College Opens Baseball Season The Loulsburg College Hur ricanes open their baseball sea son tomorrow afternoon, here against Williams College of WlUlamston, Mass. The two teams meet again Thursday af ternoon, both games starting at 3 p.m. at the College Dla ? mond. The northern college comes south each Spring for their training trip and have met Loulsburg In recent years. WUllams Is a four-year school and usually fields a fine team. They are coached by Bob Coombs who Is a nephew of a former State College baseball coach. Coombs Is a graduate of Duke and a former Phila delphia Athletic pitcher. Russ Frazler, Hurricane Coach, has said he will use two hurlers In both games. Mike Moschele, a new prospect, will start the game Wednesday. His back up man has not been named. Thursday's starter has not yet been announced by Fra zler. The other starters for Louts burg, as announced by their Coach are: Catching, Johnny Weaver; First base, Donnle Clary; Second base, Jackie Mullen; Short, Steve Lamm; Third base, Earl Rideout or Bill Mowbrey, Left field, Jim my Hall; Center, Bobby Howard and Right, Milton Miller. In case of rain on Wednesday, there will be a doubleheader on Thursday, starting at 1:30 p.m. After these games, the next home game will be on April 10th with the Duke Frosh. Franklinton Loses In Track Meet The Wake Forest Field and Track Team defeated the Frankllnton High School squad* 46-46 last week. Jimmy Caudel, Rams all round ath lete, won the 100 yard dash In 10.S seconds followed by Don Hicks of Frankllnton and Lowery of Wake Forest. The Wake County squad toe f the mile when Lee 'rjur'ft In 5 minutes flat. ..-Peoples of Frankllnton was second and Shearon ^ Wake was thrld. Wake took, the 440 as Davis made It In 60.2 seconds, fol lowed by Frankllnton's Gupton and Lowery of Wake. The 880 was run In 2.20 by Lee followed by Peoples of Frankllnton and Tull of Wake. Caudel again tallied with 22 followed by Hicks and Lowery. Caudel was best In the shot put, tossing for 40.9 3/4 Inch es. Walden of Frankllnton won the Discus throw with a toss of 110 ft. 2 3/4 Inches. Larry Kearney won the high Jump over Pearce of Wake Forest" and Gall Parker of FrjiHrtln ton. His leap wavgood for 5 ft. 3 Inches.,, Wake Wpn^the Broad Jump dlstape?d 18 ft 7 1/4 Inches. of Wake won the Poll Vault In an 8 ft. 6 Inch Jump over Harding of Wake and Walden of Frankllnton. Frankllnton Is the only Franklin school that has Track as one of Us sports. A Fitness Director ?Washington, D. C.? President Johnson named Stan Muslal, re tired baseball star, to head the government's physical fitness program. He succeeds Bud Wil kinson, who resigned to en ter politics. Muslal Is now vice president of the St. Louis Cardinals. off with the old... on with the new! Botany' 500* Cosmos Colors m ml ?BOTANY' 500" TAILORED BY DAROFF In the sunny season, a man feels the need for new color. Not easy to find, you say? Especially colors of taste and discretion? See the new 'Botany' 500 Cosmos Colors. They're more a subtlety of shading than a sharpness of tone. Blues melded upon blues. Brown blessed with a glint of sunlight. Olive shadowed with the cool shade of the woods. Come in for a try-on. Sanitized* for HygUnlc Fmhnau MM J SHOP Louisburg Falls To Wake Forest In Golf Meet The Wake Forest golfers took the first win of the season In the Green Pastures Association play last Wednesday as they downed Louisburg 41 1/2 to j 21 1/2. The match was played at the Paschal Country Club course in Wake Forest. Mac Joyner led the Louisburg team with a four over par, 74. Other scores were: Buddy Beam 82, Kenneth Isley 83, Dick Eagles and Edgar Owens 85, Ed Ray and Avery Dennis 86, BUI Huggins 88, Garland Mustlan 89, Glenn Henley 90, Woodrow Warren and Karl Per nell 91, Bill Perry, Jr., 92 and Virgil Duncan 95. Louisburg's next match is with Wendell here Wednesday, March 25th. The contests go through much of the spring with a final tournament to be played here on May 13th. NASCAR Grand National Winston Salem, N. C. --For the first time In the history of NASCAR Grand National automobile racing, the circuit's first North Carolina event of the season will be the Easter Monday race in Winston Salem's Bowman Gray Stadium. The annual holiday event in this "Easter City" Is scheduled for Monday afternoon, March 30. A field of about 25, In cluding most of the sports' s top drivers, is expected to com pete In the 250- lap meet (two 25-?lap heats and a 200-lap fea ture) on the quarter- mile as phalt track. . Race Directors Bill France and A lv'in Hawkins announced that prize money has been in creased by $915, to a total of $5,115. Defending champion is Jim Paschal of High Point, N. C., who won in a Plymouth last year and will be in a Dodge this year. The race assumed the role of North Carolina's first Grand National of 1964 when a 150 miler was rained out last Sun day at Hillsboro's Orange Speedway and postponed to April 12. The Hillsboro postponement was the fifth weather-invoked delay of the circuit's schedule since Feb. 23 "Daytona 500." The situation Is just the oppo site of last season, when the Grand National schedule went off without a hitch until a 100 miler was rained out in mid May. Of the five dates on the sche dule since the Daytona event, only one has been completed. And that one, a 125-miler at Richmond, Va., required three attempts. It was halted short of the halfway mark (which would have made it a race) by rain on March 8, and the resumption of it was postponed again March 9 before .it was finished March 10. A 100-miler at Spartanburg, S. C., has been weathered out twice. Late winter rains pre vented completion of a track renovation and it was postponed from Feb. 29 to last Saturday, when It was rained out (a new date is to be set). A 100 mller at Weavervilld, N. C.,, was postponed from March 1 to April 1 1 because heavy snows left the speedway there unusable on the scheduled date. "1889 ? 75 Years of Service ? 1964" Citizens Bank and Trust Company *THE LEADING BANK IN THIS SECTION* WE INVITE YOUR BUSINESS" MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION . ^ HENDERSON , IV. C. ?? People, Spots In The News UP ANI) OVEK! Johnl Thomas, recapturing form| of couple years ago.i clears bar at 7 feetl 2 in Boston meet.. York, explains her cancer re search work. She's on Honey well's Science All-Stars TV series, on PRESERVING her ob vious good shape, Ame dee Chabot, Miss World 1962, works with weights on movie lot I WEST MEETS EAST ? ? British soldiers mush cheer fully through snowfall, heedless of East German ar mored-car patrol, at point where two halves of Berlin ire separated not by The Wall, but merely a chain. Industry Continued From Page 1 part m ent of the State Conser vation and Development Agency, and the members and wives of Carolina Power and Light Co. Industrial Development depart ment to visit the area and get acquainted with local people and what the area has to offer. The affair will consist of an after noon of golf at the club, followed by a social hour and dinner. Appointed tp make arrange ments for the visit and the par ty were: G. M. Beam, Jr.,| Chairman, H. C. Taylor, W. ftf Lumpkin, W. H. Taylor > Jack! Cooper, H. W. Knott, Wallace! Tippett, J. H. Talton and E. F. l Yarborough. The group also gave approval! to the Idea of looking' into a| Shell Building and a meeting! was set for Thursday night,] March 26, at 7:30 at the Mur-| phy House to hear a Shell Build- 1 lng contractor, Carroll Single- 1 ton & Associates, explain the! program. Benton said all in-l terested parties were urged to I attend. The Director pointed out to I the group the need for coopera- 1 tion between municipalities and! :he county in the area of water I and sewer extension as one ofl the* prime needs in seeking new! Mustrles. He added, that many 1 t sizable sites are outside the I reach of municipal utilities at I present. Benton was obviously pleased! with the capacity crowd and the | enthusiasm showr) in Thurs- 1 lay's meeting. He said, "All! economic forecasts from eco- I nomists and publications indi- J :ate that expenditures for plants I Expansion Is on the Increase. I This and the fact that other! towns In the Raleigh area have I recently obtained plants has! focused attention on us. If we I exhibit the proper coopera- 1 tWe spirit and attitude, the out- | look for Franklin County is I good." The meeting was opened with a l song especially written for the I occasion by W. J. Benton, words I and Miss Sarah Foster, the! music. Polio Continued From Page 1 ried out this drive. I should al- 1 so like to thank the School Su- I perlntendents, Mr. Warren I Smith and Mr. Fred Rogers for I their fine cooperation and an es- I peclal thanks to the principals I of the schools at which the! Clinics were held. Last but! certainly not least I should like! to convey my gratitude to the! 200 workers at the clinics which! Included physicians, pharma- 1 cists, nurses and volunteers." I Polio Central Headquarters] was located in the Louisburgl Rescue Station. Members ofl the Rescue Squad rushed need-l ed supplies and vaccine to the! clinics throughout the day. The clinics were open froml 12 noon to 5 p.m. and were) maintained with very little wait- 1 lng. Steps will be taken to| eliminate the unexpected flaws in the program next time. A contribution of 25 cents was asked to meet the expense of the program but those unable to contribute were not required to do so." The second at the three Polio Sundays will be April 19, 1964. It is the hope of the campaign directors that all that came out this Sunday and many more will take the Type ni polio vaccine to be given that day. Complete immunization Is not attained un less all three types of the polio /acclne are taken. A run down 9f the amount of people who took the vaccine at the various centers is as follows: Louisburg 2352 Riverside 2298 Bunn 2208 ifoungsvllle El. 391 foungsvllle Hi. 1043 5old Sand 1112 Perrys 1099 Edward Best 1142 B. F. Person 1243 Franklinton 1988 jethsemane 1006 The total: 15,878 Reading a book is a good way :o spend your spare time If there Is anything in the book worth reading. Softball Meet At Pearc^s A me^Ung of Interested par for the purpose o( setting up another season's Softball League at Pearce's has been called (or Friday night, March 27th. The meeting will be held at 7:30 at the Pearce Church Annex Building! All managers of teams be longing to the league last year are urged to attend. Teams to be represented are: Pilot, Pearce's, New Hope, Wake Cross Roads, Hopkins and Ze bulon. J. W. Perry, Jr., an nounced that any others that might be Interested In enter ing a team should attend this meeting. Perry stated that there is a possibility that the league will expand from six to eight teams this season. Plans are for there to be two games nightly for three or four nights each week throughout the season. A Difference New Resldent--I hear that the village boasts a choral society. Old Inhabitant-- Well, we don't boast about It? we suffer it In silence. Crippled Children Benefit Games Announced Loulsburg men and women will meet Youngsvllle men and women In a basketball game In the Loutsburg High School Gym on Wednesday night at 7:30 March 25th. All proceeds will go to Frank lin County's fund for Crippled Children and'Mults. It's A Shame "I'm sorry, madam," said the attendant - at the movie, "but you can't take the dog Into the theatre." ,"How absurd," protested the woman. "What harm can pic tures do a little dog like this?" There will be a basketball game for the benefit of drive for funds for the CrlppledChll dren and Adults on Friday, March 27, at Gold Sand School. Two games, one women alum ni and one for the men, will be featured. Game time Is 7:30 p.m. The public Is urged to attend and support this worthy cause. Two Gripes Every commuter has two "gripes." The fast trains that don't stop at his station and tlut slow trains that stop at the oth er stations. FOR LEASE 3.39 ACRES TOBACCO ALLOTMENT, BEFORE APRIL 1st. BLAND B. PRUITT TEL. GY 6-3153 DRAWER 299, L0UISBUR6, N. C. With up to 48% more horsepower in front . and 30% more trunk space in back . . . wouldn't you fit nicely in between? Now, more people than ever can own an Olds . . . because Olds prices start lower than ever! Sensational performance for everyday owner driving ! Boomm, HfHfM THf ACTION IS! ? ??? ftiTM IKAL MTIMZU ?iBSMMILE IUUTT HiUI . MUIIAIUIS FN IMKTT DOIT. ITUflll . OKI H ITMAMIC M. KTSTAI I. KTSTII M. f M D. & J. Pontiac -Olds., Inc. 904 S. MAIN ST. LOUISBURG, N. C- N. C Dealers License No. 749 LOOKING fOII A OOOD USED CA?? IOOK fO? THI "VALUI-*ATID" SION AT YOU* OlOS Of AllfSI Fable No. 6: "Private power monopolies are being invaded" To hear some private power monopolies tell it, electric co-ops are running over the countryside and- irtto the cities and towns. Well, electric co-ops have been serving the areas around some towns and cities with non profit low-cost power for years. Now, today's urban expansion is pushing the limits of these towns into what were once rural areas. And some power companies want their monopolies to move with them. ?4 Who's invading whom all depends on your point of view. The co-ops feel they're entitled to.keep the territory which they spent 30 years building up. Co-ops are not interested in ex panding outside their service areas ? they don't want to take a single power company customer ? they just want to continue serv ing the areas they helped to bring into the main stream of American life. liJZiSuu Electric CORPORATION Wake Forest, N. C.