14—The Dtlly RaOector, Grewivlllc. N.C-—ftMjy, Jmary 14.1*77

Stock And Market Reports

Appointments Are Announced

RALEIGH lAPi f.NCDA) -Feeder Pigs: Thursday -Greensboro 529 head. 40-50 lbs No. is and 2s 52.00 per cut.. No. 3s 46.00 : 50-60 lbs No. Is and 2s 46.25, No. 3s 36,00 : 60-70 lbs No. isand 2s 40.00. No.3s 34.00.

over seven pounds at farm Wednesday. Thursday and Friday slaughter 17-18 cents.

RALEIGH <AP) (NCDA) -Cattle Auction; Wednesday-Tumersburg 764 head of cattle and 169 hogs. Slaughter Cows; Utility and Commercial 22.00-26.75; Canner and Cutter 18.75-23.00; Vealers (150-250) Choice 55.0065.00:    good    42.00-49.50;

Calves (325-550) Good 28.25-32.50: Heifers (550-700) Good

29.25-30.25; Bulls (1000 Up) Commercial 31.00-33 50, Utility

26.25-31,50; Feeder Steers (400-500) Good 30.00-3S.50; (600-800) Choice 35.25-35.75; Good 30.00-33 25: Feeder Heifers (500 Up) Good 23.50-26.00: Feeder Bulls (400-500) Good 28 50-31 00; Baby Calves 5.00-23.00 per head. Swine (180-240 ) 35,75-38.35; (240-270 ) 36.00-37.00; (300600) 25.00-28.50.

RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) -N.C Eggs: Thursday — Market 3 cents hi^r on large and medium. Supply moderate to short. Demand very good. Weighted average prices for small lot sales of consumer Grade A white cartoned eggs delivered to nearby retail stores 79.92 cents per dozen for large; 75.13 for medium: and 57.64 for small.

RALEIGH (AP) ( NCDA) -Eastern N.C. Sweet Potatoes: Thursday—(Sales fob shipping point basis) — Market steady. Demand moderate. 50-lb cartons, U.S. Is washed and waxed. cured Jewel type 5.506.00.

RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) -State Farmers Market: Thursday-Wholesale prices quoted for Apples, bushel baskets 5.00-6.00, tray-pack cartons, 8.50-10.50; Cabbage, 50-lbs bags 5.506.00; Collards, bushel hampers 4.004.50; Com, 5.75-7,00 (crates); Cucumbers, bushel baskets n.SO-12.00: Oranges, cartons 3.00-5.00; Grapefruits, cartons 3.254.00-Greens, bushel hampers 6.00; Lettuce, cartons 8.006.75; Peppers, bushel hampers 12.0016.00; Irish Potatoes, SO-lb bags 3.756.25; Sweet Potatoes, bushel baskets 5.00-5.50.

RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) -Charlotte Cotton; Wednesday— Market lower. Strict low middling 1 1-16 inch 64.25 per hundred pounds.

RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) Grain: Thursday—No.2 yellow shelled coni weaker at 2.50-2.55, mostly 2.53-2.54 in the east and mostly 2.60-2.64 in the Piedmont. No. 1 yellow soybeans lower 6.93-7.12'/í!, mostly 7.05

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RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) -The trend (»i the North Carolina hog market was steady 50 cents to St higher today. Wilson 39.0060.00; High Falls unreported; Rocky Mount 38.50-39.50; Kinston 39.0060.00; Clinton, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill. Pine Level. Chadboum, Ayden, Laurinburg and Benson 41.00; Tarboro and Bethel 36.50-37.00; Salisbury 35,00.

The

NEW YORK (AP stock market turned mixed today as blue chip issues ran into some selling pressure.

Trading was active.

The Dow Jones average of 30 blue chip industrials, up 7.90 Thursday, fell back 4,32 to 971.83 by 11:30 a.m. today.

Gainers clung to a 54 lead over losers in the over-ail count of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Analysts noted an absence of any dramatic economic news to sustain Thursday's technical rally.

oil and gas issues, which dominated activity Thursday with a strong rise, were actively traded again today, but ran Into increased profit taking.

Thus, while Louisiana Land & Exploration posted a IMi gain to 30% and Tesoro Petroleum added % to 16%, Occidental Petroleum lost % to 24% and Texas International was unchanged at 11%.

Santa Fe International climbed 1% to 49% after a 4%-point jump Thursday, wlien the company reported a successful test of a North Sea oil well.

Kennecott Cc^per, subject of a bullish assessment in Business Week magazine, rose % to 29% in active trading.

The NYSE’s composite index slipped .06 to 56.33 in the first hour.

On the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up .17 at 110.80.

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RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) -The trend cm the North Carolina f.o.b. dock broiler market was 3 cents higher for next week with supplies moderate, demand very good, weights desirable to heavy.

The North Carolina dock wei^ted average price is 39.60 cents per pound for next week week for small purchases of sized plant grade broilers picked iq} at processing plant. Estimated slaughter today 1,479,000.

North Carolina hens market seteady with weak undertone for next wéek. Sup;lies fully adequate for limited demand. Prices paid per pound for hens

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Obituaries

Home Chapel by the Rev. E. f Keith Russell. Burial will be in ; the Maxwell Cemetoy in Duplin t County.

Legislators representing Pitt County in the North Carolina General Assembly have received a number of committee appointments for the current session of the Legislature.

Horton Rountree, by virture of his being named Speaker Pro-tem of the House on Wednesday, will serve as a member of all the key committees of the House of Representatives as well as on the Legislative Service Commission.

Rep Sam Bundy's committee appointments include: Education. Elections. Finance, Highway Safety, Local Government. State Personnel and Public Libraries.

Sen. Vernon White has been named chairman of the

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Agriculture Committee and vice-chairman of the Full Ap-pri^riations Committee.

White has also been named to the Appropriations Sub-Committies on Education. Human Resources, Corrections and Base Budget.

Other committee appointments for White include Education Econony, Finance and Ways and Means.

Sen. Juhan Allsbrook has been named to the Appropriations Committee, General Government and Transportation. Rules and Operations of the Senate, and Ways and Means.

Allsbrook is expected to receive other committee appointments in the near future.

The Ice

Hold Sergeant For 3 Killings

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FRIDAY

7.30 p.m. — ReOmen meet 7.45 p.m — Welcome Wagon couples Priogeal First Fe<)eral SATURDAY

1:30p.m. — Duplicate bridge game at First Federal

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Jimmy Brewer—Skip Bright

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Auto—Accident—Life—Fire—Specialists in Mobile Home insurance

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FT. LEONARD WOOD. Mo, (AP) — An Army sergeant was taken into custody after a young woman who said she feigned death to escape an attacker directed authorities to the snowy burial sites of three companions.

The sergeant, Identified only as being from Arkansas, faced possible murder charges today in connection with the fatal shootings of the three Plato, Mo., young people, the FBI said.

He was apprehended by an Army provost marshal Thursday after military searchers found the bodite oí Anthtmy Lee Bates. 18; Wtsley Hawkins, 18, and Linda Needham. 16, on this sprawling Army base.

The Pulaski County Sheriff’s Department said Juanita Deck-ard, 19, of nearby Lynchburg, Mo., was picked up by a motorist after she staggered to a roadway about 3 p.m.

She was reported In fair condition Thursday night at Pulaski County Hospital with bullet wounds in a breast and an arm.

Biil Williams, agent In charge of the Kansas City FBI office, said the four young people apparently were driving throu¿i the base on a double date Wednesday night when they were stepped by a man driving a vehicle similar to one used by military police.

Their car was disabled by the driver of the second vehicle, and they were forced to accompany him. FBI agents at the scene said.

The four were driven to the southern part of the base, shot and buried in snow, Williams said. He said Miss Deckard was able to get away later because she pretended to be unconscious during the burial.

McGovern Plans

Proposal To Teaching Role

Compensate

RALEIGH (AP) - Persons whose lawyers misused their funds would be compensated under a proposal announced today by the North Carolina State Bar, which examines and regulates the state’s 7,000 lawyers.

State Bar President George J. Miller of Charlotte said the agency also pn^K>sed to create a panel, composed of attorneys and laymen, to arbitrate complaints from citizens over attorney fees.

Miller said that the bar would seek legislation authorizing the two programs in addition to an increase from $45 to $100 in bar membership fees to finance them.

“These programs help attorneys fulfill their professional responsibility to the people and. therefore, we feel it’s proper for them to pay the bill and not the taxpayers,” Miller said.

“We feel and we hq)e the members of the state legislature will agree, that the implementation of these programs will be of significant benefit to consumers of legal services throughout North Carolina.” Miller added.

He said if the legislature approves, the programs will begin in January 1978.

NEW YORK (AP) - Sen. George McGovern is returning to teaching, at least parttime.

The South Dakota Democrat will travel from Washington to Columbia University in New York City each Monday to teach a special evening course, “American Foreign Policy, 1945-75.”

“I seized on it,” McGovern said. “I think it’s going to be a fascinating experience to be required. after 20 years away from the classroom, to systenf atically organize my thoughts on foreign policy,”

McGovern taught history and political science at Dakota Wesleyan University before entering politics.

Ford Returning To Yale Univ.

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WON THEIR RACES ATLANTA (AP) - More than half of the blacks who ran for public office in the South last year won their races.

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OPTIMIST DIES

CLINTON. Mo. (AP) - Ralph Glasscock, 48. of Clinton. Mo., president of Optimist International in 1974-75 and a founder of the Optimist International Foundation, died Wednesday at a bo^ital here after suffering a heart attack.

I would like to thank ail of my friends of Pitt County for the kind deeds shown me during my two weeks at Pitt Memorial Hospital and at home. Thanks to Principals Wiggins and Parks; Ayden-Grifton High School Staff; my church, Mt. Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church of Winterviile; my pastor, N. Harris, and the members of the Mt. Olive Missionary Baptist Church, pastor, and deacons who held Communion service with me at my home. Thanks also to Dr. C.M. Ramsdell, his staff, and Pitt Memorial Hospital, first floor nursing staff. You all were so nice to me. Thank you Jolly Doers Club, Household of Ruth, Home Demonstration Club, and NAACP. Spacial thanks I send to the cafeteria staff at Ayden-Grifton High School, of which I am a part.

People like you and the Almighty God is why I am doing so well. God bless all of you.

Hattie Hooks

Most pecóle are afraid of morticians especially when they are sick. Not I. I asked Gratz Norcott to come to see me; he did and he was atone, which was the best part. I was so glad that I could see him. He gave me more courage to live, because I told him he was the last friend to let me down—if you know what I mean.

WAKEFIELD, N.H. (AP) -The Great Ice Caper has melted into thin air.

But it stirred up a lot of excitement while it lasted In this normally serene, picturesque community of white frame houses, sMw-covered trees and 1,400 people on the Maine-New Hampshire border.

(jOv. Meldrim Thomson said Thursday ni^t that an early reading of a geiger counter had falsely Indicated that some mysterious, possibly radioactive object had iall«i through the frozen pond on William McCarthy's Rocky Ridge Farm.

When more sofrfiisticated equipment was used, Thomson said, it showed "no object there ... no radioactive wave there."

For the past three days, McCarthy, who settled here “to get away from people.” had been deluged with about 100 visitors, including national television correspondents who rushed here after word got out about the supposed object.

Thomson said the portion of the p<md where a three-foot hole was found was covered with two layers of ice with three to six inches of space between each layer and “it was thought the weight of the snow and temperture changes could have caused a crack” in the ke.

Adams

TARBORO - Mr, Allen Adams. 52. died Thursday.

A funeral service will be held Saturday at 2 p. m. at Carlisle Funeral Home Chapei by the Rev. James Harris. Burial will be in Edgecombe Memorial Park.

Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Barbara Hamiltm Adams; two daughters, Mrs. Patricia Briley of Tarboro and Miss Bonnie Adams of the home; three sons. David and Johnny Adams, both of Tarboro, and James Adams of Bethel: two sisters. Mrs. Margie Keen of Tarboro and Mrs. Ruby Denton of Rocky Mount; and two grandchildren.

The family will be at the funeral home tonight from 7 to 9 o’clock.

N.J.; (»e brother, Eddie Barrett of Morristown, Penn.

Family visitation will be Saturday from 7 to 8 p.m. at Flanagan and Hardee Funeral Chapel. The family will be at the home of Mrs, Gladys Newton of 1108 W. Fourth St. in Grenville.

Will Drop Issue

If One Accepted

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -The Rev. Clennon King, who. has failed so far in attempts to join President-elect Carter's hometowtl 'bhurch, says he is tydlTng to drc^'thejnatter if thd ¿hiirch accepts anethar-bhiCK .'person as a member this weekend.

Garris

Mr, Leander “Seat” Garris of 1105 Colcmiai AveniK here died Thursday in Pitt'* Memorial Ho^)ital.

Funeral services will be c«i-ducted Sunday at 1:30 p. m. at the Norcott and Company Funeral Chapel in Greenville by Elder P. D. Blount, Interment will be in the Ayden Cemetery.

An Ayden native, he had lived In Greenville for the past 10 years. He was a retired employee of the Town of Ayden and a veteran of World War 11.

Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Doretha Burney Garris of the home: two dau^ters. Mrs. Edna Simmons of Bronx, N. Y. and Mrs. Geraldine Moore of Simpson; a son, George A. Burney of the home; a brother, Eddie Garris Ayden; 12 grandchildren; and four great grandchildren.

The body will be at the Norcott and Company Greenville Funeral Home from 6 p. m. Saturday until one hour before the funeral. Family visitation will be at the chapel from 7 to 8 p. m. Saturday.

Roebuck

Mrs. Virginia (Mama Ginny) Barnhill Roebuck. 68, died at her home in Azalea Gardens near Greenville Thursday night. Funeral services will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Saturday at the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by her pastor, Dr. Will Wallace. Burial will be held in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mrs. Roebuck, a native of the Everetts Community of Martin County, had lived in Greenville since 1929. She had worked in womans apparell for a number of years and was associated with Williams Ladies Shop, C. Heber Forbes and Brody’s. She was a member of the First (Kristian Church.

She is survived by her husband, Nat Archie Roebuck; (me daughter, Mrs. O'Neal Smith of Greenville: two sons, A. Dean and Mack D. Roebuck of Greenville; one brother, Robert A. Barnhill of Baltimore, Md.; one sister Mrs. R. L. Jackson of Washingt(Mi: and nine grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.

Thigpen

KINSTON - Mrs. Betty Ruth Spence Thigpen, 39, died at her home at 1502 Harriet Drive here Thursday.

'Hie widow of Horace Thigpen Sr., she was a homemaker and a member of the Church of God of Prophecy.

Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p. m. at the Howard and Carter Funeral

jiSurvivlng her are a son,' Horace Thigpen Jr. of the home; three daughters. Mrsr I Benjamin F. Hardy of Rt. 6? Kinst(» and Misses Theresa and Charieoe Thigpen, both of tbé ; home; two tmiOters, John R. i Spence of Ayden and QarencePr \ Spoice of Deep Run; three : sisters. Mrs. D. D. Brl(^t of i Greenville, Mrs. Robert E.Paté ‘ of Kinston and Mrs. Jane Howard of Deep Run.    -    j

The family will receive friends ’ at the funeral home tonight froni 7 to 9 o’clock.    I

Puzzled Over

Involvement

CINCINNATI (AP) - Actresc Lynn Redgrave says die is puz* zied over her possible involvement in the obscenity trial of Hustler magazine publishec Larry Flynt and three maga; zine employes.

Miss Redg-ave - along with journalists Vincrat Canby, Liz Smith pnd Patrick McGrady is'included on a list of possible defense witnesses announced Monday.

“She didn't seem to know anything about it.” said a theater spokesman for Miss Redgrave in New York.

Flynt, his wife Althea Leas-ure Flynt. his brother Jimmy R. Flynt and A1 Van Schalk are charged with engaging in organized crime and pandering obscenity.

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If this condition is not met. JCing. 56, warned here Thursday, he will resume the battle by establishing residence in the county where the Plains Baptist Church is located.

The church’s Watch Care Committee denied membership to King because he is not a Plains resident. King makes his home in Albany, Ga.

Mareys

MORRISTOWN, Penn - Mrs. ''jfisale^.Barrett, Mareys died Tuesday in-'Montgomery Hospital in Morristown, Penn. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at Aur-thur’s Chapel F.W.B. Church with the Bishop J, N. Gilbert officiating. Burial will be in the Crawford Cemetery.

Surviving are one son, Richard D. Mareys of the home; her mother, Mrs. (Seneva Barrett of Morristown. Penn.; two sisters. Mrs. Ethel Reid Mercer of Hartford, (^nn. and Mrs. kuthie Lee Kritz of Camden.

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01

Game Room, Snack Bar And Pro Shop. Open 7 Days A Week.

Located Behind Shoney's On 264 By-Pass Groups & Parties Arranged Call 756-4000

NEW HAVEN. Conn. (AP) -President Ford, a former assistant Yale football coach and a graduate of Yale Law School, will return to the Ivy League university for a short time after he leaves office.

The White House said Thursday that Ford has accepted a Chubb Fellowship and will spend Feb. 6-8 meeting informally with students and faculty members. He will live in a dormitory and eat in student dining rooms.    Í

Ford graduated from tj)!ik law school in 1941. He was an assistant coach in 1935.

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Price effective Friday, January 14 thru Thursday, .January 20.

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