The NEW BERN VOLUME 4 NEW BERN, N. C., FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1961 NUMBER 20 On our desk Is a recent issue of Or?ss Talk, a n^sy trade publica tion that Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Company prints for the benefit of its many employees. Among other thtogs in the issue at hand is the story of how four of the firm’s directory advertising salesmen were credited with saving .the lives of three men at Atlantic Beach on June 12. The youths are John Byrd, Don Collier, Ed Lee find Bennie Harker. The story carries their photo graphs, and the thoughts of this newspaperman went rushing back through the years — six years to be exact — as we* spied Bennie’s bmMng likeness. in the publication. ive’ll never torget young Barker, hor will he forget us. Call it a ooineidence, a miracle, a God in tended thing, or vidiatever you like, Bennie will tell you that he is un doubtedly alive today because un usual circumstances which neither of us can explain in mortal terms came about. The writer will simply detail the events, and let you decide whether a guiding hand directed the actions of this newspaperman on a tragic afternoon. We’ve never spent much time on tales of the supemnatural, , nor are we inclined to pay hpmage to superstitions. Ehren so, there was sbmething exceedingly strange about the indent we’re going to rel^e. - , "iSh "the afterndon^ referred- to, w« were up BroaA ^toeet j ust as- w« that t^roughfare thousandCtof times before. As we got directly across toe street from Kafer Memo rial Hospital, something told us to cr^ over to enter that institution. To say the urge was unusual is an understatement. Never before, so far as we can recall, had we ever visited toe hospital without a definite purpose in mind. Oc casionally we went there to see some friend who was ill. Almost always i it was to cover a news , story — usually a serious accident that toe writer already kn^ about. 'This time we didn’t have the sli^test inkling of an accident. As if drawn by a magnet, we crossed over, climbed the steps and enter ed the big front door. Then, and not until then, we dis- covered that Bennie Harker had been in an automobile accident. ' His chest was crushed, and his condition wns so desperate that he wasn’t expected to live. We were told he needed toe attention of ^^cialists at Duke Hospital in Durham, 1>ut that he probably wouldn’t survive an ambulance trip if one'were attempted. Forgive us for believing, if we ne^ forgiveness, that God had plwed us in toe right spot at toe right time. Thinking with clarity that isn’t always typical of us, mid probably wasn’t of our own doing, we made the most of precious minutes. Getting approval from the young ster’s relatives and the attending physician, we called toe control tower at Cherry Point and got through to the high command. Hur riedly we informed them o^ the dire situation here, and requested a mercy flight to Durham from New Bern’s municipal airport. A flying boxcar took off from toe Marine Corps Air Station at * once. It was large enough, of course, to accomodate a stretcher and attendants on toe scheduled trip to Durham. Bennie was hur- ribd to the airpart in an ambu lance. Another ambulance and a Highway Patrol escort was arrang ed for at Durham. In a matter of miAutes from toe time we walkfed into Kafer, Memo rial Ho^tal, for no apparent rea son, he was on his'-^vay. A surgeon was waiting when he reached an (Cehtiiwwi on Pago 81 I 1 i SWEET MISSES—New Bern always has emphasized history in its parades, and this float is a typical example of that em phasis. We’ll l|!t you guess how long ago this photograph was taken, after you identify Elizabeth Nunn, Betsy War ren, Martha Hurst, Florrie Gibbs, Martha Waters, Catherine Waters, Rachel Raynor, Sallie Pat Kafer, Annie Kinsey Whitford, Cecil Lupton and Catherine Matthews. Our thanks to the countless Mirror readers who have expressed delight at these pictorial excursions into the past. 'f i , I. LOADS OF FUN—Pictured here is the Trent Court sum mer playground provided for happy youngsters by the New Bern Recreation Department. John Anderson has been its director, and did a fine job. EquaUy qffipient at thej gther local playgrounds in their roles as directors were Carolyn Nelson, Eloise Reel and Shirley Rogers. The season ends today, but the memories will Unger much longer.—^Photo by John R. Baxter. , .,.