
        <p>VILLAGE GROVE.Colorful carpets and draperies go with this neat 3 bedroom home featuring a spacious kitchen and living room. Don't delayCall Today. Greenville Development and Realty Company. 752 2814. Evenings 752 4224 or 756 5258.</p>
        <p>JEWEL HOME IN THE COUNTRY</p>
        <p>with hardwood floors. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, large living room. Low down payment. Price is only $17,000. Also available with FHA 235 financing. Call for details. Greenville Development Co. 752 2814. Winnie Evans 752 4224 or Faye Bowen 756-5258.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Largest suraceTomp^^ the south has opening for qualified persons to work in ordinary life insurance sales and group insurance markets. major MEDICAL hospitalization, disability income and vested retirement furnished for all qualified applicants at no charge to them. Full salary for 2 years while being trained for management and career sales. If interested mail resume to</p>
        <p>Box 3217 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Attention: Mr. J. C. Jenkins</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>2407 Memorial Drive. 2 story stucco house, 2 bedrooms^ l bath, and garage, $13,500. Moye Realty Company, 756 0729.</p>
        <p>CONVENIENCES GALORE are</p>
        <p>waiting for you in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick home ideally located at 1611 S. Elm St. Refrigerator, freezer, washer-dryer. Central air, humidifier, fresh paint outside, will paint inside to suit your decor. Fenced in backyard. Den with fireplace. $32,900. Lily Richardson Agency, 752 6535</p>
        <p>ADD IMAGINATION to living! Check the great rental apartments in 'oday's Classified Ads.</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE HOME custom built 2 story dream home on wooded lot. 4 bedrooms, 2Vj baths, living room, dining room, study, gormet kitchen, and breakfast room. Brook Valley $65,000.00. D. G. Nichols Agency, 752-4012.</p>
        <p>FIREPLACE LOVERSJJo you enjoy the comforts of luxury? Cozy evenings by the fireplace, lovely shag carpet and plush carpeting, 3 nice size bedrooms including a spacious master bedroom just right for Your King Size bed. Two ceramic tile baths, large kitchen with beautiful cabinets, plus separate dining room. This is it! Greenville Development and Realty Company. Call 752-2814 today or Evenings Call 752-4224 or 756 5258.</p>
        <p>WESTHAVEN  3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, large wooded lot, paneled family room with fireplace and built-in bookcases, plus much more. Priced to go in the low 30's. Fleming and Associates 756 6 234, Mike Aldridge 752 3743, Louise Hodge 756 5005.</p>
        <p>IF YOU'VE LOST YOUR FOUR LEGGED FRIEND, look for him with a Want Ad.</p>
        <p>READY FOR IMMEDIATE occupancy, very neat 3 bedroom home in desirable neighborhood, 2 full baths, central air, large workshop building, one-car carport. Estate Realty Co. 752-5058; Jarvis or Dorlis Mills, 752 3647; Stearle Pittman, 756 3517.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME</p>
        <p>featuring beautiful hardwood floors can be yours. Nice ceramic tile baths, plus extra large kitchen with hand some cabinets. Large landscaped lot. Owner wants to sell and says, bring an offer in. Greenville Development and Realty Company, Inc. Call 752 2814 today. Evening Call 752-4224 or 756-5258.</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT BUY in Ayden on this very attractive 3 bedroom home in choice location. Carpeted entrance foyer, living room with fireplace and kitchen dining area. Attic has recently been converted into fully carpeted and paneled large 380 square feet, room with loads of ad joining storage space. Enclosed workshop in backyard with heat and electricity. All this and more for only $16,500. Downtowne Motors, Inc. Realty. 746 6892 or 746-6566. Ask for Marvin or Marcus.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL NEW CARPET ac</p>
        <p>centuates the loveliness of this conveniently located 3 bedroom brick home with central heat and ceramic tile bath, large living room and adjoining kitchen dining area. Good sized storage room with 80 gallon water heater, leaves lots of space for those odds and ends. Screened back porch, spacious yard, beautiful trees, and great neighborhood in Ayden. Contact Downtowne Motors, Inc. Realty. 746-6892 or 746-6566. Ask for Marvin or Marcus.</p>
        <p>IF YOU HAVE been looking for a lovely 3 bedroom home with cozy fireplace, then we may have just what you want. Recently painted inside and out, new carpet, storm windows; 3-year old roof, custom drapes in living room-dining area, and carport with sheltered walk are just a few plus features you'll appreciate. Priced right at $17,(X)0.00 in Ayden. Call and let us show it to you. Downtowne Motors Inc. Realty 746-4892 or 746-6566. Ask for Marvin or Marcus.</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>PRICE AND LOCATION are right of this valuable lot zoned for business. Within town limits of Ayden. Contact Downtowne Motors, Inc-Realty, Ayden, N.C. Call 7466892 day, 752-4819 or 746-4574 nights. Ask for Marvin or Marcus.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>New textile plant near Pheenix, Arizona. Needs loom fixers.</p>
        <p>(Crompton-Knowles Looms)</p>
        <p>Weavers</p>
        <p>Woolen System, Wet and Dry Finish Operators Shear, Napper, Fulling Mills Operators</p>
        <p>Call or write</p>
        <p>Mrs. Jorgenson Globe Albany Corp. 2202 West 10th Place Tempe, Arizona 85281 (602) 968-4451</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITIES</p>
        <p>CITY OF GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>CEMENT FINISHER CLERK TYPIST I FIRE FIGHTER I LABORER I LABORER II POLICE OFFICER I REFUSE COLLECTOR II</p>
        <p>$5,378-16,864 $4,646-$5,929 $5,929-$7,567</p>
        <p>$4,214- $5,378 $4,424-$5,647 $6,537-$8,343 $4,424-$5,647</p>
        <p>Apply in person af City Manafers Office. City Hall, or Mibmil written applieatien te' City Manaier, Pest Office Bex 190$, Greenville. North Caroline 27134. Applications close November 30.1973. The City of Greenville it an equal eppertunity emptoyer.</p>
        <p>liilfSSBSSS</p>
        <p>aS@B</p>
        <p>People - Working For People</p>
        <p>Lots For Sate</p>
        <p>Vj ACRE LOTS now at midway acres. Some cleared, most wooded. Located 4 miles from Ayden, 4 miles from Griffon mobile home and house lots. It's great living in the country. Contact Downtowne Motors, Inc-Realty Ayden N.C. 746-6892 or 746-6566. Ask for Marvin or Marcus.</p>
        <p>RENTALS  "</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL BUILDING, 3600 square feet, 213 W. 9fh' Street. Call Jack Edwards, 758-2616 or 756 5024.</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS DAILY, weekly or monthly. Old London Inn, 2710 Memorial Drive, Greenville.</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>NEW DOWNTOWN OFFICES for</p>
        <p>rent. Available at Georgetown Shops next to ECU. Heat, air condition, fully carpeted. Janitor service available on request. 758-2525.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>' APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1 &amp;amp; 2 bedroom furnished &amp;amp; unfurnished. Contact M.E. Sutton or C.L. Thigpen, Jr. Call 752-6121.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>Ultimate In Apartment Living</p>
        <p>1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer, dryer, hookups, pool, club house. (Dniy 5 blocks from East (Carolina Universiiy.</p>
        <p>Check everywhere else first, then call</p>
        <p>Tar River Estates</p>
        <p>1401 Willow St. 752-4225</p>
        <p>FEATURING</p>
        <p>+1 crli|xo-LrL:</p>
        <p>KITCHEN APPLIANCES</p>
        <p>What Happens</p>
        <p>After</p>
        <p>You</p>
        <p>Rent An Apartment?</p>
        <p>Apartments are like people or autos or gardens or cities. They have to be kept up. Something can go wrong or get out of kilter.</p>
        <p>At Stratford Arms we never stop trying to add to the amenities of life.</p>
        <p>You dont have to wait around enduring some temporary inconvenience. Our maintenance experts are on the property ready and eager to serve you. Few families move out.</p>
        <p>1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, furni.shed or unfurnished. Attractive. Heat and hot water included. From $130. Air conditioned. Large enclosed swimming pool and playgrounds. A few apartinenis jeady tg move in now. Like a quiet village. Must be seen.</p>
        <p>Momurs HAM Of MSTMCTM</p>
        <p>simofiD</p>
        <p>ffl</p>
        <p>apartment |</p>
        <p>J. Diaz, Broker 1900 S. Charles Street Tele. (9191 756-4800</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA 208 South Elm Street. One bedroom apartment, completely furnished, carpeted, central heat, air and utilities. Call 752-3376.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Little University</p>
        <p>Kindergarten &amp;amp; Nur^rj</p>
        <p>Reasonable Rates Open 6:30 to 6:30</p>
        <p>Call 752-7148 315 E. lOth St. Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>STORAA WINDOWS DOORS&amp;amp; AWNINGS</p>
        <p>C. L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>752 616</p>
        <p>APARTMENT HUNTERS LOOK!</p>
        <p>Grier Rental Agency has a listing of the best in Greenville. Check witti us First! 752-5700.</p>
        <p>NICE 2 BEDROOMS, Country Club apartment. Wall to wall carpets, draperies, appliances all furnished, central air and central heat. $75 for 1st month. Offers expires December 12, 1973. Call 756-5234.</p>
        <p>WOULD YOU LIKE TO COME HOME TO PLEASANT SURROUNDINGS?</p>
        <p>Play Tennis then take a swim and after that a relaxing sauna bath and finally an evening on your own private patio.</p>
        <p>LET US MAKE IT POSSIBLE.</p>
        <p>General</p>
        <p>Electric</p>
        <p>Apartments</p>
        <p>Managett By</p>
        <p>mooajBmBnt contri</p>
        <p>752-1557</p>
        <p>Oft 264 By-Pass</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>James R. Hudson</p>
        <p>For Dragline and Bulldozer work. Also have large trucks and backhoe.</p>
        <p>756-6039 752-2239 or 758-3378</p>
        <p>RNS</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>LPNs</p>
        <p>Openings on several shifts for professional nurses who are interested in long-term and chronic nursing. Write your resume in strict confidence to</p>
        <p>P. O. Box 5046 Greenville, N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>Busy local store in dne of the nation's largest retail jewelry chains has an opening for alert, mature, personable office assistant. Background in retailing, credit, banking, or other customer-orienteo fields desirable. Must be high school graduate, prefer some college. Ability to assist on sales floor would be valuable "extra."</p>
        <p>BENEFITS INCLUDE</p>
        <p>-s.</p>
        <p>Free Life and Health Insurance Paid sick leave and vacation</p>
        <p>Generous discount purchasing plan Pleasant, busy surroundings Profit-sharing plan</p>
        <p>Christmas bonus</p>
        <p>Apply to:</p>
        <p>Liberal earnings</p>
        <p>Joseph Johnson The Jewel Box 410 Evans Street Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Apartments for Rent</p>
        <p>PLUSH COUNTRY CLUB apart ments. Two bedrooms, wall-to-vzali carpet, draperies, kitchen appliances and water. Rent furnished or unfurnished. Call 756 5234.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM DUPLEX, 112 A</p>
        <p>N. AAeade St. Range, refrigerator, central heat and air. Married couple, onechildonly. December 1st 756-3373.</p>
        <p>OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>e 2 bedrooms</p>
        <p>e 6 closets, fully carpeted, disposal, dishwasher</p>
        <p>Near Shopping Center, schools, churches and university.</p>
        <p>1212 Redbanks Rd. Tel.: 756-4151</p>
        <p>2 AND 3 BEDROOM apartments $82 and $90 per month. Glendale Court Apartments. Call 756 5731.-</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS! Luxurious or Economical...you'll find them all in the Classified Section. Turn back now.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM APARTMENT for sub</p>
        <p>let. Immediate occupancy. East brook Apartments. Call 758 1106 after</p>
        <p>4 p.m.</p>
        <p>STADIUM APARTMENT,904 E. 14th</p>
        <p>St., adjoins ECU campus, furnished, complete modern, central heat and air. $115 per month. 752 5700, 756 4671.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>COLONIAL PARK</p>
        <p>HWY. 13 NORTH</p>
        <p>(Acroi-t from Burroughs-Wetlcome)</p>
        <p>Spaces Now Available</p>
        <p>Featuring the best in country living with city conveniences, including pavtd streets. Off street parking and patio, recreational area, swimming pool, underground utilities. Rental units available.</p>
        <p>Most Modern Park in Pitt Co., FHA approved.</p>
        <p>Contact Earl Rayfield at 7S8-4413 or 758-2799.</p>
        <p>Apartmants For Rant</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath. Kitchen, dining and living room combination. Floor furnace, partly furnished. 208 N. Sylvan Drive. Call after 5 p.m. 756-5056.</p>
        <p>House For Rent</p>
        <p>409GREENVIEW DR. Two bedroom house with gas floor furnace heat, $100 per month, ^all 752 4823 between 5 and 6:30 PM.</p>
        <p>SPECIL NOTICES</p>
        <p>LOSE WEIGHT WITH New Shape</p>
        <p>Tablets and Hydrejt Water Pills. Beddingfield Pharmacy.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Lease</p>
        <p>WANTED; TOBACCO POUNDS for</p>
        <p>1974. Call 753 3078.</p>
        <p>WANTED TO LEASE farm land and tobacco to be moved for 1973 and 1974 Call 756 0234 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>WANTED PECANS SMALL or large. Nobles Department Store. Located in front of Home Furniture 'Store,. Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Rent</p>
        <p>TOBACCO POUND FOR rent for 1974 30,000 at 25 cents pound. Call 756 3015 after 6.</p>
        <p>TIRED OF THE same old routine? Find an exciting new job in today's "Help Wanted" Ads.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Wanted:</p>
        <p>R.N.'s for fulltime employment at progressive state-owned Respiratory Specialty Hospital with medical school affiliate program. Excellent state employee fringe benefits and competitive salaries.</p>
        <p>Contact:</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. L. Deaton, Director of Nursing</p>
        <p>(919) 237-1121 Ext. 213</p>
        <p>FUEL OIL DELIVERYMAN</p>
        <p>Excellent salary and working conditions, must be sober, apply in writing also giving references.</p>
        <p>Send resume to:</p>
        <p>Fuel Oil Deliveryman P.O. Box 1967</p>
        <p>Greenville, North Carolina 27834</p>
        <p>Owning Your Own Home Is Easier Tlian You Think!</p>
        <p>FHA, VA, and Farmers Home Loans are available to qualified persons.^</p>
        <p>Miller Homes, 7th Stockton St., Richmond, Va., has the house tailored to your needs.</p>
        <p>For further information:</p>
        <p>Contact District Sales Manager, Mr. Clayton Cannon, P.O. Box 670, Newport, North Carolina or call 919-223-4297.</p>
        <p>"A New Direction For Finer Living"</p>
        <p>Easibrook</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Immediate Occupancy</p>
        <p>Two bedroom luxury apartments with optional dens and all the new amenities including wall to wall carpeting, draperies, dishwashers, individual air conditioning and heating, AND MORE.</p>
        <p>RECREATION? YESl</p>
        <p>Pool, Clubhouse, Tennis Courts.</p>
        <p>Model Open</p>
        <p>Daily 9-12,1-5:30 Saturday &amp;amp; Sunday 1:00-5:30</p>
        <p>Utilities Included*</p>
        <p>201 Eastbrook Drive  Off Greenville Boulevard (US 264 Bypass) just south of Tenth Street, convonitnt te ECU and every thing.</p>
        <p>(</p>
        <p>DRUCKER &amp;amp; FALK 758-4012</p>
        <p>AM ACCRBDITBO NkANABlMBNT OBBANIZATION</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0014" />
        <p>14TW Daily Reflectar, Greaiville, N.C.Wedaeiay. Novenber 21, Itn</p>
        <p>Stock And [Heavy Mekong Delta Battle Is Ended</p>
        <p>Market Reports</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA)-North Carottna egg markets stnmger Tuesday on all sizes. Supplies short, demand good. Wei^ted average prices for small lot sales of consumer grade ^s in cartmis delivo*ed nearby outlets; Grade A large whites 76.65, medium whites 74.59, small whites 64.16.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-(NCDA)-North Carolina hogs today were steady to $1.25 higher. Tops of 43.50-44.50 Kinston, Benson and Lumberton; 42.50-43.00 Rocky Mount; 40.00-42.00 Wilson and High FaUs; 43.75 Mount Olive; 43.50 Clinton, Fayetteville, Dunn, Elizabethtown, Pink Hill, Pine Level, Chadbourn, Ayden and Laurinburg; 41.00 Salisbury.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-(NCDA)-North Carolina f.o.b. dock broilers; market steady, supplies adequate for fair demand, weights heavy at most points.</p>
        <p>North Carolina hens; market weak on heavy type hens, supplies adequate, demand only fair. Too few sources reporting to quote prices.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina hog and poultry markets will be closed Thurs^y for the Thanksgiving holiday.</p>
        <p>SM Oil ind Swvcns Tckcco Tntron TtxM GvH UMC ind Un CdrbW Un Oil Cal Uniroyal U S STaai wactwvia Waatg El Waytrh* Winn Dixie Wooiworffi XaroK Cp</p>
        <p>f3'4</p>
        <p>J5'4</p>
        <p>4f</p>
        <p>II'A</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>33'^</p>
        <p>33*1i</p>
        <p>7Sfc</p>
        <p>37W</p>
        <p>nw</p>
        <p>2SVk</p>
        <p>I7H</p>
        <p>34 va 43H H</p>
        <p>33'/4</p>
        <p>33W</p>
        <p>32^</p>
        <p>74'/i</p>
        <p>37'*</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>nw</p>
        <p>2S'A BVti 4l&amp;lt;4 7H iiva 34&amp;gt;* 43W IW 33 Vi 33* 33</p>
        <p>74&amp;gt;*</p>
        <p>37H</p>
        <p>It*</p>
        <p>14V* 13iVi I3t</p>
        <p>FoiiweinB ara salactao 11 a m itock market quota tiom</p>
        <p>Surrougtts  33t</p>
        <p>United Utilities  IS</p>
        <p>Meublein  51</p>
        <p>Jett Pilot  35</p>
        <p>Tri South  34*</p>
        <p>Wicke*  13</p>
        <p>Wachovia Realty  il</p>
        <p>Eckerds  IS'*</p>
        <p>Central Soya  33'*</p>
        <p>Hardees  7*</p>
        <p>tntegon  I*</p>
        <p>F ieidcrest  tS</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTERS Combined inaurance  10-'4</p>
        <p>Franklintife  2S'4  15*</p>
        <p>NCNB  37</p>
        <p>Piedmont Air  37'*-3t</p>
        <p>Little Mint  1**</p>
        <p>Conner Home*  1'* '*</p>
        <p>Guardian Care  3*-4'*</p>
        <p>Provident Financial  14'*  BID</p>
        <p>Planters National Bank  35 BID</p>
        <p>Hatterat Income  U'^ V,</p>
        <p>By GEORGE ESPER .</p>
        <p>Associated Press Writer SAIGON (AP) - A rice bowl war ended today in the ftile Mekong DelU, but government artillery continued to pound North Vietnamese and Viet (iong forces, the military command reported. It said 92 troops were killed on both sides.</p>
        <p>The battle, which took place 45 miles southwest of Saigon just off the capitals rice road to the delta, was the biggest in the region since the first two</p>
        <p>wedES in June whoi more than 200 North Vietnamese and Viet CJong troops were reported killed in two battles.</p>
        <p>Both goverriment and Communist-led forces reportedly are trying to extend their pre-ence in the delta in an ^fori td control as much o the rice harvest as possible.</p>
        <p>Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, tte chief spdcesman for the command, claimed 75 North Vietnamese and Viet C^ng troops were killed since the fighting began Tuesday morning near</p>
        <p>the (Strict town of Cai Lay. He said South Vietnamese infantrymen were supported by artillery.</p>
        <p>There was no corroboration of Hiois casualty daim, which seemed hi^ in Wew of his repent that only eight eimy weapons and 127 Mocks oi TNT w-e captured. He said preliminary reports listed government casualties as 17 killed and four wounded.</p>
        <p>President Nguyen Van Thieu has predicted a full-scale North Vietnamese and Viet C^g of-</p>
        <p>Some Parents Object To Jailing Of Doctor</p>
        <p>Air</p>
        <p>Will</p>
        <p>Fare</p>
        <p>Rise</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market turned mixed today after prices pulled back from a sharp morning rally.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up over 17 points early in the session, was down 0.45 tq^844.45 at noon. Advances confinued to lead declines 724 to 547 among 1,663 issues traded.</p>
        <p>The morning rally was the first sign that the market is trying to find a bottom, said Monte (Gordon of Dreyfus Corp. The question now is whether it will help bring the buyers in. The Dow blue-chip average has slumped over 46 points the past two sessions, largely on fears that the energy crisis will provoke a recession in 1974, analysts say.</p>
        <p>The American Stock Exchange market-value index at noon was off .28 at 95.11 as Gould, Inc., warrants were most-ective, unchanged at 7&amp;gt;A.</p>
        <p>On the Big Board, the broad-based index was ahead .02 at 52.62 while Gulf Oil, after a large block was sold, led trading, down  1  at  20%. The company said  Arab  cutbacks  had</p>
        <p>reduced its world-wide supplies about 16 per cent.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  Midday 1ocK4 </p>
        <p>Hih Low Last *IOoa  20'* 20* 30'*</p>
        <p>*  9*  9*</p>
        <p>41* 41'* 41* 10* 10'* 10* 34'* 34'* 34'* 24* 34* 24* 21* 21'* 21* 7*  7*  7*</p>
        <p>47&amp;lt;* 44* 47 31&amp;lt;4 30  31'4</p>
        <p>21* 21'* 21* 28* 2t* 28'* 14  15* 15*</p>
        <p>21 20'* 21 24* 24* U* 20* 20'* 20* 31* 31'* 31'4</p>
        <p>17  14&amp;gt;4 17 19'* 18* 19'*</p>
        <p>135* 135'* 135'* 28'4 28'4 28'4 23* 32* 22* 44&amp;lt;* 43* 44&amp;lt;* 54* 54'4 54* 17* 17'* 17* 141'* 141'4 141'4 127  134* 124&amp;gt;4</p>
        <p>7'*  4*  7</p>
        <p>23* 33* 23* 91'* 91  91'*</p>
        <p>15* 15* 15* 28'* 2I&amp;lt;4 28&amp;lt;4 .  31* 31'* 31'*</p>
        <p>45  44 * 44*</p>
        <p>12 11* 12 24  24  24</p>
        <p>43* 43  43'*</p>
        <p>35  24* 25</p>
        <p>59  59  59</p>
        <p>52* 52'* 52* 24''4 25'4 24* 35* 35* 35* 17* 14* 17* 14* Wm 14* 13* 13* 13* 21* 21'* 21'* 30* 30* 30* 90* 90* 90'/j 24* 24'x 24* 30* 30* 30* 44'* 4S&amp;gt;'j 44'* 17* 17* 17* 17'* 17'* 17'*</p>
        <p>13  11* 13</p>
        <p>41'.4 41  41</p>
        <p>18  17* 17*</p>
        <p>34* 33'*  33*</p>
        <p>5*  5  5</p>
        <p>21'* 21  21*</p>
        <p>21* 21* 21* 14* 15'* 14 U* 82* 82'* S3'* 52'* 52*</p>
        <p>57  54* 54'A</p>
        <p>42* 43* 43* 13* 13* 13* 13* 13'A 13* 73'* 71* 71* 79'* 77'-i4 77* 115'* 112* 11* 43* 43* 42* 91* 89* 89* 99* 97'* 97* 44* 44  44&amp;gt;A</p>
        <p>30* 19* 30 23* 22* 23'A 43* 43* 43* 43* 43'4 43'^ 17* 17* 17* 42* 42* 42* 14* 13* 13* 23* 23* 23* 87* 85* K* 15* IS* IS* 34* 34  34*</p>
        <p>47* 44* 44* 48* ** 48* 42* 41* 41*</p>
        <p>Akiona AllisChal Alcoa AmAirlin AmBdS AmCan AmCyan AmMotor AmT&amp;amp;T BabckW Beat Fd Beth St Boeing Borden Burl Ind CaroPw Ceianese Chmpint Chrytler CocaCol ComwEd ContCan Delta Air DowChem DukePower duPont EasKod EasAirLin Esmark Exxon Firestone FlaPow FlaPwL FordM FordMcK GenOynam GenElec GenFoods GenMills GenAAot GenTelEI GaPac Goodrich Goodyear Greyhd GulfOil Mercle Honywell IntHarv IntTSiT IntPap JonLau KaisAlm KayserR KrattCo Kroger Kresge S Lock Hd Air Loews Marcor Mead Cp Minn M M AAobil O Monun Nabisco Nat Distill Olin Corp Penney Pepsi Co Phil AAor PhiH Pet Plaroid Proct Gam Ralston P RCA Rep StI Revlon Reyn Ind Roy C Cola St. Reg P Scott Pap Sea Cst Ltn Sears R South Co Sou Ry Sparry R S*d Brds Std Oil Cal</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The Civil Aeronautics Board today agreed to let the nations airlines increase their fares by five per cent, effective Dec. 1.</p>
        <p>The boards action seems sure to arouse the ire of congressmen who have contended in recent weeks that fares should be decreased since recent flight cutbacks because of fuel shortages will increase airline profits.</p>
        <p>TTie CAB, although agreeing the cutbacks will create at least a short-run impetus toward improved profitability, said the five per cent increase is justified by recent increases in airline costs.</p>
        <p>The CAB said the fare increase will not result in airlines making more than the 12 per cent rate of return on their investment which the board found fair in its recent domestic fare investigation.</p>
        <p>The hike will affect all fares on all U.S. trunk airlines and six local service airlines. Those include Allegheny, American, Braniff, Continental, Delta, astm, Frontier, Hughes, National, North Central, Northwest, Ozark, Piedmont, Southern, Texas International, Trans World, United and Western.</p>
        <p>Holding Youth For 24 Murders</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - Michael Altenberger, 18, is being held on 24 counts of murder in connection with the fire last week at the Stratford Apartments.</p>
        <p>TTie 24 victims included nine children. Fifty-two persons were injured.</p>
        <p>Authorities said Altenberger, of Tucson, Ariz., confessed he started the fire. He was arrested Friday, seven hours after the blaze, and was arraigned Tuesday before Judge Morton Rochman.</p>
        <p>CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (AP)  One of the two pediatricians in this city of 25,000 hasnt treated patients for a week.</p>
        <p>Dr. Phillip Hall has been in jail since last Thursday on a contempt citation for nonpayment of back alimony.</p>
        <p>And some of the gtys parents dont like it. Women and children picketed City Hall on Saturday and again Monday to</p>
        <p>protest Dr. Halls jailing, o</p>
        <p>Dr. Robert Marks, the citys other pediatrician and Halls partner, also doesnt like it. He joined the pickets Saturday, saying he could not carry the double load of work.</p>
        <p>City jailers have been bombarded with telephone calls demanding the 43-year-old physicians release.</p>
        <p>Lord, I couldnt begin to tell you how many calls weve gotten, said Angelo Second of the Harrison dbunty Sheriffs Department.</p>
        <p>They call and say their baby is sick and they want to see the doctor. I tell them theyll just have to call his office. Theres nothing I can do.</p>
        <p>Intermediate Court Judge Robert Zeigler found Dr. Hall in contempt for refusing to pay $4,000 in back alimony to his former wife, who Hall says wont let him see his three children.</p>
        <p>Dr. Hall said that, although he has kept up his $600-a-month child support payments, he wont make $650-a-month alimony payments.</p>
        <p>He says its a matter of principle and hes prepared to stay</p>
        <p>in jail indefinitely.</p>
        <p>Contempt is an appro{^iate charge, said Dr. Hall. I feel this i3 not a legal matter and the courts are not equipped to deal with it. This is a moral, mental and psychological question.</p>
        <p>His former wife has declined to discuss the case, which will be heard Friday before Judge Zeigler.</p>
        <p>Reacting to a rash of angry calls, the judge issued a statement Tuesday saying that doc-^rs are subject to the law like anyone else.</p>
        <p>At the same time, one of the citys newspapers, TTie Telegram, carried a paid, two-column ad proclaiming;</p>
        <p>Why cant our doctor see his children? We trust him with ours.</p>
        <p>Demo Committee Again Turns To Policies Probe</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-A Democratic-appointed legislative committee resumed its efforts today to investigate the Hol-shouser administrations personnel policies with the threat 0^ a lawsuit hanging over it.</p>
        <p>Sen. criarles Taylor, R-Trans-lyvania, the Senate minority leader, said he and his colleagues planned to file a suit if the committee decided to subpoena 17 personnel officers from the Department of Transportation.</p>
        <p>Ckimmittee chairman Bob Barker, a Democratic Wake County senator, was to meet with (Jov. Jim Holshouser at</p>
        <p>lunch to discuss the committees effort to obtain testimony from the personnel officers about the firing of more than 100 Transportation employes last month.</p>
        <p>The committee was appointed by Lt. Gov. Jim Hunt, a Democrat. Holshouser is a Republican.</p>
        <p>The personnel officers failed to appear at the committees first meeting, last Wednesday, and Holshouser later agreed to talk with Barker about the Sen; ate bodys investigation.</p>
        <p>Taylor, a close political ally, of Holshouser, said the threat</p>
        <p>ened suit would asske a court order to restrain the committee from acting as a duly authorized committee of the Senate.</p>
        <p>Taylor said that Hunt, under Senate rules, had no authority to appoint the committee. Hunt is the presiding officer of the Senate.</p>
        <p>Theres a precedent wed long regret, Taylor said. What concerns us is the precedent for either presiding officer from taking off on his own...picking a few friends,..and going into any subject he cares to.</p>
        <p>U.S. Diplomat Scoli Undergoes Heart Surgery</p>
        <p>PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)  John A. Scali, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, is recovering from open heart surgery to repair three partially blocked arteries.</p>
        <p>Everything looks very good. He ought to do very well, said Dr. Edward Diethrich, director of the Arizona Heart Institute, where the operation took place Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Scali, 55, had comfdained of chest pains in recent weeks during U.N. Security Council debates on the Mideast War. He flew to Phoenix Sunday with his wife for an examination at the institute.</p>
        <p>Dr. Diethrich said the oper-ati&amp;lt;m was to bypass narrowed portions M the ambassadors coronary arteries and to bring a fresh supply of blood to the heart muscle.</p>
        <p>Prince Charles Goes Hunting</p>
        <p>MALAGA, Spain (AP)  Prince Charles, heir to the British throne, is doing some hunting at Molino del Rey, the 2,-500^cre estate of the Duke of Wellington.</p>
        <p>During his five-day vacation, the 25-year-old prince also will see the dukes 22-year-old daughter, Lady Jane Wellesley, the girl some London newspapers say Charles will marry.</p>
        <p>The prince arrived Tuesday and ^as met at the airport by the duke and duchess. Lady Jane arrived from London a day earlier.</p>
        <p>Sheriff Appeals His Conviction</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO (AP) - Sheriff James R. Taylor of Surry County appealed Tuesday his conviction and susp^ded sentence of 18 months for illegal wiretapping.</p>
        <p>He asked a new trial or acquittal. The motion is to be heard next month in U.S. District Court.</p>
        <p>He testified during the recent trial that he had been given permission to wiretap the telephone of a Mount Airy beauty parlor to catch a person making obnoxious calls. The woman proprietor, a former secretary in the sheriffs office, said he had not been given permission.</p>
        <p>]Holiday For Mostf</p>
        <p>All Federal, State, County and City offices will be closed TTiursday in observance of Thanksgiving Day.</p>
        <p>And* according to Harold Creech, manager of the Greenville Chamber of Commerce-Merchants Association, most of the stores and businesses will be closed one day for Thanksgiving.</p>
        <p>Only the Greenville City and Pitt County Boards of Education  offices will remain closed Friday. Those offices will close both 'Ihursday and Friday in observance of Thanksgiving and will re-(^n as usual on Monday.</p>
        <p>According to local U. S. Postal Service officials, there will be no rural and city delivery mail and no window service on Thanksgiving Day.</p>
        <p>However mail will be placed in post office boxes, special delivery mail will be delivered in the city and collection of mail from all drop boxes marked with a star will be tnade.</p>
        <p>Outgoing mail will be dispatched fi-om Greenville at 4:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Regular postal service will be resumed Friday.</p>
        <p>4:30 p.m.KNuwiii Ciifto mMft 8 00 p.m.Pl CounTy At-Anon Group mitts pt AA BHte- Earmvill* Hwy. T*tiO*NM  or  7MJK47</p>
        <p>8 lOOp.m.Tlw Mitroni CiuO map* pt tfw twmp Pt HpBlpr Kllipon</p>
        <p>COMEDIAN DIES LOS ANGELES (AP)-AUen Sherman, 49, who rocketed to fame as a comedian in the early 196(te, died Tuesday of respiratory failure. A producer-writer, Sherman rose to prominence with his first recording, "Hello Mudder,' in which be portrayed the mythical experiences of a youth at summer camp.</p>
        <p>Traffic Toll</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)Here is the North Carolina Motor Vehicles Department's report of highway deaths and injuries for the period from noon ye^erday to midni^t today. Killed 0 Injured (rural) 11 Killed this year 1,677 Killed to date last year 1,755 Injured to Septembo- 1, 1973 47,480</p>
        <p>Injured to Setpember 1, 1973 41,$87</p>
        <p>Pin COUNTY INSURANCE EXCHANGE, INC.</p>
        <p>menibers will observe Thersday and Friday, November 22 and 23 for</p>
        <p>THANKSGIVING</p>
        <p>Ayden Loan and Insurance Company Bill Clifton Agency First Union National Bank, Agent Goodson and Flanagan, Inc.</p>
        <p>Hines Agency, Inc.  ^</p>
        <p>Home insurance Agency Hooker and Buchanan, Inc.</p>
        <p>E. F. House Insurance Agency Ives Insurance Agency</p>
        <p>C. D. Langston AAanning Insurance Agency McRoy Insurance Agency Moore's Insurance Agency Moseley Brothers Insurance, Inc.</p>
        <p>D. G. Nichols Real Estate and Insurance Agency Page-Barbre Insurance and Real Estate</p>
        <p>Pitt County Insurance Agency</p>
        <p>John W. Rook and Son Insurance and Real Estate</p>
        <p>George Saleeby Insurance and Realty Company</p>
        <p>Smith Insurance and Realty Company</p>
        <p>Tadlock Insurance Agency</p>
        <p>Turnage Real Estate and Insurance Agency</p>
        <p>Tyson Brothers Insurance Agency</p>
        <p>Wachovia Insurance Agency, Inc.</p>
        <p>H. A. White and Sons, Inc.</p>
        <p>Willard and Webb Winterville Insurance Agency</p>
        <p>fensive for later this year or early next year during the dry season. He said the first move could be an to disrupt the nations economy by cutting its links with the ddta area.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, rescuers recovered the bodies of five persons killed when an Air Vietnam domestic alrlimr crashed in bad weather last Saturday 50 mil^ south of Da Nai^. The aircraft carried a crew of three and 23 passengo's. One person aboard was a man listed as Richard W. Thompson, an American volunteer at the American Friends Service Committee rehabilitation center at Quang Ngai, 75 miles south of Da Nang. The search for the others was continuing.</p>
        <p>In Cambodia, President Lon Nol flew by helicopter to Neak Luong where last August an American BS2 accidently dropped a bomb killing 137 persons and injuring another 268.</p>
        <p>Lon Nol went to the town to greet 290 men described as Khmer Rouge rebels who had come over to the govemmaits side. He also toured a hospital which was partially destroyed in the mistaken American bombing, but which has since "been rebuilt with U.S. money.</p>
        <p>In a rare news conference, Lon Nol discounted the Monday bombing of his presidential palace by a government plane as an isolated incident.</p>
        <p>There was no plot, he said, adding the government was investigating the incident in which three persons were killed and 10 injured, (government sources said they do not know where the T28 bomber landed.</p>
        <p>I**</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Disclose LBJ ShunnedTaking Tax Advantage</p>
        <p>AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) - Former President Lyndon B. Johnson gave the bulk of his papers to the United States without obtaining any tax advantage, says the director of the LBJ Library.</p>
        <p>Director Harry Middleton said Johnson gave 200,000 documents, covering the years before he entered the U.S. Senate in 1948, to the library before a law allowing tax write-offs for such gifts was changed in 1969. Johnson served in the House before being elected a senator.</p>
        <p>He said in an interview that he believed Johnson obtained a tax exemption only for those 200,000 papers, out of a total of 31 million.</p>
        <p>President Nixon said during a news conference Saturday ni^t that one reason he had paid only nominal amounts of income tax in 1970 and 1971 was that he had obtained a writeoff, at Johnsons suggestion, for giving his vice presidential papers to the government before the tax change.</p>
        <p>Joyner</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE  Funeral for Little Raymond Joyner, who died Friday, will be convicted Thursday at 2 p.m. at St. Johns Free Will Baptist Church here. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Paric.</p>
        <p>A lifelong resident of Farm-ville, he is survived by a brother, Essex Hines of near Farmville; and three sisters, Mrs. Holland Williams of Raleigh, Mrs. Mary Ellen Tyson of Farmville, and Mrs. Hattie Williams of Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>The body will be at Joyners Mortuary after 6:30 p.m. today. The family will be at the Mortuary from 8 to 9 oclock tonight.</p>
        <p>May</p>
        <p>Mr. Johnny H. May, 70, died at his home near Hookerton Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 2 p.m. at the WUkerson Funeral CTiapel by the Rev. John Andrews and the Rev. Conrad Williford. Burial will be in the Maury Cemetery,</p>
        <p>Mr. May was a native of Greene (^unty and spent most of his life there. For the past 15 years he had made his home near Maury and was a retired painter and carpenter. He was a member of the Fountain Baptist Church and a veteran of World War II.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Katie Johnson May; two brothers, Travis May of Grifton and Dan May of Wilson; and two sisters, Mrs. Charity Young of Bell Arthur and Mrs. Betty Boone of Grifton, j</p>
        <p>MiUs</p>
        <p>Mr. Lonnie E. Mills, 68, died at his home in the Black Jack Community Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be .conducted at 3 p.m. at the Black Jack Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church by his pastor, the Rev. R.M. Stewart and the Rev. R.W. Tedder, pastor of the Greenville Church of God. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park. The body will be taken from the Wilkerson Funeral Home to the church one hour prior to the time of service.</p>
        <p>Mr. Mills was born and spent all his life in Pitt County in the Black Jack Community and was</p>
        <p>a retired farmo'. He was a member oi the Bladt Jack Pentecostal Free Will Baptist (3iurch.</p>
        <p>Surviving him are hia wifci Mrs. Lizzie Boyd Mills; a son, Lonnie Ray Idills of Black Jack*, one granddaughter; five brothers, Sola, Harvey, LevieT; Plum, and Lloyd B. (Buddy! Mills, all of Black Jack; and two sisters, Mrs. James T. Woodman, of Greensboro and Miss Rebia' Lee Mills of Black Jack. -</p>
        <p>Rosi</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLEMrs. Lillian Rogerson Ross, 74, died Tuesday in Zebulon. She was a native of Pitt County and an member of the First CTiristian Church here.</p>
        <p>She was the widow of the late George D. Rms.</p>
        <p>Surviving are two brother^, Raymond Rogerson of Greenville, and W.H. Rogerson cif Bethel; a sister, Mrs. Catherine Briley of Greenville.  -</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. at Big^ Funeral Chapel here. The Rev. Donald Weaver will officiate at the service and burial will follow in the Spring Green Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Announce New Office Hours</p>
        <p>The Greenville Social Security Office has announced new operating hours to be effective beginning December 3 for the offices in Greenvill^ Washington and Elizabeth C^ty.</p>
        <p>Beginning on that date, hourei for visits ^to the office or conduct of business by telejhone will be from 9:(X) a.m. until 4:30 p.m. daily, Monday through Friday.</p>
        <p>This is a change from the current operating hours of 8:45 a.m. til 5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>REMAINS SERIOUS TEL AVIV (AP)-Former Premier David Ben-Gurioh remained in serious condition today, doctors said. He suffered a cerebral hemorrhage four days ago.</p>
        <p>Veiiters Grille Closed Thursday &amp;amp; Friday November 22 &amp;amp; 23</p>
        <p>For The Thanksgiving Holidoys Will Reopen Monday As Usual</p>
        <p>Happy Thanksgiving To All Our Friends &amp;amp; Customers</p>
        <p>New Industry Coining To Greenville Will Require:</p>
        <p>Machinists Mechanical Draftsmen Welders</p>
        <p>Pitt Technical Institute Offers</p>
        <p>For The Winter Quarters-Beginning Nov. 27, 1973</p>
        <p>Machinist Trade Mechanical Drafting Welding</p>
        <p>Be ready for employment in good paying jobs. Veteran Benefits Available.</p>
        <p>For further Information contoct:</p>
        <p>The Student Personnel Office Pitt Technical Institute P.O. Drawer 7007 Highway 11 South Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone 756-3130</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0015" />
        <p>LADIES 1-SIZE PANTYHOSE</p>
        <p>Save 40c reg. 79c 39c</p>
        <p>Granada nylon pantyhose in beige, cinnamon, brown, taupe. 1 size fits 100-150 lbs., 5'-5'10". Limit 4 pairs.1974 CALENDAR TOWEL</p>
        <p>reg. 79c 50c</p>
        <p>1974 calendar towel in a wide choice of colorful kitchen prints. Gift packaged for mailing.</p>
        <p>NEWBORN</p>
        <p>BABY TENDER LOVE</p>
        <p>699</p>
        <p>Bathe her, dress her or feed her. 13" tall with rooted hair. Blanket, diaper, bottle and I.D. bracelet. By Mattel. Limit 1 please.</p>
        <p>VERTIBIRD RESCUE SHIP BY MAHEL  |  ^90</p>
        <p>Save 2.98 reg. 13.96 lU 41" Coast Guard cutter with its own helicopter that really flies. Lood cargo or perform rescues from the fantail controls. Batteries not inch</p>
        <p>INDOOR MIDGET LIGHT SET BY TRIM TYME</p>
        <p>Save 68c reg. 1.68 20 indoor lights in red, green, blue, white. If one burns out, others stay lit. IJL approved. Pre-tested. Guaranteed. Limit 2.</p>
        <p>]00</p>
        <p>NORELCO TRIPLEHEADER 40 VIP'  23^^</p>
        <p>Norelco shaver with 9 comfort settings. Super Microgroove^^ floating heads, popup trimmer. 1 10/220 voltage selector switch.</p>
        <p>3-ROLL GIFT WRAP BY TRIM TYME</p>
        <p>36c</p>
        <p>3 rolls of foil or paper gift wrapping per package. All 26" wide in gay holiday patterns. Limit 2.</p>
        <p>Supplement To The Daily Reflector &amp;amp; Reflector Shoppers Guide, Wednesday, November 21, 1973</p>
        <p>PRICES EFFECTIVE 11/21 THRU 11/24</p>
        <p>OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY</p>
        <p>CLARKS</p>
        <p>DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE</p>
        <p>A DIVISION OF COOK UNITED. INC.</p>
        <p>Shop for national brands at low discount Christmas savings</p>
        <p>BankAmericaro</p>
        <p>HOLIDAY RAINCHECK*</p>
        <p>If we sell out of any odvertised specials, excluding cleorance items, you will receive a written order 'Raincheck' which entitles you to buy the item at these advertised prices when our stock is replenished.</p>
        <p>*Rainchecks will be given on seasonal items only if we can replenish our supply before Christmas.</p>
        <p>637</p>
        <p>OPEN DAILY</p>
        <p>MON. thru SAT., 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY. CLOSED</p>
        <p>WEST END SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>THANKSGIVING HOURS</p>
        <p>9:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0016" />
        <p>Holiday gift ideas in carefully selected fashions., .great values at fantastic prices.</p>
        <p>2E</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>2F</p>
        <p>2G</p>
        <p>2H</p>
        <p>2A FASHION HANDBAGS</p>
        <p>433</p>
        <p>Save 1.66 reg. 5.99</p>
        <p>Vena glazed vinyl handbags in brown tones or black. Top handles for dress or shoulder-strap casual.</p>
        <p>2A</p>
        <p>A2B OPAQUE PANTYHOSE</p>
        <p>Save 19c reg, 98c 79</p>
        <p>Granada nylon pantyhose in brown, black, navy, white and fashion shades. One size fits 5-5' 10", 100-150 lbs.</p>
        <p>2C PANTY PACK GIFT BOXED218</p>
        <p>Save 69c reg. 2.87 6 pr./pkg.</p>
        <p>Nylon tricot white and pastels, 5, 6, 7. Choose bikini or brief styles embroidered with assorted motifs.IT*%-2D LONG HOLIDAY ROBES</p>
        <p>Saw 2.33 reg. 8.99 6^^ Acetate tricot quilted to polyester. Assorted prints and solids. Washable. 10-18.2F CAFTAN HOSTESS LOUNGER</p>
        <p>Save 1.66 reg. 5,99 4^^ Two-tone "lambskin" in acetate/nylon. Brown/beige, royal/green, royal/hot pink. Bock zipper. S, M, L.2G "SLEEP DRESS" LONG GOWN</p>
        <p>Save 1.66 reg. 5.99 4^^</p>
        <p>Today's look in nylon tricot. Lt. blue, purple, red, royal, S, M, L,2H LONG HOSTESS LOUNGERS</p>
        <p>Save 1.66 reg. 5.99 4^^ Acetate knit loungers in float or caftan styles. Assorted prints. S, M, L. Great value!</p>
        <p>2C</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0017" />
        <p>388</p>
        <p>3G ''BUST OUT"</p>
        <p>GLITTER BLOUSE  , g8</p>
        <p>Save 2,11 reg. 8.99 O The 'Bust out' button-front, tie bock. White or block rayon/Mylar metallic. 30-36.</p>
        <p>3H PALAZZO PANTS</p>
        <p>Save 3.11 reg. 11.99 Wide 48" flare pull-ons with sash. Navy, berry, hunter green polyester. 7-15, 8-16.</p>
        <p>3J GIRLS' FADED DENIM SEPARATES  c49</p>
        <p>Save 2.50 reg. 7.99 3 Jeans or shirt jacket in blue cotton IOV2-OZ. faded denim. Embroidery trim. Sizes 7 to 14.</p>
        <p>3K BIG/LIHLE SISTERS . DRESSES</p>
        <p>reg. 9.99 7^ 12.99-13.99 9</p>
        <p>Long or regular length dressy styles in washable polyester,, polyester blends. Fine detailing. Famous moke. 4-6X, 7-14.</p>
        <p>3L STRETCH NYLON TIGHTS</p>
        <p>Save 42c reg. 99c 57c</p>
        <p>Lycra spandex waist. Opaque seamless, ass'td cirs. Girls' sizes 1-3 through 12-14.</p>
        <p>3M BOY/GIRL SLACK SETS</p>
        <p>Save, 2.00 reg. 6.49 4</p>
        <p>Shorty jackets with sports motif appliques. Nautical and 'bust-out' styles. Cuffed slacks. Polyester/cotton blends, ass'td cIrs. 2-4.</p>
        <p>3N INFANTS' POLYESTER SLACK SETS  4^9</p>
        <p>Cuffed slacks with 'bust-out' or nautical shorty jackets. Ass'td colors. 9-18 months.</p>
        <p>3P INFANTS' HOLIDAY DRESSES AND DRESS SETS</p>
        <p>Save 2.00 reg. 6.49 4^^ Polyester flocked prints, ginghams. Ribbon, lace trim. Pink, maize, lilac, blue. 9-18 mos. 3P1 Dressy dresses, 1-3. Reg. 6.99. 4.49</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0018" />
        <p>Important fashion gifts for men who know what they want4A THE "IN LOOK" NEW LONG-SLEEVED SPORT SHIRTS</p>
        <p>Save 2.98 reg. 3.99 2 for</p>
        <p>500</p>
        <p>Machine washable no-iron polyester/cotton bold fancies or solids. 'Now look' long point collar with sewn-in stays. S, M, L, XL.</p>
        <p>46 CLIP-ON BOW TIE1 49</p>
        <p>Save 50c reg. 1.99 I Popular new wide butterfly shape in variety of handsome fabrics, patterns and colors.4C PILE-LINED STORM COAT</p>
        <p>Save 4.99 reg. 22.991800</p>
        <p>Polyester/cotton shell. Orion acrylic pile lining and collar. Tan, maple. 38 to 46.4D NO-IRON SHIRT/TIE SETS</p>
        <p>Save 2.00 reg. 4.99 2 Machine washable cotton/^lyester solids with co-mate tie. Long-sleeved, long point collar shirt. S, M, L, XL.4E STRETCH KNIT DRESS FLARES</p>
        <p>Sove 2.99 reg. 9.99 / Polyester knit. Regular flare and cuffed. Navy, brn., gm., burg. Cuffed legs, 29-38"; hemmed, 30-42".4F SWEATER AND SHIRT SET</p>
        <p>Save 4.22 reg. 14.99 1 U Acrylic sleeveless sweater plus long-slee\d, placket shirt in machine washable polyester or acrylic knit. Geometric shirt with solid sweater or pinstripe shirt with window-pane pattern sweater. Many colors. S, M, L, XL.4G CUFFED FURE JEANS  *  .</p>
        <p>Save 1.99 reg. 6.99 3 Western style in navy cotton denim. 22" ftare. Also, brushed cotton denim in navy, bm., burg. 29-38".4H TURTLENECK SWEATER SHIRT</p>
        <p>Save 1.00 reg. 4.99 3^^ Machine washable acrylic rib knit solids. S, M, L, XL.AAATTE JERSEY KNIT SHIRTS</p>
        <p>(Not shown) nylon knit sport shirt. Matte jersey colorful prints. Permanent press machine washable. Long sleeves. S, M, L, XL. Reg. 5.99....................4  494J DOUBLE KNIT PUID FURES</p>
        <p>Save 3.99 reg. 11.99300</p>
        <p>Cuff^ flares. Polyester stretch plaids.- navy/red/white, navy/green/white. 29-38". (Not shown) polyester stretch knit uncuffed flare slocks. Mini check in grey, gold. 30-42". Reg. 10.99 ................. .....  8.004K WARM WASH/WEAR ROBES</p>
        <p>Save 1.50 reg. 4.99 3 ^ Cotton flannel plaids. Belted wraparound. S, M, L, XL.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0019" />
        <p>5A MEN'S COLORED KNIT UNDERWEAR</p>
        <p>94c</p>
        <p>Save 53c reg. 1.47 Solid foshion colors. No-iron Dacron polyester/cotton. Athletic or T-shirts, regular or lo-rise briefs. S, M, L, XL.</p>
        <p>5B MEN'S COAT STYLE PAJAAAAS</p>
        <p>Save 1.22 reg. 4.99 No-iron polyester/cotton patterns or solids with piped trim. Long sleeves, legs. Our 'Bradmark' brand. A, B, C, D.</p>
        <p>5C MEN'S HOSIERY</p>
        <p>Save 30c reg. 84c Famous brands assortment. Orion acrylic/stretch nylon crew; Ban-Lon nylon dress anklets in cables, panels, ribs, nylon overcalf, or cushion foot crew socb. White, colors. 1 size fits 10-13.</p>
        <p>#  I</p>
        <p>ii</p>
        <p>^  r</p>
        <p>I  i</p>
        <p>V I</p>
        <p>5D NEW AAAHE JERSEY BAGGY TOP SHIRTS. NO-IRON PULLOVER</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>Save 1.00 reg. 4.99 Matte jersey knit shirt with baggie bottom. FarKies with solid knit trim. Acetate/nylon. Sizes 8 to 18.</p>
        <p>5E BOYS' SHIRT/BOW TIE SET</p>
        <p>Save 1.30 reg. 4.99 3^^ Zingy big bow tie in solid tones... plus fancy shirt of no-iron polyester/cotton. 2-button cuffs. Sizes 8 to 18.</p>
        <p>5F KNIT SLACKS</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>Save 2.00 reg. 6.99 Solid 'blister look' polyester knit slocb. Flore or cuffed legs. Burgundy, dust, navy, brown. 8-18.</p>
        <p>5G SHIRT/SUCK/TIE SET</p>
        <p>449</p>
        <p>Save 1.50 reg. 5.99 Plaid slacks and tie of no-iron polyester/cotton. Solid cut 'n' sewn, knit shirt of acrylic. 2-4, 3-7.</p>
        <p>Great new fashions and classic favorites for boys in the know</p>
        <p>5H BOYS' PJ'S</p>
        <p>Save 1.00 reg. 3.69 2^^ No-iron polyester/cotton broadcloth or soft cotton flannel. Notch collar coot style in fancy patterns and assorted colors. Sizes 8-18.</p>
        <p>5J JR. BOYS' SLACKS</p>
        <p>Save 1.00 reg. 3.99 2^^ Cuffed slocb or jeans with 2 pockets, zip fly. Solids and plaids in sturdy, no-iron 100% cotton. Regular and slims in newest colors. Sizes 4-7.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0020" />
        <p>CLARKS</p>
        <p>DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE</p>
        <p>A DIVISION OF COOK UNITED, INC.</p>
        <p>CUT VELVET OR WET LOOK DECORATOR PILLOWS</p>
        <p>Save 1.00 reg. 3.99 2</p>
        <p>Choose cut velvet with solid velveteen bock and tassels, or wet-look vinyl with</p>
        <p>pompom tassels, Zippered.</p>
        <p>PERMA PRESS LACE-EDGE TABLECLOTHS  cOO</p>
        <p>reg. to 7.49 O Soil release, machine wash/dry.</p>
        <p>Dacron polyester/cotton. Gold, avocado, orange, white. 54x72" oblong or oval, 67x90" oblong or oval, 68" round. Save 2.47 on 67x108" oblong, 8.97. 6.50</p>
        <p>WIPE-CLEAN CHRISTAAAS TABLECLOTHS</p>
        <p>52x70" reg. Festive holiday patterns.</p>
        <p>.00</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>52x90.......... 77c</p>
        <p>NOEL PRINT KITCHEN TERRY TOWELS</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>reg. 39c each Colorful cotton terry towels in holiday prints. Lint free. 15x26" size.</p>
        <p>NOEL PRINT VINYL PLACEMATS</p>
        <p>4 FOR 67^</p>
        <p>Wipe-clean vinyl with foam back in holiday prints and colors. Sold in package of four.</p>
        <p>3-PC. HOSTESS GIFT SET</p>
        <p>229</p>
        <p>Save 70c reg. 2.99 Permanent press gingham or denim. Apron with pocket, heat resistant oven mitt and pot holder.</p>
        <p>FUR-LIKE PILE</p>
        <p>COLLINS &amp;amp; AIKMAN</p>
        <p>BATHROOM ENSEMBLE</p>
        <p>Furry easy-care acrylic/modacrylic pile in fashion colors. By Collins &amp;amp; Aikman. Machine washable, noQ-skid back.</p>
        <p>18x30" rug, reg. 1.89 .</p>
        <p>24x36" rug, reg. 2.99 .</p>
        <p>27x45" rug, reg. 3.99 .</p>
        <p>Contour rug, reg. 2.29 Lid cover, reg. 1.59 . .</p>
        <p>5x6' wall to wall carpeting and lid cover,</p>
        <p>reg. 14.99....................11.99</p>
        <p>2-pc. tank set, reg. 4.49..........3.49</p>
        <p>Basket and cover, reg. 2.79 .......1.99</p>
        <p>Scale cover, reg. 1.19............99</p>
        <p>Tissue box cover, reg. 1.49........1.19</p>
        <p>1.39 2.49</p>
        <p>3.39 1.89 1.19</p>
        <p>f Imm</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0021" />
        <p>DRESSY HALTERS</p>
        <p>Serve 1.50 reg. 4.99 3^ Solids or prints in rayon satins, velvets, metallics, challis. One size fits all. Perfect for holiday parties with slacks or skirts.</p>
        <p>PUPPET MIHEN</p>
        <p>129</p>
        <p>Save 60c reg. 1.89 I A fun way to keep little fingers warm. One size fits all. Stretch acrylic with Disney characters, clown or animal motifs.</p>
        <p>JEWELRY BOXES</p>
        <p>99.-2</p>
        <p>Save 70C-1.00</p>
        <p>reg. 1.69-3.99 For guys, a wood pirate chest, simulated leather caddy or box. For gals, a musical ballerina or simulated leather boxes. Many with drawrs and inside mirrors.</p>
        <p>GIFT SLIPPERS</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>Comp, value 2.00 I</p>
        <p>Ladies' glitter style in gold or silver-tone, or florals in blue, gold or pink. Machine washable moterials. Sizes S, M, L.</p>
        <p>FASHION GLOVES</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>Save 30c-80c reg. 1.79-2.29 I Classic or novelty gloves, or mittens in warm acrylic or wool knits or leother-look vinyl. Some fleece lined. Popular colors. One size fits all.</p>
        <p>288</p>
        <p>GIFT JEWELRY</p>
        <p>188 .</p>
        <p>Priced for saving I &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Special group of gold or silver-tone metal tailored jewelry. Some accented with beads. Ropes, chokers, pendants, nothing chains, bracelets.</p>
        <p>RAC TEST &amp;amp; TUNE-UP KIT</p>
        <p>Save 10.00 reg. 26.77 Includes pistol grip tinmng light, compression tester, dwell tachometer and oerry/storage cose. No. 829.</p>
        <p>CHILTON'S AUTO REPAIR AAANUAt</p>
        <p>*  Rbb.9.86  6^</p>
        <p>Fix it yourself and sa^ewith Chilton's Auto Repotr Monuat. Updated &amp;lt;md covers oH Anieri' can cars from 1966 to 1973.</p>
        <p>wBNVAmms</p>
        <p>SPEED DRU</p>
        <p>Sav4.00  IJltT</p>
        <p>0-22.87  10</p>
        <p>Reversible variable spaed drill 1^ Wen wHh unbreoltdbte housing, double redicin gears. Double insubled and dxxkproof. FingerHp w^ln from 0 lo 1200 im % h.p. motor. No. 802.</p>
        <p>-MNakUWII-wNJII</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>BUCK &amp;amp; DECKER JIGSAW</p>
        <p>Save 3.33 reg. 9.99 Mokes straight, curved, scroH ci4s in wood, metol, ploshc, other materiob. tmproved bun' ORJt prcSscted motor, includes blade, hex wrendt. 2.4 amps. i/7h,p. No. 7610.</p>
        <p>Sorry, no rain chedcs on thtrileffi.</p>
        <p>7A</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0022" />
        <p>Educational toys... a delightful and safe way for toddlers to learn.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>AAAHEL SEE 'N SAY</p>
        <p>Talking toys with from 10-26 messages. Choose from: 'The Farmer Says', 'The Bee Says', 'Mother Gosse Says', 'Count with Colors.'</p>
        <p>KENNER POWER TOOTHBRUSHES497</p>
        <p>Snoopy or Mickey Mouse battery operated set that includes 2 toothbrushes, wall mounting brocket. (Batteries not included).</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>KENNER 3 POUND PLAY-DOH CANISTER</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>3-lb. canister of non-toxic soft pliable Play-Doh. Red, yellow, blue white.</p>
        <p>PLAYSKOOL RESCUE CENTER</p>
        <p>Save 2.00 reg. 11.86 3-story. Includes fire engine, chief's car, helicopter, elevator, first-aid station. Fun for ages 4-9.</p>
        <p>MERRY'S TEETER-TOHER WATCH</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>Works like a real watch. Runs, ticks, keeps time. Clear face lets child see gears move. Adjustable band.</p>
        <p>SESAME STREET HAND PUPPETS</p>
        <p>3 PLAYSKOOL WOOD GIFTS</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>Now your child can perform skits with a choice of Ernie, Bert or Cookie Monster; moveable arms, mouth.</p>
        <p>Choice of 12 Walt Disney or Sesame St. .puzzles. Full color inlay pieces. For ages 3-5. Cobbler's bench, 8 pegs and mallet for ages 1-2'/2.</p>
        <p>AAATTEL TUFF STUFF</p>
        <p>3^</p>
        <p>Play mixer, saw drill and sewing machine for hours of pretend play. Safe, sturdy; no batteries needed.</p>
        <p>LimE TYKES TOY BOX CHEST1496</p>
        <p>Holds loads of toys or "treasure". Polyethylene with antique stain in red or gold. 28x17x18."</p>
        <p>CHILDREN'S PLAY TABLE 'N CHAIRS19</p>
        <p>Table 20x20x17", with cup holders. 2 chairs. Seat ht. 11". Red.MAHEL PUn-PUTT</p>
        <p>Save 3.00 reg. 11.86g86</p>
        <p>20-pc. wind-up railroad: 3-pc. 8-ft. oval track, sidings, crossings and more. Hardwood 'n plastic.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0023" />
        <p>fi'inwmi</p>
        <p>nrn</p>
        <p>CLARKS</p>
        <p>DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE</p>
        <p>HASBRO LITE-BRITE</p>
        <p>547</p>
        <p>COLECO POOL TABLE  IDEAL TOSS ACROSS</p>
        <p>1 4^^  Save  2.00 reg. 9,97 7^^</p>
        <p>A DIVISION OF COOK UNITED, INC.</p>
        <p>Create pictures with light 16 preprinted, 6 blank sheets. Over 400 pegs, 8 colors.</p>
        <p>"The Champ" 45x22" table with ball return. Folding steel legs. Complete with cue, balls and triangle.</p>
        <p>Giant size tic-tac-toe for 2 players or 2 teams. 8 bean bags. Ages 7 and up.TUDOR NFL ELECTRIC FOOTBALL H96</p>
        <p>MILTON BRADLEY CHUTE-5MILTON BRADLEY ON TARGET</p>
        <p>Save 3.00 reg. )4.96 Features total team control and individual movement. Metal field With UL-listed safety plug, automatic timer.374</p>
        <p>Save 2.00 reg. 10.86</p>
        <p>386</p>
        <p>Strategy game features unique dice tumbling chute, automatic scoring windows. 2-4 players, ages 10 and up.</p>
        <p>Skill and action game fo| any number of players. Hit trigger, drop target to win. Ages 7 and up.</p>
        <p>BUMP-A-LITE POOL</p>
        <p>Save 5.00 reg. 24.86 19 Shoot to hit bumper lights, one at a</p>
        <p>time, till you miss. First to score 100 hits wins. By Aurora.</p>
        <p>SCRABBLE GAME</p>
        <p>Classic favorite crossword game. Standard edition hasl4/2"sq. board, 4 rocks, 100 polished wood tiles.FLOOR MODEL ELECTRIC PINBALL</p>
        <p>2486</p>
        <p>GUNFIGHT AT OK CORRAL</p>
        <p>Fun 'n skill, features automatic tilt, scorer, dual replay and more. 461/2x32".</p>
        <p>Old West action game by Ideal. 6 players shoot, weave, duck; opponent springs into air with direct hit.</p>
        <p>MONOPOLY OR GNIP GNOP299</p>
        <p>Save 94c reg. 3.93 Two great games from famous Parker Bros. Monopoly in standard edition, the world's most popular board game. Gnip Gnop IS fast-paced tabletop ball game for ages 5-14</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0024" />
        <p>Toys that teach or 'just for fun' and all at savings</p>
        <p>RITE HITE PLAY STOVE OR WASHING AAACHINE</p>
        <p>094</p>
        <p>Save 3.00 reg. 11.94 ea. w Sturdy steel play appliorKes by Wolverine. Both 28 high, 18 wide. Stove has window oven. Washing machine has safe crank agitator.</p>
        <p>CLOTHES FOR DOLLS</p>
        <p>87</p>
        <p>New styles for Barbie arKi Gl Joe type dolls as well as 18 fashion doll styles and 12 action figure styles. With hanger, accessories.</p>
        <p>BARBIES FRIEND SHIP</p>
        <p>Save 2.00 reg. 10.80 8 Compact case opens into realistic jet over 4V2 ft. long. Authentic interior with accessories, stewardess smock, etc. (Doll not included) By Mattel.</p>
        <p>VENTRILCX5UIST DOLL</p>
        <p>Save 3.00 reg. 13.96  10</p>
        <p>Mickey Mouse 30 high professional type ventriloquist doll by l^rsman. Soft and life-like. Simple trigger mechanism. Instructions included.</p>
        <p>497</p>
        <p>TAR AWAY'</p>
        <p>DOLLS only *ir each</p>
        <p>Collector's series of international dolls in native costumes. Each is 8 tall, fully jointed, has rooted hair.</p>
        <p>RAGGEDY ANN OR ANDY DOLL</p>
        <p>99C.396</p>
        <p>America's perennial favorite. Authentically costumed and with red wool yarn hair. By Knickerbocker.</p>
        <p>7&amp;gt;/2" high....................99c</p>
        <p>151/2 high, reg. 3.47 .........2.96</p>
        <p>311/2 high, reg. 10.96 ........8.96</p>
        <p>EASY-BAKE OVEN</p>
        <p>Save 2.00 reg. 9.96</p>
        <p>796</p>
        <p>New Betty Crocker safe baking oven bakes with 2 ordinary 60 watt bulbs (not included). With 3 mixes, 3 pans arxJ cookbook.</p>
        <p>DOLL CARRIAGES</p>
        <p>599</p>
        <p>Choice of stroller or coach. Stroller has vinyl seat and canopy. Cooch is moulded plastic. Tubular steel frames.</p>
        <p>POHERYCRAFT</p>
        <p>996</p>
        <p>41" HORSE</p>
        <p>19*</p>
        <p>Potter's wheel, 3-lbs. air-dry clay, tools and instructions. Safe, no baking or firing needed. Battery operated (not irKluded). By Gilbert.</p>
        <p>Save 7.00 reg. 26.96 Big size spring model. Exclusive new soft touch... looks and feels real. By Hi-Ho.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0025" />
        <p>U-FLY-IT</p>
        <p>BARNSTORMER SET</p>
        <p>AAARX BAHLEGROUND PLAYSET/FORT APACHE</p>
        <p>896</p>
        <p>486</p>
        <p>Famed Sopwith Camel World Wof I biplane with launcher features, play accessories. Airmail pick-up hook and mail pouch, collapsible barn.</p>
        <p>Battleground, 2' sets of soldiers, tanks, guns, bridge, landing craft, wire fence; or Old West fort with soldiers, cannon, horses, fighting Indians.</p>
        <p>TONKA AERIAL LADDER OR MIGHTY LOADER g99</p>
        <p>Loader truck has swivel cabwith operating bucket. Ladder truck has multi-position aerial ladder that cranks up and out.</p>
        <p>TOWER CAR 'N CYCLE</p>
        <p>Save 1.00 reg. 5.47</p>
        <p>447</p>
        <p>Choose T.T.P. tower and car, or tower and cycle. No batteries. For stunt action, 2 wheel turns. Pump tower and hear jet-like whine as power mounts.</p>
        <p>BOOM-A-BALL</p>
        <p>CANNON</p>
        <p>323</p>
        <p>Exciting new hand-propelled plastic cannon fires harmless polyethylene balls. 3 balls included. By Chio Art.</p>
        <p>ERECTOR AAARK 30 SET</p>
        <p>986</p>
        <p>Traditional Erector steel parts for nut/bolt assembly. New battery (not included) operated motor, remote control, storage case.</p>
        <p>Hours of fun with games designed for the young generation</p>
        <p>EASEL CHALKBOARD 6*</p>
        <p>Big 36x24" reversible bcxard on 50" high easel. Complete with tray, chalk and eraser.</p>
        <p>ACTION AAAN ADVENTURES</p>
        <p>296</p>
        <p>Adventures for G.l. Joe-type dolls, each with outfit, complete accessories and story. Plus giant fold-up adventure headquarters.</p>
        <p>Your choice</p>
        <p>Racing set has 37 ft. of track, 2 cars, 2 4-speed controllers, automatic lap counter. Switch train set has 7 cars, remote control log dump and piggy back flat cars. Double oval track. UL approved. By Tyco.</p>
        <p>BIG JIM RESCUE RIG</p>
        <p>998</p>
        <p>Save 3.88 reg. 13.86 Mattel 23" rescue rig with rescue boom and accessories. Includes talking communications center to relay 6 emergency calls. Big Jim figures not included.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0026" />
        <p>Houseware gifts that make things happen...</p>
        <p>7-PC.CCX)KWARESET</p>
        <p>now only! 6^</p>
        <p>'^Fine quality porcebinware in a charming kitchen pattern of brown or green on white. Heat-safe plastic handles and knobs. Set includes 10" fry pan, 1-qt. saucepan with cover, 2-qt. saucepan with cover, 5-qt. Dutch oven with cover. A Boutique C(X&amp;gt;kware design.</p>
        <p>20-PC. STONEWARE SET</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>26-PC. PUNCH SET</p>
        <p>Save 2.00 reg. 4.99 2 ^ Anchor Hocking vintage grape design in clear glass. Inclucies 6-qt. bowl with plastic ladle, 12 6-02. cups, plastic hangers.</p>
        <p>5-PC. PANTRYWARE SET</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>Pantryware by Woodbury, with look of hand carved wood and fine crockery. Includes 2 large, 2 small canisters, rect. bread box.</p>
        <p>CRAFT KITS</p>
        <p>Save 1.00 reg. 4.99 3^^ 9" candle making kit. Or 3 dimensional sculptured candte making kit in choice of many shapes. Or bottle cutting/decorating kit.</p>
        <p>899</p>
        <p>FIBRE OR VINYL HAMPERS X*</p>
        <p>Rounded front in vinyl with gold Mylar trim, 20*/2xl3!/2x26/2". Or loom woven fibre with gold mylar medallion. 12x21x29". Podded lids, ventilated bocks.</p>
        <p>Save 4.00 reg. 19.97</p>
        <p>High fired ironstone dinnerware can go from oven-to-toble^to dishwasher. Spanish-inspired cobrs: Valencia orange, verde green, carmel yelbw. IrKludes 4 (each) dinner plates, salad plates, soup/cereal bowls, teocups, saucers.</p>
        <p>FOLDING STEPSTOOL</p>
        <p>9'</p>
        <p>Chrome-plated tubular steel frame. 14'/2" wide steel steps. Rubber saf-t-treod bottom step. Washable vinyl wet-look daisy design. Lock legs. 30" high. By Comfortline.</p>
        <p>ADJUSTABLE SWIVEL ST(XL</p>
        <p>only</p>
        <p>1995</p>
        <p>Adjusts to 24", 26", 28" or 30". King-size seat and back. Washable vinyl. Upholstered in black/ brown. By Comfortline.</p>
        <p>50-PC. STAINLESS SERVICE SET FOR 8</p>
        <p>Save 4.00 reg. 14.99 10 Choice of 3 patterns.. .Costelbno, Vossar or Dusk. Stainless steel flatware for any occasbn and virtually carefree. Set includes 16 teaspoons, 8 (each) soup spoons, dinner forks, salod forks, dinner knives... plus a sugar shell and butter knife. By Notional Silver Co.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0027" />
        <p>SCHICK FLEXAAAATIC GE IRON</p>
        <p>OSTERIZER</p>
        <p>1995</p>
        <p>Schick foil head men's shaver. Extra fine screen for maximum closeness. 34 sharp blades. Extra wide trimmeii;;) Carry case.</p>
        <p>1797</p>
        <p>New self-cleaning spray/steam/ dry steam/dry iron. Instant spray on any setting. 39 steam vents. Fabric guide. New CXirever cord-set.</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>Oster 10 speed 'Cycle-Blend' with 3 cycle speeds, grate, chop, grind plus 7 more. Large 5-cup glass container opens at both ends. Avocado.</p>
        <p>CALCULATOR</p>
        <p>Sove 10.00  ^093</p>
        <p>reg. 59.93</p>
        <p>Unisonic pocket "Slide Rulette M" Full feature, 12 digit. Automatic decimal set. Constant odd on/discount function. Batteries, AC adaptor, case.</p>
        <p>DESK TOP</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>PERCOUTOR</p>
        <p>Save 16.93</p>
        <p>reg. 66.86'</p>
        <p>Rapidman 8-digit calculator. Liquid crystal read-out. Full floating decimal, percentage key, constant function. Clear key.</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Famous General Electric automatic 9-cup coffeemaker that's immer-sible. Peek-A-Brew indicator. Mini-brew basket. Avocado green with chrome.</p>
        <p>Indispensable small electric gifts that keep on giving for years</p>
        <p>LADY SCHICK HAIR SEHER</p>
        <p>1497</p>
        <p>Lasting Curls Hairsettr with beautifying mist. Includes 7 oz. can pre-setting mist, 20 rollers (6 jumbo, 10 large, 4 small), cup, set guide.</p>
        <p>GE AAA/FM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO</p>
        <p>22^</p>
        <p>Digital clock radio with full 24-hour alarm. Sleep switch, automatic shut-off. Slide rule dial. AFC on FM. Walnut finish.</p>
        <p>PANASONIC BALL &amp;amp; CHAIN , ,</p>
        <p>AM RADIO Onlyl</p>
        <p>Panasonic ball &amp;amp; chain battery radio. Roll disk tuner, volume control. Red, white, blue, grey, yellow. With battery, earphone.</p>
        <p>GE CASSEHE</p>
        <p>]976</p>
        <p>Portable cassette recorder, automatic shut-off. Forward or rewind control. Remote control mike. Automatic record level control.</p>
        <p>Your choice</p>
        <p>99c</p>
        <p>Large assortment of your favorites. "Christmas with Ed Ames", "Do You l^rWhotlHearr Ethel Smith, "Silent Night,</p>
        <p>Holy Night", The Ames Brothers' "White Christmas, others, from Lawrence Welk and friends, "We wish you a merry Christmas."</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0028" />
        <p>A DIVISION OF COOK UNITED, INC.</p>
        <p>Give a little action with your gifts this year</p>
        <p>MEN'S OR LADIES' 3-SPEED BIKE</p>
        <p>Save 8.00 reg. 57.93</p>
        <p>49j</p>
        <p>Our own Pro-Star import. 26" chrome wheels. 3-speed action with twist shaft handle. Men's model with green padded seat; women's model with hot pink padded seat.</p>
        <p>22 CAL. RIFLE WITH SCOPE</p>
        <p>Save 8.04 reg. 42.92 34**</p>
        <p>75S Glenfield by Marlin. 22 caliber semi-automatic rifle complete with four-power scope and mounts. Holds up to 17 rounds.</p>
        <p>BIKE RADIO-LITE</p>
        <p>Save 3.00 reg. 12.96 9^^ AM radio attaches to any bike handle. Easy on/off. With 2 "C" cell batteries for flashlite, 9 volt battery for radio.</p>
        <p>EXERCISE BIKE</p>
        <p>Save 7.00 reg. 33.97 Adjustable tension and adjustable to all sizes. Rubber tire, chrome spoke wheel. Gold-tone baked enamel. By General Home Products.</p>
        <p>BARBELLS</p>
        <p>Save 5.00 reg. 18.86</p>
        <p>13*4</p>
        <p>Vinyl coated 110 pound barbell and dumbbell set with bars, collars and exercise course. Red, white, blue.</p>
        <p>PRO-STAR STEEL RACKET</p>
        <p>Save 4.00 reg. 15.83</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>Pro-Star steel tennis racket strung with nylon. Leather grip for comfort and firm grasp. Our own fine import.</p>
        <p>SPALDING TENNIS BALLS</p>
        <p>Can of 3 1</p>
        <p>Spalding tennis balls in bright yellow for better visibility. US Lawn Tennis Asso. approved. Championship quality. 3 in can.</p>
        <p>DOUBLE KNIT WARM-UP SUIT</p>
        <p>Save 3.00 reg. 15.96</p>
        <p>1296</p>
        <p>Double knit nylon warm-up suit with snug-fit rib-knit collar and cuffs, handy zipper pocket. Navy blue. An Add-In design.</p>
        <p>DUAL DART GAME</p>
        <p>094</p>
        <p>reg. 4.94 O Multi-color 17!4i" dart board by Crown. 9 darts, metal dividers. 20 point English dart game with baseball on reverse side.</p>
        <p>VIDA BLUE RETURN THROW</p>
        <p>,, 5  4*</p>
        <p>37x37" steel frame. Nylon mesh net. A Regent design, endorsed by famous Vida Blue. Great for baseball training.</p>
        <p>BINOCULARS</p>
        <p>Save 9.95 reg. 32.94</p>
        <p>2299</p>
        <p>Wide angle powerful 8x30 binoc- ' ulars with center focus. Fully coated optic lens. Complete with carry case &amp;amp; straps. By Tosco.</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0029" />
        <p>;</p>
        <p>KODAK POCKET INSTAAAATIC 20KODAK XL 33 AAOVIE CAMERA SETPOLAROID SQUARE SHOOTER 2 CAMERA</p>
        <p>CAMERA OUTFIT</p>
        <p>1097</p>
        <p>88*</p>
        <p>184</p>
        <p>Little camera for big pictures. Easy drop-in loading. Flash pictures without flash batteries. Limitone per customer.</p>
        <p>Extra fast 9 mm, 6 element, FI2 Elctar lens. Takes indoor super 8 movies without special lights..</p>
        <p>Automatic electric eye exposure control. Built-in distance finder, flash. 3%x3V4" color photos. Fast pock loading.</p>
        <p>4-LB. BOX</p>
        <p>BROCK CHOCOLATES</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>1-LB. MELSTER DELICIOUS AAINTS</p>
        <p>POODLE GIFT SET</p>
        <p>39^</p>
        <p>248</p>
        <p>con-</p>
        <p>Brock "Memory" assortnient tains a wide variety of delicious chocolates for the holidays. A memorable gift.  '  </p>
        <p>Your choice delicious butter mints, assorted party mints, or Swedish mints. For holiday entertaining and giving.</p>
        <p>Desert Flower spray perfume Vs oz. Comes with adorable cuddly poodle. A gift thof s sure to please.</p>
        <p>OLD SPICE GIFT SET</p>
        <p>Old spice fragrance set contains 2%-oz. after shove lotion and 2%-oz. cologne.</p>
        <p>Desert Flower set contains 2-oz. body talc and I/a-oz. cologne. Doubly pleasing gift of fragrance.Camera to watches the choice is yours the gifts are great!</p>
        <p>super value at</p>
        <p>Our Christmas gift assortment includes men's and ladies' digitals, sport and simulated wood watches, bubbles, dress, pendants and wrist watches. Lucite ^ and wood coses. Assorted colors.</p>
        <p>/j</p>
        <p>ROAAAN BRIO TRAVEL KIT</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>Contains 4 oz. eoch of after shave lotion, deodorant, and shove cream. Roman Brio leather-look quality Travel Kit.</p>
        <p>V5</p>
        <pb facs="00092080_0030" />
        <p>mmm</p>
        <p>* DIVISION Of COOK UINTED. INC</p>
        <p>Make yours a beautiful Christmas...</p>
        <p>DELUXE 6'</p>
        <p>SCOTCH PINE</p>
        <p>iiive 4.22 reg. 13.98  9</p>
        <p>In the traditional upswept style, withstand. Flame resistant, 108 tips, long needle. Decorations not included.</p>
        <p>OUTDOOR SANTA CHOO CHOO</p>
        <p>Save 5.00 reg. 33.99 6' train and tender are electrified to light up your lawn or roof top.</p>
        <p>15-LITE OUTDOOR SET DOOR FOIL</p>
        <p>Save 90c reg. 3.27 9Va" Christmas bulbs in multicolor, or all red or blue. Each burns independently. Weatherproof safety sockets. UL approved.</p>
        <p>Trim-a-door foil, 36" wide, 7' long. Wraps big gifts too. Four holidpy designs to choose from.</p>
        <p>50 MIDGET LIGHT INDOOR-OUTDOOR SET</p>
        <p>Save 1,00 reg. 5.38 4  ^</p>
        <p>String of 50 weatherproof bulbs, pre-tested and UL approved, each burns independently. Clear or multi color, steady or flashing light.</p>
        <p>CHOICE OF 3</p>
        <p>ELECTRIFIED</p>
        <p>ORNAMENTS</p>
        <p>97</p>
        <p>13" high Noel candle. Tiny Tim lamp or Santa lamp. UL approved. Decorated in red, white, green, black, yellow.</p>
        <p>5-LITE</p>
        <p>ELECTRIC CANDOLIER 1 99</p>
        <p>Save 78c reg. 2.77 I UL approved. Ivory with orange lamps.</p>
        <p>TRIM TYME CHRISTAAAS CARDS</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>50 beautifully decorated Christmas cards in assorted designs, including envelopes.</p>
        <p>TRIM TYME BOX OF 10 GLASS ORNAMENTS</p>
        <p>Save 29c reg. 98c 69'</p>
        <p>214" glass ornaments. Blue, red, gold, silver or assorted. American made.</p>
        <p>TRIM TYME</p>
        <p>CHRISTMAS GARLAND</p>
        <p>69'</p>
        <p>15 long, 3" wide for Christmas decorations. Flame proof and tarnish proof.</p>
        <p>TRIM TYME CHRIST/^S BOWS</p>
        <p>29^</p>
        <p>Bag of 25 stick-on Christmas bows in assorted colorsred, blue, green, gold white. Instant stick back.</p>
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